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Tom Petty: 'I joined the conspiracy to put black music on the popular white radio', Musicares Person of the Year - 2017

January 31, 2018

10 February 2017, Los Angeles, California, USA

Wow. Thank you, thank you so much. Thank you, thank you.

Twenty years ago I’d have been way too cynical to do this, but I’m 66 now and I feel ya. I thank you for this and it’s a great honor. I’ve watched the whole show backstage. I’ve never — I’m really at a loss for words. The music has been wonderful, and I thank all these artists for coming.

I’d also like, right off the bat, to thank my band the Heartbreakers. They’re such an important part of all of this — I didn’t want to forget them. I know it’s been a long night, I won’t talk too long. I want to play you a bit more music. We have some friends we brought with us and we’re gonna get to that in just a second.

I’m just so beyond honored to be here for MusiCares. For something that does something for musicians. I know people that this has directly affected. And they know how to do it. They don’t ask for a lot of paperwork and the money shows up. And they’ve helped so many people.

And I thank all my friends and the artists that have come. To be here in the presence of so many great American songwriters is amazing. You know, Jackson Browne, Don Henley, Lucinda Williams, Randy Newman. We’re truly honored.

It’s been about two years since I played with the Heartbreakers. Honestly, I’ve been producing records the last couple of years. We got together last week and rehearsed for this thing, and I realized I may actually be in one of the best two or three Rock and Roll bands there is. I’m so proud of them.

I got into Rock and Roll at age ten. I was collecting records — Rock and Roll records. Not rock; this was Rock and Roll. The roll designates a swing — there’s a swing in the roll. It’s a music that was created by black people, given its name by a white DJ named Alan Freed who, along with Sam Phillips — in music they saw it as a conspiracy to get black music on white popular radio. And when Sam found Elvis he called Alan and said “We’re ready to roll.”

The music became popular and it empowered the youth of America. The government got very nervous — especially the Republicans. They put Elvis in the Army and they put Chuck Berry in jail. Things calmed down for a couple of years. But it was too late; the music had reached England. And they remembered it.

In 1964, The Beatles came. I had my eyes opened like so many others and I joined the conspiracy to put black music on the popular white radio. And Rock and Roll goes on, you know. More like the blues or jazz now. But I’m heartened to see these young bands — The Head and the Heart, Cage the Elephant, The Shelters. They’re gonna carry this forward. And we have to be there to support them through it. Because there ain’t nothing like a good Rock and Roll band, people — here to tell you.

Let me kind of fast forward here — you know my story. This is kind of a surreal moment in a surreal life. For some cosmic reason, so many of the artists that I adored came into my world without me calling  -  they just showed up and we played together and we became friends. And there were so many people. The first one was Roger McGuinn of The Byrds who was there right away with my first record.

And so much has happened to me that you wouldn’t believe. I’m not gonna try to tell it all to you, but I’m thinking right now about one particular thing. I was looking out there — I know so many people here. Mo, Mo and Olivia are out there. I love Mo and I love Liv. Me and George Harrison and Jeff Lynne one night were at Mo Ostin’s house — this was before, we were just working on the idea of the Traveling Wilburys — and I had written this song Free Fallin’ and done the record and taken it to my label, MCA. And they rejected the record. And that had never happened to me before. I was like, wow, what do I do?

So, we forgot about it. And we were at Mo’s house and dinner ended and George said, “Let’s get the guitars out and sing a little bit.” And we sang and George said, “Let’s do that ‘Free Fallin’’ Tom. Play that.”

So we had a kind of Wilbury arrangement of it with harmony. And we did it. And Lenny Waronker is sitting there, he said, “That’s a hit.” With two acoustic guitars, you know? I said, “Well, my record company won’t put it out.” And Mo says, “I’ll fuckin’ put it out.”

But anyway — not supposed to do that. Ok. I was going to tell you, sorry. I’m trying so hard to be good. I got my wife is here. And my daughter Adria. I’m really on my best behavior tonight. But I did — I wanted to tell you one little thing. I got into town in 1974 and I was signed by Denny Cordell to Leon Russell’s Shelter Records. And Leon brought me over to his house and he said, “I want you to just hang around.” He like the songs that I’d done. “If it comes to a thing where we need some words, I need you to be here and I’ll pay you for it.” And he was gonna pay me, I was gonna be there, right?

So, the first session, in comes George Harrison and Ringo and Jim Keltner and they didn’t need any words. But those cats were so cool, you know? And I found myself — after the session when we were hanging out — I found myself slipping my sunglasses on. Leon said, “What the hell are you doing with the dark glasses, man?” I said, “I don’t know? It feels cool, you know, like Jimmy Keltner.” He goes, “Wearing a sunglasses at night is an honor you earn. Lou Adler had Johnny Rivers and the Mamas and Papas before he put them glasses on. Jack Nicholson mad really shitty Boris Carloff movies before he put them glasses on.”

