Giant

The Super Bowl is a uniquely American event. But this year it felt more symbolically American than other championship games in recent memory. It wasn't merely two teams competing, but also two American ideals pitted against each other: Perfection, as embodied by The New England Patriots; and overcoming doubts and obstacles to achieve greatness, as exemplified by The New York Giants. As much as we strive for, or claim to exalt, perfection, it was interesting how many people, including myself, were hoping for an upset by the Giants, for them to mar an otherwise flawless season by the Patriots.

Within this context--a battle between grit and glamor--Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers were the ideal Super Bowl half time performers. There was little that Fox or the producers could do to super size or glamorize the performance. No amount of lights or camera trickery could produce action that wasn't there. Petty is no spectacle. He and his band looked like dads dressed up at their daughter's wedding. Petty played some of his best-known songs, from "American Girl" to "I Won't Back Down". The delivery was staid and earnest, with very little flash. The drama and movement of Petty's songs have always been in the lyrics themselves, or in the stripping down of the excess, the sudden emphasis on a perfectly constructed chord progression. "American Girl" sounds like it could have been written in recent years. (It almost was, by The Strokes on their debut album.). And "Free Fallin", a meditation on life, love, and loss, was sung by tens of thousands in the crowd. It was a more heartfelt moment of togetherness than the one conjured by American Idol's Jordin Spark's delivery of our national anthem.

Tom Petty came of age when the earnestness in music was beginning to wane, when disco, glam rock, mythic tales, and pretty boys were all the rage. What Petty's albums lacked in high concept they made up for in structure and solidity. With his modest looks and without gimmicks: no monsters to tame or to slay, no superfluousness at all really, he and his band made records that have outlasted his more outlandish peers. Springsteen is the other survivor from that era. But while Springsteen is a street preacher, with always an air of sacredness and rage to his songs, Petty is more of a street sweeper. His songs speak of what's been left behind or used up, and they put a polish on what we thought to be dull and dreary. His best songs are bursts of possibility born from dinginess, from nothingness; the guitars jangle, the choruses lift you up, and all the while Petty's voice is there to keep things earthbound.

Not many musicians can say that their tour started at the Super Bowl. Beginning yesterday in Glendale, Petty and his band will traverse across the US on and off until August, playing multiple nights at stadiums and amphitheaters. Maybe so many people love Tom Petty because he, like The Giants, is an underdog. With millions of records sold, he may not seem like one; but if you listen, his songs tell a different story.

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They last five minutes of that game were truly exciting to watch.

Sent by Meagan | 10:55 AM ET | 02-04-2008

I didn't watch the superbowl. I was studying like a good student.

Tom Petty was one of the headliners last year at Bonnaroo, and one of my favorite moments of the festival was walking back to our tent, listening to him and others sing out "let's roll another joint!" It was quite amusing.

Sent by Jaime | 11:39 AM ET | 02-04-2008

Wow, you lost me here...Super Bowl & Tom Petty. Keepin' it "real" with NPR...

Sent by Stacey | 11:53 AM ET | 02-04-2008

What I've always found most fascinating about Tom Petty is how every generation is able to claim him for their own, often without full knowledge of what came before the album they first noticed.

I may not always completely dig what Petty does, but his music's always growing, which one can't say for many bands out there, new or old.

Sent by Elizabeth | 12:23 PM ET | 02-04-2008

He should have played Even The Losers and dedicated it to the Patriots.

Sent by Rick | 12:45 PM ET | 02-04-2008

I have to admit that I washed my dishes and took out my trash while Tom Petty played. I'm not one for the Heartbreakers. Now, LAST year...Prince. Prince was hands down the best part of last year's Super Bowl.

How about Eli Manning putting together a Joe Montana drive to win that thing last night? Damn.

Sent by Nick L. | 12:51 PM ET | 02-04-2008

i'm with you, nicely written.

Sent by AguaLinda | 12:53 PM ET | 02-04-2008

it's cool to imagine a stadium full of people- who weren't there for a tom petty concert- singing along to "free fallin." maybe one of tom petty's songs would make a good choice for a campaign song?

i saw amy ray perform "refugee" with the butchies once and everyone in the audience was singing the words. i'd never really paid attention to the lyrics before then. it was really inspiring and cool.

Sent by lea | 1:01 PM ET | 02-04-2008

did anyone else think those sales genie ads were racist?

p.s. for some reason, i hate tom brady. i took a study break during the last few minutes of the game to jump for joy.

p.p.s. i don't know who jordin sparks is, but i thought she rocked it.

Sent by Lauren | 1:09 PM ET | 02-04-2008

The halftime show had one of the most glaring juxtapositions in recent memory.

