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Highway Companion
 
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Highway Companion

Tom Petty
4.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (166 customer reviews) More about this product

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Product Details

  • Audio CD (July 25, 2006)
  • Original Release Date: July 25, 2006
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: American
  • ASIN: B000FP2O2C
  • In-Print Editions: Vinyl  |  MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (166 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #2,204 in Music (See Bestsellers in Music)

    Popular in this category: (What's this?)

    #43 in  Music > Classic Rock > Southern Rock

Listen to Samples and Buy MP3s

Songs from this album are available to purchase as MP3s. Click on "Buy MP3" or view the MP3 Album.

Samples
Song Title Time Price
listen  1. Saving Grace (Album Version) 3:46$0.99 Buy Track
listen  2. Square One (Album Version) 3:24$0.99 Buy Track
listen  3. Flirting With Time (Album Version) 3:14$0.99 Buy Track
listen  4. Down South (Album Version) 3:25$0.99 Buy Track
listen  5. Jack (Album Version) 2:28$0.99 Buy Track
listen  6. Turn This Car Around (Album Version) 3:58$0.99 Buy Track
listen  7. Big Weekend (Album Version) 3:15$0.99 Buy Track
listen  8. Night Driver (Album Version) 4:27$0.99 Buy Track
listen  9. Damaged By Love (Album Version) 3:23$0.99 Buy Track
listen10. This Old Town (Album Version) 4:15$0.99 Buy Track
listen11. Ankle Deep (Album Version) 3:23$0.99 Buy Track
listen12. The Golden Rose (Album Version) 4:43$0.99 Buy Track


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
Four years after he took Elvis Costello's advice and bit the music/radio biz hands that have simultaneously fed and frustrated him for decades on the scabrous The Last DJ, Tom Petty returned to the studio with more personally introspective matters on his mind. Reuniting with producer/Wilbury sideman Jeff Lynne sans Heartbreakers for his third solo release proper, the veteran doesn't so much retool his trademark sound here as allow it the freedom to roam. The sonic landscape here is bluesier ("Saving Grace's opening shuffle, the haunting "Turn This Car Around") and more country-fried (the twangy energy of the blue collar lament "Big Weekend"), a return to familiar roots that produces subtly different results this time around. That sensibility now seasons songs as different as the stoned-elegant languor of "Night Driver" and the playful "Jack," where Petty and Lynn give a knowing nod and wink to the contemporary pop milieu. The stately, pop-perfect closer "Golden Rose" may lean on the Beatle-y side of their familiar sound, but it's a cliché the duo use both sparingly and shrewdly throughout, forging one of the veteran's most free-ranging and warmly satisfying efforts in a decade. Jerry McCulley

Recommended Tom Petty Discography

The Last DJ

Anthology: Through the Years

Wildflowers



Product Description
Highway Companion, Tom Petty's third solo album and first in a dozen years, is a timeless album about the passing of time. A constant companion on the road of rock n' roll, Petty, says Rolling Stone, is "rock aristocracy".


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Customer Reviews

166 Reviews
5 star:
 (74)
4 star:
 (49)
3 star:
 (26)
2 star:
 (11)
1 star:
 (6)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (166 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
95 of 101 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A BREATH OF FRESH AIR , July 25, 2006
By Mitchell Cassman (BUFFALO GROVE, IL United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   

Tom Petty fans rejoice because he's back with his third solo studio album `Highway Companion.' The album consists of 12 tracks that are perfect for a road trip and live up to the classic guitar rock sound that fans of Petty have loved for years.

`Highway Companion' finds Petty once again teaming with musicians Jeff Lynne (who produced the album and was a member of the Traveling Wilburys band with Petty) and Mike Campbell (longtime guitarist for Petty and the Heartbreakers).

The album features a stripped down studio rock sound closer to the sound that Petty did on 1989's `Full Moon Fever' than the singer's follow-up solo album `Wildflowers' in 1994. All of the songs were once again written by Petty, and the singer/songwriter also played rhythm guitar, drums, harmonica, electric piano, bass, and lead guitar and provided lead and backing vocals on the album's various tracks.

`Highway Companion' (which Petty describes as being about the passing of time) is filled with the type of rock songs that one would expect from Petty, and never strays too far from the formula of song writing that made him a rock icon. It kicks off with the "blues heavy" track "Saving Grace" - with lyrics that set the tone for the whole album.

The song is simply the perfect way to start a rock album, and you will be in love with `Highway Companion' before Petty finishes the track. This is a heavy blues song filled with guitar riffs similar to "Running Down a Dream" or something off a Bo Diddley album. Petty keeps other parts of the album bluesy with tracks like "Jack," "Turn This Car Around," and "This Old Town."

"Flirting with Time" and "Down South" are reminiscent of work done by Petty and the Heartbreakers on albums like `Echo' and `Into the Great Wide Open.' Tracks like "Big Weekend" and "Ankle Deep" seem influenced by Petty's work with the Traveling Wilburys.

Petty then slows things down with tracks like "Square One" and "Damaged by Love" which features the songwriter's unique ability to craft lyrics that seem simple and profound at the same time. If you were not hooked by the end of the first track, "Square One" will win you over.

