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Tom Petty
Full Moon Fever
Tom Petty:  Full Moon Fever

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Album Review

Released: 1989
Label: MCA
Selection #: 133911
Solo gator-rock, w/help from fellow Wilburys & some Heartbreakers on I Won't Back Down, Runnin' Down A Dream, Free Fallin', Yer So Bad, A Face In The Crowd, more.
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1 Free Fallin'
2 I Won't Back Down
3 Love Is a Long Road
4 A Face in the Crowd
5 Runnin' Down a Dream
6 I'll Feel a Whole Lot Better
7 Yer So Bad
8 Depending on You
9 The Apartment Song
10 Alright for Now
11 A Mind With a Heart of It's Own
12 Zombie Zoo
  
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Album Review

Although "Let Me Up (I've Had Enough)" found the Heartbreakers regaining their strength as a band and discovering a newfound ease at songcraft, it just didn't sell that well. Perhaps that factor, along with road fatigue, led Tom Petty to record his first solo album, "Full Moon Fever". Nevertheless, the distinction between "solo" and "Heartbreakers" is a fuzzy one because "Full Moon Fever" is essentially in the same style as the Heartbreakers albums; Mike Campbell co-wrote two songs and co-produced the record, and he, along with Benmont Tench and Howie Epstein, all play on the album. However, the album sounds different from any Heartbreakers record due to the presence of former Electric Light Orchestra leader Jeff Lynne. Petty co-wrote the lion's share of the album with Lynne, who also is the record's main producer. In his hands, Petty's roots rock becomes clean and glossy, layered with shimmering vocal harmonies, keyboards, and acoustic guitars. It was a friendly, radio-ready sound, and if it has dated somewhat over the years, the craft is still admirable and appealing. But the real reason "Full Moon Fever" became Petty's biggest hit is that it boasted a selection of songs that rivaled "Damn the Torpedoes". "Full Moon Fever" didn't have a weak track; even if a few weren't quite as strong as others, the album was filled with highlights -- "I Won'T Back Down," the wistful "A Face In The Crowd," the rockabilly throwaways "Yer So Bad" and "A Mind With A Heart Of Its Own," the Byrds cover "Feel A Whole Lot Better," the charging "Runnin' Down A Dream," and "Free Fallin'," a coming-of-age ballad that could be Petty's best song. "Full Moon Fever" might have been meant as an off-the-cuff detour, but it turned into a minor masterpiece. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

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