YIN:

They respect our desire to be entertained by a real band with real music.

YANG:

They think we're fools/idiots/lemmings:

The "fans" rushing with orgasmic enthusiasm to the stage as Petty began playing was moving and was obviously not staged or choreographed. Many of the 14 to 15 year old "fans" have loved Tom Petty since his glory days 20 years ago.

Whatever happened to lighters? I miss lighters.

Sent by Chad Bly | 2:40 PM ET | 02-04-2008

I know my living room was full of college kids singing along at the top of our lungs.

Sent by Kim | 2:57 PM ET | 02-04-2008

It seemed to me that Jordin Sparks was lip-synching to a pre-recorded vocal track.

Sent by Eagle Eye Smith | 3:37 PM ET | 02-04-2008

i was in a room full of 30-something hipsters who spent the halftime deriding petty. but he's one of my favorite artists. as you said, there's no flash and no glitz, but his playing is so SOLID and real and those songs feel like home to me. i'd love to see him live, i think it would really change the way i hear those songs.

Sent by makyo | 3:43 PM ET | 02-04-2008

here here, carrie -- beautiful post on a wonderful artist.

Sent by sheena | 3:55 PM ET | 02-04-2008

Eagle Eye, she probably was lip-synching to herself. I read that the Super Bowl does that because it's really hard for singers to hear themselves over all the noise, plus they need the timing to be perfect for the fighter planes.

And "Refugee" is my favorite TP&HB song. I saw them years ago--1989 or 1990, Lenny Kravitz opened. Whatever happened to him?

Sent by Laura E. | 4:35 PM ET | 02-04-2008

i missed part of the performance by tom petty! i heard it though and i was singing in the shower. the game was an upset. i was going for the giants and it was sack after sack after sack giants getting their butts kicked completely and i pretty much teared up when they got that touchdown in the last couple minutes of the fourth quarter my dad was screaming at the top of his lungs and pretty much scared me half to death.
that was a really great post kudos

Sent by danielle | 5:08 PM ET | 02-04-2008

Love the Tom Petty. He doesn't go away but he doesn't really need to. He's sort of like an old friend that's available when you need him.

My best memory is seeing him on the Full Moon Fever tour. The Replacements opened and I was mostly there to see them...I was kind of over classic rock and wanted to see the Mats for the first time. Well they pulled one of their typical drunken, sloppy 15 minute messes out of their hats and we were all standing there shaking our heads. Petty comes out soon after and played a perfect 2hr set on a beautiful summer night. I think the Replacements were put on that tour by their label to learn some professionalism or something from TP...but typically they rebelled and did the opposite. But at the end of the night, I was more of a fan of the "professional" than I had been for a long time.

Neko Case played a nice cover of "Listen to Her Heart" Saturday night in Northampton.

Sent by Rick | 5:26 PM ET | 02-04-2008

I so agree - I saw a fantastic show years ago on a starry summer night, much like Rick described.

Sent by Rachel | 7:04 PM ET | 02-04-2008

As with Springsteen, I'm not so sure I really enjoy the music of Tom Petty as much as I appreciate the idea of a Tom Petty. Nevertheless, it might be interesting to hear some of their home recordings (the experimental stuff that was never intended for anyone else's ears, but which I'm assuming Bruce and Tom must have laying around the house). Oh yeah, good game too!

Sent by Andy | 8:01 PM ET | 02-04-2008

Some thoughts on the game / day
1. The Patriots, WOULD NOT, have been undefeated in the greatest division in all of sports, the NFC East... look up over the last 28 years, how many times has one of those 4 teams been in the Super Bowl... (im going to guess 14 off the top of my head?) all 4 teams this year were 8-8 or better, 3 teams in the playoffs and Dallas tied the franchise record for wins in a season. AND it might be added, 3 of the 4 teams gave NE their best games in the regular season... NFC East, You just dont sweep that division...

2. Tom Petty... AWESOME, saw him twice in 06 with Pearl Jam, GREAT Concerts... of all the "legends" Ive seen... Petty and Neil Young are far and away still ROCKING... I cant believe the sports radio shows today blasting Petty? I only had it on for 5 mins to hear about the great patriots fall... and heard more about "that old fart that no one under 40 cares about" IDIOTS...

