Product Description
Hard To Find Early U.S. Pressing Of The Debut Tom Petty And The Heartbreakers LP ~ Still In Top Condition Over 43 Years Later! Vinyl Looks Barely Played, Labels Are Clean.
Condition – Vinyl: NEAR MINT!
Condition – Cover: EXCELLENT! Light wear, couple of small spine creases. Red sticker on back.
Side 1:
Rockin’ Around (With You)
Breakdown
Hometown Blues
The Wild One, Forever
Anything That’s Rock ‘N’ Roll
Side 2:
Strangered In The Night
Fooled Again (I Don’t Like It)
Mystery Man
Luna
American Girl
AMG –
Many highlights. “Breakdown", "Rockin' Around (With You)", "Hometown Blues", "The Wild One, Forever”, "American Girl”… 4 ½ Stars At the time Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers' debut was released in 1976, they were fresh enough to almost be considered punk. They weren't as reckless or visionary as the Ramones, but they shared a similar love for pure '60s rock and, for the Heartbreakers, that meant embracing the Byrds as much as the Stones. And that's pretty much what this album is -- tuneful jangle balanced by a tough garage swagger. At times, the attitude and the sound override the songwriting, but that's alright, since the slight songs ("Anything That's Rock 'N' Roll," to pick a random example) are still infused with spirit and an appealing surface. Petty & the Heartbreakers feel underground on this album, at least to the extent that power pop was underground in 1976; with Dwight Twilley providing backing vocals for "Strangered in the Night," the similarities between the two bands (adherence to pop hooks and melodies, love of guitars) become apparent. Petty wound up eclipsing Twilley because he rocked harder, something that's evident throughout this record. Take the closer "American Girl" -- it's a Byrds song by any other name, but he pushed the Heartbreakers to treat it as a rock & roll song, not as something delicate. There are times where the album starts to drift, especially on the second side, but the highlights -- "Rockin' Around (With You)," "Hometown Blues," "The Wild One, Forever," the AOR staples "Breakdown" and "American Girl" -- still illustrate how refreshing Petty & the Heartbreakers sounded in 1976. 4 ½ Stars