Well, I’m putting my glasses on. But, I thank Leon for that advice.

I was going to tell you, I was fortunate enough to know the great Johnny Cash. I loved him since I saw him on the Hootenanny television show in 1962. They filmed in Gainesville, Florida.

Well, I actually didn’t see him that week. The paper said he was a little loopy and punched a policeman and did not appear that night. And I loved him. I loved all his songs. You know, “Hey Porter,” “Don’t Take Your Guns to Town,” “Big River” — you young songwriters, you wanna be a songwriter, just listen to “Big River” about sixty times and you’ll write something.

But we made an album together, Johnny and the Heartbreakers. And it won the GRAMMY for Best Country Record of the Year — without ever being played once on a country record station. But that’s alright, because it was actually a Rock and Roll record — Johnny was pretty Rock and Roll.

This morning, I was looking through a box and a card fell out — and it was from John on my 50th birthday. And it said, “Happy birthday. You’re a good man to ride the river with.” And that’s all I wanna be — good man to ride the river with. And I’m gonna keep riding the river. Thank you.

 

 

Established in 1989 by The Recording Academy, MusiCares provides a safety net of critical assistance for music people in times of need. MusiCares’ services and resources cover a wide range of financial, medical and personal emergencies, and each case is treated with integrity and confidentiality. MusiCares also focuses the resources and attention of the music industry on human service issues that directly impact the health and welfare of the music community. For more information, please visit www.musicares.org.

Source: http://www.hypebot.com/hypebot/2017/02/tom...

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In MUSIC 2 Tags TOM PETTY, HEARTBREAKERS, ROCK AND ROLL, MUSICARES, TRANSCRIPT, MUSIC, ROCK
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Bruce Springsteen: 'You can't triumph without music', Musicares Person of the Year - 2013

May 20, 2017

8 February 2013, Los Angeles, California, USA

Thank you, thanks a lot. It’s kind of a freaky experience, the whole thing, it’s – it is
a bit like, this is the Italian wedding Patti and I never had. It’s a huge Bar Mitzvah.
Your life does – did kind of pass and John legend made me sound like Gershwin, I
love that. Neil Young made me sound like the Sex Pistols, I love that.

You know, what a night, quite a night, uh makes me proud to be a musician. Here
tonight with my mom, she is 87, she is here with me, yeah. My sister, it’s her
birthday, happy birthday sis. My lovely daughter is with me tonight, her boyfriend,
and Ricky and Marian are my cousins who raised our children with us, thank you
Ricky and Marian for being here with me.

Got to walk through red carpet, that was – it was fun. And Patty, what can I say,
you know, 20, 25, years we’ve been together, love you, love you. I’m glad you
could all share this night with me. I’m glad to be here for MusiCares, it’s a great
organization, it takes care of musicians. They take care of the people who is taking
care of us with their voices and with their songs, with their blood, with their sweat
and tears and with their lovely and great artistry.

The people whose music have inspired us and soothe their broken hearts, angered
us, whose music we’ve got married to, divorced to, music that’s been with us on
our blackest days, stood by us in war and in peace, made us laugh, made us be
strong, helped us not be stupid and formed us and loved us.

Music, do you believe in magic? There is no faith required, none whatsoever,
because it’s all like this evening, right? Here in front of you. I’ve seen it, I’ve been
a part of the miracle of music. I’ve seen people tired and depressed and weary and
worn out, soul off. And I’ve seen them revived, rise from their seats and dance.

The Taliban will never win, not now or not ever, not here, not in Timbuktu by
banning the music and dancing, don’t tell them. The minute you do that, you label
yourself a tyrant and your cruel days are numbered. The minute Timbuktu was
liberated, what did people do? They played music, and they danced. I was so happy
to read that in the paper. I was happy for them, and happy for us.

“Vive la France!”

You can’t triumph without music because music is life; music is the birds singing,
the wheat rustling in the fields, strumming of the wind through the leaves of that
tree that was in the backyard of your childhood home. The earth and the stars
rolling through the heavens at night, before man or a woman heard their name,
they heard music. They heard the wind rushing past their eardrums, the grasses
humming with insects, the birds knocking and rocking in the trees.

Thank you MusiCares for taking care of musicians, because we are bad with our
money, we spend it too freely, and on too many stupid things. We drink it away, we
do drugs, we love too many and the wrong people, we are the wrong people. You
know, we fuck up many people’s lives, many people’s lives, while setting fire to
our own dancing down the street. We are a brother and sisterhood of magical fuckups,
and we need you.

Because once in a while we get it right, and then we sing about it, and we sing
about it and we are musicians. Take me for instance, I am here tonight under totally
false pretenses, because whatever philanthropy I’ve ever done, it usually just
involves me playing the guitar, making a few bucks and bringing some attention to
the folks that are really doing the work, shouldn’t count really much. I mean, I was
going to be playing the guitar anyway.

