Tom Petty’s final interview was with the Los Angeles Times, but no one expected it to be the case.
Writer Randy Lewis introduced the article with a chilling realization: “This is not the Tom Petty story that I intended to write.” Conducting an interview with Petty, 66-years-old at the time, and just a few days before his death, Lewis later wrote, “I had no clue that this would turn out to be the last, for me and for him.”
In the interview, Petty addressed hitting the road with The Heartbreakers on their massively successful 40th Anniversary Tour. “This year has been a wonderful year for us,” said Petty. “This has been that big slap on the back we never got.”
READ MORE: Taylor Swift remembers how Tom Petty inspired her
Petty was also excited to continue mentoring upcoming L.A. rock band, The Shelter. “They’ve been on the road for a year and we got together recently,” Petty said. “They played me some of their new stuff and I was just blown away.”
In addition, he also opened up about his love of hosting his SiriusXM radio show. “I love doing my ‘Buried Treasure’ show,” Petty confessed. “It keeps me listening like I used to do. I always listen. I could come home and I would spend the rest of the night just lying on the floor or the sofa listening to albums. It was like a movie to me. I still do really, and doing the radio show ensures that I’ll be sitting there listening.”
Get daily National news
Petty, who was active as a musician for 47 years before is untimely death, never stopped working. “It’s hard for me… If I don’t have a project going, I don’t feel like I’m connected to anything. I don’t even think it’s that healthy for me. I like to get out of bed and have a purpose,” he admitted.
Ultimately, Petty’s life was cut short after suffering cardiac arrest on Monday, Oct. 2, but he left the world the same way he arrived: a true rock star to the core.
READ MORE: Miley Cyrus honours the late Tom Petty with haunting
“We’re a real rock ’n’ roll band — always have been,” he said of The Heartbreakers. “And to us, in the era we came up in, it was a religion in a way. It was more than commerce, it wasn’t about that. It was about something much greater.”
He added, “It was about moving people, and changing the world, and I really believed in rock ’n’ roll — I still do. I believed in it in its purest sense, its purest form… It’s unique to have a band that knows each other that long and that well.”
Petty concluded: “I’m just trying to get the best I can get out of it.”
Comments