
More of the Music of Tom Petty
This commentary was written way back in 2011 after playing the best sounding copy of the album we had ever heard up to that point.
For those who may be interested, we offer some unsolicited audio advice toward the end of our review regarding what kind of stereo is not appropriate for Tom Petty’s albums.
Our story from 2011:
This Minty looking Shelter original LP has THE TWO BEST SOUNDING SIDES we have ever heard for this album! It’s a freak in the world of Tom Petty records, which tend to have NO good sounding sides.
And this is the band’s MASTERPIECE to boot, with four or five of their best and Hardest Rockin’ songs.
Both sides come flyin’ out of the gate with straight ahead rockers that have the Big Sound we go crazy for here at Better Records.
Side one was so unbelievable that we had to award it the rare Four Plus (A++++) rating.
Of course the sound is punchy and alive — with Hot Stampers, what else would they be? — but where did all that studio ambience come from?
Simple: the best copies have the RESOLUTION that’s missing from the average pressing. You know the kind of run-of-the-mill LP I’m talking about: punchy but crude and just a bit too aggressive to really enjoy.
Oh, but not this bad boy. Sweetly textured guitars, breathy vocals — all the subtleties of a Top Quality Recording are here, along with prodigious amounts of bass and powerful dynamics. (Check out that drum sound!)
If you can play this one good and loud you will be shocked at how good it sounds.
I’ve paraphrased a bit of commentary from Aja for this listing where we discussed the kind of changes we needed to go through here at Better Records to make it possible to play a hard-drivin’ rock record like this one and get it to sound the way we always wanted it to.