You know, and I am actually, I’m here tonight because last year, Mr. Landau, my
manager called me up and said, “Boss, what do you think about opening the
Grammys this year with your new song, and we had a new record, and I thought it
was one of the berst records that I ever made, and so I wanted to promote it, right?
And I said, “It sounds great.” Because I am going to call Ken Ehrlich right now, all
right, he is the Grammy producer, I met him, I don’t know maybe back in ‘96 when
I sang The Ghost of Tom Joad, and he had me under like 10,000 lights, it looked
like I was going to be abducted by aliens.

We sort of – but anyway, I said go ahead call Ken; John calls back the next day
says, “Ken loves the song, and he would love to have a 63-year-old man open the
Grammys, and – and would you like to be MusiCares Person of the Year?” Now,
I’m pretty sure he said, “And” though he might have said “If.” He might have actually said, if you will be MusiCares Person of the Year or he might have said,
“And”, and then he left a really long pause so that the “And” became “if” while it
was hanging out there. And he said, we’re going to be out there anyway for you to
pick up your best album award, because we are optimists. So even though I have
gathered all of these people, some of my great heroes, all these new youngsters
here tonight is fabulous musicians. The evening actually had its origins in a
mercenary promotional opportunity.

Um, but, it’s a great night anyway, because people played music. So I’m having
one of the loveliest nights of my life tonight, I was just, I got the auction, you
know; just some I’ve really – the circle is a strange thing.

You know Ben Harper had Charlie Musselwhite playing with him on the
harmonica, you know, I opened for Charlie Musselwhite in a little club in San
Francisco, he will not remember me, right? When I was my daughter’s age, you
know, and I have Patty Smith here in my life again. We always called that song our
song, but really it’s her song, right? I would have never finished it, I couldn’tdidn’t
have a story and the beautiful story of Fred’s Telephone Call, and if I’d had
finished it, I would have never had a hit with you, I would have never had. And see
you gave me one of my greatest, and I play this song almost every night, so it’s
your song and thank you for being here along with all of the other musicians, that’s
the humbling thing.

I mean, it’s wonderful to see people come up and sing your music, the young
musicians. Musicians like the great musicians that are gathered here tonight, there
is a group of people who are always in search, born searchers, born to get lost, born
to get lost. Because that’s 98% of it and then suddenly, suddenly you’re home. All
people who are always in search of the power to sustain, the best of ourselves and
to seek out the best in you, our fans and our audience. We want to be great.

Like Neil says in his book, “Be great or be gone,” we want to be great, we want to
be important in your life, that was all that mattered to me. I didn’t care if I was
going to be a, I don’t know if it’s going to make it rich or be famous or but I
wanted to be great more than anything else, and I wanted to be important in your
life.

Because you keep us in search of the force that reignites our gifts, our ability to
make you want to move, to dance, to love, to make love, to be angry, to act. When
we play, we want the hair to stand up on your arms; we want you to feel the glory.
And we want you to be glad of being alive. And really at the end of the day, that’s
all there is to it. My fellow musicians, young and old tonight, thanks for taking
care of me and taking care of my songs this evening. I’ll never forget it and I owe
each and every one of you; one. You made me feel like: Person of the Year. Now
give me that damn guitar.
—————-

Springsteen Set List
with Jake Clemons, Nils Lofgren, Patti Scialfa, Cindy Mizelle, Curtis King

1. We Take Care of Our Own
2. Death to My Hometown (with Tom Morello)
3. Thunder Road (with Roy Bittan, Morello, Garry Tallent, Max Weinberg)
4. Born to Run (with Bittan, Morello, Tallent, Weinberg)
5. Glory Days (with Tribute Artists)

Tribute Set List

1. Adam Raised a Cain - ALABAMA SHAKES
2. Because the Night - PATTI SMITH
3. Atlantic City - NATALIE MAINES, BEN HARPER & CHARLIE MUSSELWHITE
4. American Land - KEN CASEY
5. My City of Ruins - ZAC BROWN & MAVIS STAPLES
6. I’m on Fire - MUMFORD & SONS
7. American Skin - JACKSON BROWNE featuring TOM MORELLO
8. My Hometown - EMMLOU HARRIS
9. One Step Up - KENNY CHESNEY
10. Streets of Philadelphia - ELTON JOHN
11. Hungry Heart - JUANES
12. Tougher Than the Rest - TIM MCGRAW & FAITH HILL
13. The Ghost of Tom Joad - TOM MORELLO & JIM JAMES
14. Dancing in the Sark - JOHN LEGEND
15. Lonesome Day - STING
16. Born in the U.S.A. - NEIL YOUNG & CRAZY HORSE

 

 

Source: http://brucespringsteen.net/timeline/music...

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In MUSIC Tags BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN, MUSICARES, PERSON OF THE YEAR, GRAMMYS
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