3. and lastly... So the Super Bowl is a big deal? everyone has it on TV... right? biggest sporting event of the year...right? 90Million will watch it? Well did ya know a lil basketball game in the NBA this weekend actually drew a good 100+ million more viewers? a game, between the Houston Rockets and Milwaukee Bucks no less??? over 200Million Chinese tuned into that game... ;)

Sent by Kramer | 8:11 PM ET | 02-04-2008

Guitar rant
I recently watched a Petty concert video in which he changed guitars at least 6 times. One concert, 4 electric guitars and 2 different acoustics.
I don't get it, all he does is strum chords at the nut, it's not like that telecaster or strat is going to sound better than the Rickenbacker.
End Guitar rant

Sent by blindjoedeath | 9:54 PM ET | 02-04-2008

Good for Tom Petty that he is still rocking away at his age, and that he's stayed true to his calling amidst numerous fads coming and going in music.

If I'm looking honestly at the Super Bowl as spectacle, though, I thought Petty was an odd and conservative choice, and pallid on the outsized stage compared to Prince last year. Also, I'm old enough to remember when Petty's conservatism wasn't so charming -- his intolerance toward other musical genres (disco, punk, dance music in general) in the 1980s was quite strident.

But I'll give him credit for having the courage of his convictions, and he's still plugging away making the music he loves to play. He also seems to have more perspective and even a sense of humor about rock and roll and his place in music history in his old age. And his greatest hits are definitely worth playing, 30 years later, and have worn well.

I was most happy to be able to watch a game that made all other distractions (commercials, pre-game celebrities, halftime show, etc) superfluous for a change. Usually, it's the other way around -- the game is superfluous.

Sent by Max | 10:42 PM ET | 02-04-2008

I disagree with you on Jordin Sparks. She was nervous. Her butterflies were evident. She showed she cared about her performance. And her performance was very dignified. I cannot say I have seen a better Star Spangled Banner in a long while. Her performance truly dignified the American spirit. I do agree with you that Tom Petty and Co. rocked the house. His performance exemplified Rock n' Roll. I look forward to seeing them this Summer. Thanks for your time.

Sent by Tyrone M. | 1:54 AM ET | 02-05-2008

I hate football. I hate the Super Bowl. I love Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers. http://www.alternativetentacles.com/octopodes/828/Zf5o535TxMNL40aR-AW/Wesley_Willis-Tom_Petty_and_th.mp3

Sent by Coco | 4:50 AM ET | 02-05-2008

Having always kind of written off Tom Petty as someone FOR my dad, I appreciate you illuminating some sincere words to his legacy. The contrasts of American Idol to Petty, and Patriots to Giants are very interesting as well. I wonder if an artist like Petty could be launched in this day and age of youth worship, myspace celebrity and spectacular rock bottoms. Could America accept a simple dude just playing some good songs and be commercially mainstream? Sometimes I feel like we on the cultural equivalent to the Gravitron at a midwestern carnival, spinning so fast we forced against the wall with no choice but to vomit.

Sent by KM | 9:45 AM ET | 02-05-2008

I saw Tom Petty live during their summer 2005 tour, and it really was such a goofball crowd. There were punk rock kids with blue mow hawks chillin' with the old sun burnt hippies dancing in circles with out their shirts on. Tom Petty's music is accessible, but not cheesy. It's simple Americana, void of embellishment or pretentiousness. That's why I love it.

Sent by Maddie | 3:38 PM ET | 02-07-2008

If you can find it, watch TP&THB on the Old Grey Whistle Test. It was on VH1 Classic the other day. Mike Campbell was particularly impressive. He's like an encyclopedia of classic guitar tones and melodic licks. The audience seems rather bored with the band but they're tight as hell.

Sent by Gary Drechsel | 4:24 PM ET | 02-19-2008

May I recommend the Petty documentary that came out late last year, "Runnin' Down a Dream." I can't really call myself a Petty fan -- guilty pleasure, indie irony or otherwise -- but was quite taken by his story in the film. Yes, for the most part, his lyrics do epitomize the good and bad of American character; to your point, the NFL couldn't have chosen a better musical accompaniment to this year's Super Bowl.

The film is the best, longest VH1 "Behind the Music" episode you've ever seen: early pix from his youth, band growing pains, super-stardom, drugs, death, family drama, fire, redemption, quotes from current hipsters (E. Vedder, J. Depp). Twice, early in his career, he took on the record industry and won. The footage of the Heartbreakers backing Dylan in the mid-80s is great and may include the best version of "Maggie's Farm" I've ever heard. Highly recommended.

Sent by Tim F. | 7:09 PM ET | 02-25-2008

Carrie Brownstein

Carrie Brownstein

Carrie Brownstein is a writer and musician. She was a member of the critically acclaimed rock band Sleater-Kinney. Her writing has appeared in 'The New York Times,' 'The Believer,' 'Pitchfork,' and various book anthologies on music and culture. Read Carrie's F.A.Q.