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Music review: Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers – ‘Hypnotic Eye’

2 min read
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Music review: Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers - 'Hypnotic Eye’
2 / 2

Rhodes

Over the past 38 years, Tom Petty and his Heartbreakers have been producing memorable albums that are seamlessly woven into the fabric of American music culture.

Albums such as “Damn the Torpedoes,” “Hard Promises,” “Southern Accents” and “Into the Great Wide Open” have provided us classic tracks like “Refugee,” “The Waiting,” “Don’t Come Around Here No More” and “Learning to Fly.”

Four years after the release of the blues-heavy “Mojo,” Petty returns to deliver vividly descriptive songs about disillusionment, determination, survival and redemption.

“American Dream Plan B” opens the album with pulsating guitar riffs and PettyĢƵ feisty, raspy vocals as he growls, “My success is anybodyĢƵ guess.” PettyĢƵ success may be determined, but the people he sings about struggle with maintaining a meager living and providing the best they can for their family. While “Mojo” felt more like a midnight drive on a lonely highway, “Hypnotic Eye” possesses more of an early morning, kick-in-the-pants vibe. Throughout the 11-song set, “Hypnotic Eye” delivers sonic textures of pulsating, infectious rock built on solid songwriting and superb musicianship. Never one to rest on his laurels, PettyĢƵ latest songwriting effort certainly places him on the level with the likes of Bruce Springsteen, Bob Dylan and Neil Young. Lead guitarist Mike Campbell and keyboardist Benmont Tench fuel the throwback feel of “Red River,” while “Fault Lines” is a scorching confessional that flaunts a chaotic urgency.

“Forgotten Man” begins with the comfortable familiarity of “American Girl” as Petty sounds as vibrant and alive as he did when recording the bandĢƵ 1976 debut release.

While the characters of PettyĢƵ new arrangements may be struggling to capture the American Dream, they certainly aren’t giving up or backing down. Themes of perseverance and hope are planted on tracks like “All You Can Carry,” “Sins of My Youth” and “U Get Me High.”

With “Hypnotic Eye,” the 63-year-old rocker storms back with a raw, gritty set of new American classics.

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