If you are a fan of Tom Petty's solo work or his work with the Heartbreakers then you will want this album. It is a good blend of all the influences throughout Petty's career, and every song is a hit. Petty packs the album full of guitar driven rock, catchy lyrics, and choruses that have good enough hooks to keep you singing them after one listen.
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56 of 62 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Rockin' the Indian Summer Away, August 3, 2006
By J. Chasin (NYC, NY) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)      
A new Tom Petty record is always a welcome occasion (even the ones produced by Jeff Lynne.) Highway Companion is Petty's third solo album, and the previous two (Full Moon Fever and Wildflowers) are generally considered to be among the best in his now-30-years-long history.

Jeff Lynne produces with a lighter touch than usual, which is a good thing; he lets the music breathe, and as a result it sounds earthy and organic, which is how Petty should be recorded. Many of the best songs harken back to the breezy, wistful Wildflowers, especially the lovely "Square One," which Petty introduced in concert this past June by calling it one of the songs he was especially close to.

Guitarist (and Heartbreaker "co-captain") Mike Campbell is, as usual, the secret weapon here. Campbell is absolutely meticulous about guitar sounds; he manages to get precisely the right tone on each solo, each track. Listen to the way his brief but poignant solo pierces like an arrow when he steps up during "Down South;" prickly, trebly, a little bit of echo. If you listen closely, you can hear just how much effort Campbell puts into sounding so effortless. Listen to his full, rubbery tone on "Night Driver;" he manages to speak volumes just by the sound of his guitar, almost regardless of what he plays. And what he plays is going to be note-perfect and spot-on.

Indeed, the credits list only three players-- Petty (who covers the drums), Lynne (bass, among other things) and Campbell. The record has a casual feel to it, a gentle, friendly and inviting vibe. After repeated listens, the message-- about the passage of time-- begins to seep in ("Turn this car around/I'm going back...") "You can look back, babe... but its best not to stare," Petty sings in "Big Weekend." "If you don't run, you rust."

I liked Echo (1999) a lot, and was unmoved by The Last DJ (2002). Highway Companion is a "small" record, in the way the Wildflowers was small compared to Damn the Torpedoes. But it is full of grace and easy, confident singing and playing, by a guy (and his musical cronies) who has little left to prove, and yet manages to prove he's still vital. It isn't a pump-your-fist-in-the-air record; it is a sway-in-the-breeze-in-Indian-Summer record. BUt I'm already sure it will end up one of my favorites from the Petty canon.

Petty is on the road with the Heartbreakers, celebrating 30 years together. The tour is a big, boistrous celebration. This record is also celebratory, but in a very different way. It is an adult record, full of tasty and tasteful playing, confronting the passage of time but ultimately finding an easy peace with it. A gently strummed, unilateral cease fire with the passage of time. Bravo.
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18 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Superb songwriting, spirited playing, stellar production...an instant classic, August 1, 2006
Tom Petty's timeless HIGHWAY COMPANION is one of those albums that needs some time to marinate in your CD player, iPod, computer, or soul...wherever you best like to house your favorite music. For the most part, it doesn't leap out of the speakers and grab you by the throat, so much as it slips up behind you and drapes a friendly, understanding arm across your shoulders. For that reason, I've waited a week before writing this review, to allow the songs to soak in; and I can honestly say that after listening to it more than twenty times in the past seven days, I'm still finding new bits to love about it every time.

First of all, it starts with the quality of the songs themselves. Tom Petty takes a backseat to no one lyrically. He is as fine a lyricist as there is in this generation, spanning everyone from Bob Dylan to Smokey Robinson to Van Morrison. There are so many incredible one-liners and epiphanies throughout this one CD that it would be a career's worth for many writers. For example ...

* "It's hard to say/who you are these days/but you run on anyway/don't you baby?"
* "Last time though I hid my tracks/So well I could not get back"
* "He was caught up in a lie/he half-believed"
* "You're flirting with time baby/flirting with time, and maybe/time baby/is catching up with you"
* "Create myself down South/impress all the women/pretend I'm Samuel Clemens/wear seersucker and white linens"
* "If you don't run you rust"

...and there are so many more, but I'll let you discover them for yourself.

TP's masterful way with a melody doesn't disappoint either. Each song works its way into that spot in your brain that later triggers bouts of humming, whistling, and meditative la-la-la-ing.

Several of the songs are flat-out gorgeous, particularly "Square One," "Damaged By Love," and "Golden Rose" (which can best be described as a Pink Floydian sea chanty). Others mine a bluesy vein: the John Lee Hooker-esque boom-boom of "Saving Grace," the "Last Dance with Mary Jane"-esque hum of "Turn This Car Around," and the "You Don't Know How it Feels"-esque shuffle of "This Old Town." Elsewhere, "Flirting With Time" flies with the Byrds, "Jack" is spare pop with cool martial breaks and surfing guitar, while "Big Weekend" and "Ankle Deep" are delightful returns to the rollicking country rock of Petty and producer Jeff Lynne's Travelling Wilbury days.

