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Overview

Tom Petty has always battled corporations and the music industry -- fighting for lower retail prices for Hard Promises, complaining about videos, and always fighting for old-school, artist-first '60s rock aesthetics. There's a lot to admire about this stance, especially since he's essentially right about corporations having too much of a stranglehold on pop music, but it doesn't provide a solid foundation for an album, as the stultifying The Last DJ illustrates. Not every song on the record is about the death of rock & roll and the evils that corporations do, but it sure feels that way, since it begins with the one-two punch of "The Last DJ" and "Money Becomes King." The former is a bitter lament for the loss of free thought in pop culture, using the DJ as a truth-telling seer; the latter is a rewrite of "Into the Great Wide Open," all about a favorite artist who sells out. Both are didactic with their tortured metaphors and stretched narratives, but they seem subtle compared to the fourth song, "Joe," a heavy-handed tirade about a record company CEO that is unbearable in its awful, vulgar lyrics and is rendered unlistenable by Petty's hammy vocals; it is easily the worst song he's ever written. These front-loaded tracks obscure the lovely "Dreamville," the best song here, and effectively offer an early deathblow to an album that alternately finds Petty muddling through ballads and stumbling through rockers. Though his songcraft serves him well on occasion, it's only on occasion -- the aforementioned "Dreamville," "You and Me," "Have Love Will Travel" -- and the record's spare, black-and-white production doesn't add color to compositions that need it. Throughout The Last DJ, Petty sounds utterly lost -- and instead of liberating him like it did in the past, it paralyzes him, boxing him into a corner where he can't draw on his strengths. It's the first true flop in a career that, until now, had none. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine

Product Details

Release Date: 10/08/2002
Label: Warner Records / Wea
UPC: 0093624795520
Rank: 210696

Tracks

  1. Last DJ
  2. Money Becomes King
  3. Dreamville
  4. Joe
  5. When a Kid Goes Bad
  6. Like a Diamond
  7. Lost Children
  8. Blue Sunday
  9. You and Me
  10. Man Who Loves Women
  11. Have Love Will Travel
  12. Can't Stop the Sun

Album Credits

Performance Credits

Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers   Primary Artist
Tom Petty   Primary Artist,Bass,Piano,Guitar,Vocals,Ukulele
Lenny Castro   Guest Artist,Percussion
Lindsey Buckingham   Guest Artist,Vocals (Background)
Benmont Tench   Keyboards,Piano,Organ
Ron Blair   Bass
Martyn Atkins   Director
Steve Ferrone   Drums
Jon Brion   Conductor
Scott Thurston   Guitar,Ukulele,Lap Steel Guitar

Technical Credits

Zachary Larner   Design
Jim Atkins   Graphic Design
David May   Producer
Bob Ludwig   Mastering
Ed Thacker   Engineer
Don Smith   Engineer
Jon Brion   Arranger,Orchestral Arrangements
Ryan Hewitt   Assistant Engineer
Jim Scott   Engineer
Richard Dodd   Mixing,Engineer,Mastering
Mike Campbell   Composer
Tom Petty   Arranger,Composer,Producer,Orchestral Arrangements
George Drakoulias   Producer
Raena Winscott   Graphic Design
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