Link to book on Amazon: Petty: The Biography - Kindle edition by Zanes, Warren. Arts & Photography Kindle eBooks @ Amazon.com.
Yeah, I am on a roll with these things. Here is the link to the Sam Phillips bio I read, which has links to the Elvis Costello and Glyn Johns bios I read: Rock Bio: Sam Phillips, the Man Who Invented Rock n' Roll - Cafe Society - Straight Dope Message Board
Next up? Petty: The Biography by Warren Zanes, with a lot of input from Petty and others in his life. Zanes was the leader of the Del Fuegos and has been at the forefront of cool kids-focused songs. A journeyman musician/writer who has been friends with Petty for years.
I am only at the intro, but a couple of phrases jumped out at me, so I thought I would start this thread and come back to it as needed. One is:
[QUOTE=Warren Zanes]
‘Breakdown’ had as much space as 'Green Onions."
[/QUOTE]
and another is:
[QUOTE=WZ]
The Heartbreakers had a different southernness, in some ways more like Dan Penns and Eddie Hintons, musicians and writers who had been raised on the black sounds around them, players who held back when there was a song in the room, because there was a song in the room.
[/QUOTE]
[italics mine]
This is some cool inside-baseball music stuff. Both Breakdown and Green Onions do have a lot of space in them - i.e., they sound full, but when you listen to the individual pieces, there is no Wall of Sound layering - just a few pieces that work together really well.
And laying back if there’s a song in the room, i.e., if the song is excellent, make sure and play less and to focus on featuring the song. That’s wise insight from an experienced band player, phrased in an old-school way. Starting off this bio of Petty by speaking to that level of song wisdom is cool.
This could be fun.
Green Onions: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_bpS-cOBK6Q
Breakdown: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fsKsFU766Io
Both are so cool in how spare they are.