Speaking of Jeff Lynne, he shows once more why he is one of the best and most respected producers in the history of rock and roll. His sensitivity to Petty's songs, coupled with his unparalleled studio craft, results in a sound rich in subtle brilliance. Lynne's enthusiasm and obvious love of the recording process is a somewhat needed kick in the pants/fresh drink of water for Petty, who's previous effort (with the Heartbreakers), THE LAST DJ, was excellent, but dour...and remains underappreciated by the general public. On HIGHWAY COMPANION, you can tell these guys are having a blast, even when the subject matter is serious, or when the tone is delicate.

The playing is spirited throughout, with a core band of Petty, Lynne, and longtime Heartbreaker Mike Campbell handling the instrumentation. Make no mistake: Mike Campbell is one of the great rock guitarists EVER and he shines alongside TP and Lynne, who are no slouches, either, when it comes to working the frets. Even though the name of Rick Rubin does not appear on any credits, the fact that this album is released through his American Recordings label is notable, and his spirit infuses this entire project with a heightened sense of honesty and integrity.

The CD packaging--especially the beautiful sepia-toned booklet--is topnotch and pleasing to the eye...quite befitting the quality of the project overall.

To sum up: I don't want to add a lot of hype to an album that is so wonderfully understated, but I sincerely believe that it's not only one of the best albums of this year, but certainly one of the best of this decade and one that will stand the test of time...an enduring classic for anyone who loves good music made by real people on real instruments, with lots of love and soul.

Key tracks: all, but especially "Saving Grace," "Down South," "Square One," "Flirting With Time," and "Damaged By Love"

BONUS INFORMATION: For a highly enjoyable and informative book on Tom Petty and his monumental career, check out CONVERSATIONS WITH TOM PETTY by Paul Zollo. It contains wonderful, warm stories about the many artists with whom TP has worked, as well as a virtual clinic on how to write classic songs.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

3.0 out of 5 stars I want a really good TP album next time
A few of these songs are good.....JUST ENOUGH to make the TP FANS starve for a really good HEARTBRAKERS album. THIS album, really is HALF finished. Read more
Published 1 month ago

3.0 out of 5 stars MORE LIKE CEMETERY COMPANION
Just like every other artist from this era, Tom Petty has mellowed way down from past works like Full Moon Fever. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Stephen Todd

5.0 out of 5 stars The best Petty CD since Wildflowers!
That wobbly voice we all love (except my wife, who, uh, does not), excellent songs, that 12-string electric guitar stuff (have you ever priced a 12-string electric? Read more
Published 2 months ago by Ceferino Lamb

5.0 out of 5 stars A subtle, satisfying album
It took a while for this album to take hold. At first listen it seems thin and uninspiring as there are no obvious rock anthems on it. Read more
Published 3 months ago by Peter Hansen

3.0 out of 5 stars I'm not sure this is TOM PETTY
This CD just doesn't sound like TOM PETTY. I don't know if it is the new style of writing...playing music....or....singing. BUT. Read more
Published 8 months ago

4.0 out of 5 stars Like fine wine
Like fine wine Tom Petty keeps getting better and better with age. He's also mellowed quite a bit as well. Read more
Published 9 months ago by Bill Wilbury

2.0 out of 5 stars I agree, I don't get the lyrics as well
I agree with the reviewer below. I don't like the style of writing or lyrics in this album. Besides 2 songs, maybe 3, you have to try to think to hard to understand the meaning... Read more
Published 9 months ago

2.0 out of 5 stars who wrote the lyrics ??
Good music,but diffently TOM PETTY's worst writing. YEP,the lyrics are bad.Real bad!!! Music is good (NORMAL), but the lyrics just bore the listener to death. Read more
Published 10 months ago

3.0 out of 5 stars Has a really cool song on it
This album "DOES NOT HAVE", that Full Moon Fever feeling. And it hurts the album really bad (IT JUST DOESN'T MAKE YOU FEEL GOOD ). Read more
Published 14 months ago

5.0 out of 5 stars Bought After NPR Interview
I bought this album after listening to Petty being interviewed on NPR's Fresh Air where he talked about making the album. Read more
Published 17 months ago by J. Avellanet

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  Discussion Replies Latest Post
Jeff Lynne is a Tom Petty Disaster 11 2 months ago
Blooper on track 4? 5 September 2008
Petty and Lynne are a brilliant team 1 July 2007
Doesn't play on a computer 1 July 2006
See Him Live 1 July 2006
Same old Petty songs with new lyrics 2 July 2006
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Highway Companion opens new browser window by Tom Petty opens new browser window is mainly Heartland Rock, quite Singer-Songwriter, with hints of Album-Oriented Rock (AOR)”

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What Do Customers Ultimately Buy After Viewing This Item?

Highway Companion
71% buy the item featured on this page:
Highway Companion 4.0 out of 5 stars (166)
$14.99
Wildflowers
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$12.99
Greatest Hits
7% buy
Greatest Hits 4.1 out of 5 stars (17)
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Anthology: Through the Years
7% buy
Anthology: Through the Years 4.6 out of 5 stars (70)
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