The Best of Everything (album) explained
The Best of Everything |
Type: | greatest hits |
Artist: | Tom Petty |
Cover: | Tom Petty - The Best of Everything.png |
Alt: | A black-and-white photo of Petty gesturing to the camera |
Recorded: | 1976–2016 |
Studio: | Various |
Genre: | Heartland rock |
Language: | English |
Producer: | Various |
Prev Title: | An American Treasure |
Prev Year: | 2018 |
Year: | 2019 |
Next Title: | Wildflowers & All the Rest |
Next Year: | 2020 |
The Best of Everything is a 2019 greatest hits album with recordings made by Tom Petty, with his backing band The Heartbreakers, as a solo artist, and with Mudcrutch. It was released on March 1.
Release and promotion
The compilation was originally due to be released in 2018, immediately following An American Treasure and the alternative take of the title track, released as the first single, for digital streaming. "For Real" was released as the second single.
"For Real" was recorded in August 2000 when Petty and the Heartbreakers went to Bill Bottrell’s studio to record a new version of "Surrender". "Surrender" was placed on , while "For Real" remained unissued until 2019.
Reception
Writing for AllMusic, Stephen Thomas Erlewine says the album is "the best overall overview of—and perhaps introduction to—Tom Petty assembled to date".
"The Best of Everything"
The title track of the compilation, "The Best of Everything" was originally released in 1985 on the album Southern Accents; the song was later released in two different versions on the posthumous compilations An American Treasure (2018), and this album. The latter extended alternate version, which contains an extra verse, was released as a single in 2018, before the release of the album. The posthumous released versions have a more rocking arrangement and sound more organic (the synths were substituted with the piano), while the one on Southern Accents is more soul/pop-oriented.
"For Real"
"For Real" was the previously unreleased track on the compilation, and was described as a gritty autobiographical acoustic track. It was recorded in 2000. It was released as the second single from the compilation and charted on the Adult Alternative Songs chart, peaking at #28.
Track listing
All songs were written by Tom Petty, except where noted.
Disc one
- "Free Fallin'" (Petty, Jeff Lynne) (from Full Moon Fever, 1989) – 4:15
- "Mary Jane's Last Dance" (from Greatest Hits, 1993) – 4:32
- "You Wreck Me" (Petty, Mike Campbell) (from Wildflowers, 1994) – 3:23
- "I Won't Back Down" (Petty, Lynne) (from Full Moon Fever) – 2:56
- "Saving Grace" (from Highway Companion, 2006) – 3:45
- "You Don't Know How It Feels" (from Wildflowers) – 4:47
- "Don't Do Me Like That" (from Damn the Torpedoes, 1979) – 2:41
- "Listen to Her Heart" (from You're Gonna Get It!, 1978) – 3:02
- "Breakdown" (from Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, 1976) – 2:43
- "Walls (Circus)" (from Songs and Music from "She's the One", 1996) – 4:24
- "The Waiting" (from Hard Promises, 1981) – 3:57
- "Don't Come Around Here No More" (Petty, David A. Stewart) (from Southern Accents, 1985) – 5:04
- "Southern Accents" (from Southern Accents) – 4:43
- "Angel Dream (No. 2)" (from Songs and Music from "She's the One") – 2:26
- "Dreamville" (from The Last DJ, 2002) – 3:47
- "I Should Have Known It" (from Mojo, 2010) – 3:39
- "Refugee" (Petty, Campbell) (from Damn the Torpedoes) – 3:20
- "American Girl" (from Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers) – 3:33
- "The Best of Everything" (alternate version, original version from Southern Accents) – 5:26
Disc two
- "Wildflowers" (from Wildflowers) – 3:11
- "Learning to Fly" (Petty, Lynne) (from Into the Great Wide Open, 1991) – 4:01
- "Here Comes My Girl" (Petty, Campbell) (from Damn the Torpedoes) – 4:24
- "The Last DJ" (from The Last DJ) – 3:30
- "I Need to Know" (from You're Gonna Get It!) – 2:23
- "Scare Easy" (from Mudcrutch, 2008) – 4:36
- "You Got Lucky" (Petty, Campbell) (from Long After Dark, 1982) – 3:32
- "Runnin' Down a Dream" (Petty, Lynne, Campbell) (from Full Moon Fever) – 4:22
- "American Dream Plan B" (from Hypnotic Eye, 2014) – 3:00
- "Stop Draggin' My Heart Around" (with Stevie Nicks) (Petty, Campbell) (from Nicks' album Bella Donna, 1981) – 4:03
- "Trailer" (from Mudcrutch 2, 2016) – 3:19
- "Into the Great Wide Open" (Petty, Lynne) (from Into the Great Wide Open) – 3:42
- "Room at the Top" (from Echo, 1999) – 5:01
- "Square One" (from Highway Companion) – 3:26
- "Jammin' Me" (Petty, Campbell, Bob Dylan) (from Let Me Up (I've Had Enough), 1987) – 4:03
- "Even the Losers" (from Damn the Torpedoes) – 3:35
- "Hungry No More" (from Mudcrutch 2) – 5:56
- "I Forgive It All" (from Mudcrutch 2) – 4:14
- "For Real" (previously unreleased, recorded in August 2000) – 3:52
The vinyl edition has four LPs:
- LP 1: A side (disc 1, tracks 1–5)/B side (disc 1, tracks 6–10)
- LP 2: A side (disc 1, tracks 11–15)/B side (disc 1, tracks 16–19)
- LP 3: A side (disc 2, tracks 1–5)/B side (disc 2, tracks 6–10)
- LP 4: A side (disc 2, tracks 11–15)/B side (disc 2, tracks 16–19)
Personnel
- Tom Petty – lead and backing vocals, rhythm and lead guitars, harmonica, piano, keyboards, drums on "Saving Grace", bass guitar on "Scare Easy", "Hungry No More", and "I Forgive It All"
The Heartbreakers
Mudcrutch
- Mike Campbell – lead guitar
- Tom Leadon – guitar and backing vocals on "Scare Easy", "Hungry No More", and "I Forgive It All"
- Randall Marsh – drums, percussion and backing vocals on "Scare Easy", "Hungry No More", and "I Forgive It All"
- Benmont Tench – keyboards, backing vocals
Additional musicians
- Lindsey Buckingham – backing vocals on "Walls (Circus)"
- Lenny Castro – percussion
- Donald "Duck" Dunn – bass guitar on "Stop Draggin' My Heart Around"
- George Harrison – backing vocals and acoustic guitar on "I Won't Back Down"
- Phil Jones – percussion, drums on "Full Moon Fever" tracks
- Jeff Jourard - electric guitar on "Breakdown"
- Jeff Lynne – bass guitar, guitar, keyboards and backing vocals on Full Moon Fever, Into The Great Wide Open, and Highway Companion tracks
- Stevie Nicks – lead and backing vocals on "Stop Draggin' My Heart Around"
- Lori Perry, Sharon Celani - backing vocals on "Stop Draggin' My Heart Around"
Production
Charts
Weekly charts
Year-end charts
External links
Notes and References
- Top Rock Albums – Year-End 2019. Billboard. April 7, 2021.