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Tom Petty's Los Angeles

There exists in sound a map of Los Angeles, filled with song-lyric street names, neighborhoods, beaches, bars, empty spaces and spaces between spaces. It's a chart that follows more than 30 years in the life and work of Tom Petty, a longtime resident of the city and an undercelebrated rock & roll icon who finally appears to be getting his due.

Artwork by Scott Gursky

(Click to enlarge)

Artwork by Scott Gursky

(Click to enlarge)

In 1974, Petty drove cross-country from Gainesville, Florida, to Los Angeles to get a record contract. Knocking on doors along Sunset, he played demos and eventually got a deal for his first band, Mudcrutch, then moved the group to L.A. "We fell in love with L.A. within an hour of being there," Petty told author Paul Zollo in the 2005 book Conversations With Tom Petty (CWTP). "We just thought this is heaven. We said, 'Look — everywhere there's people making a living playing music. This is the place.'" In 1976, the first Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers album hit, and aside from touring with the band, he's never left town. His songs are indelibly linked with the cityscape, sometimes explicitly but more often in hints — that rare ability of a gifted lyricist to generalize the intimate.

Last October saw the release of Peter Bogdanovich's four-and-a-half-hour documentary on the band, Runnin' Down a Dream. The director, who was unfamiliar with Petty's music prior to the project, called it "the story of a great American band, a great American story." In November, Chronicle Books released an oversize coffee-table book based on the film, also titled Runnin' Down a Dream (RDAD). And Petty's slated to perform during halftime at this year's Super Bowl (February 3). He co-produced the film and book, and one thing striking in both is the relative timelessness and placelessness of Petty's public life — he consciously avoids personal details while focusing on the particulars of songwriting, recording and touring. Which seems odd, since songs like "Free Fallin'" and "Into the Great Wide Open" offer a specific vision of the city, one that unfolded for a generation. Here is a map of that L.A., gathered from evidence the songwriter has left behind.Click here to download a PDF of Scott Gursky's map

1. Sunset Boulevard. Imagine Petty driving up in a van full of Florida stoners onto Sunset Boulevard in 1974, cruising for labels. "You just saw them down the road. So we would just go in the front door of every one with a tape and say, 'Hi, we just got here from Florida, can we play you this tape?'" (CWTP) Later, in "Waiting for Tonight," the mystique had worn off a bit. In the song, he sings, "I went walking down the boulevard/Past the skateboards and the beggars/I was out looking in the windows/Just out walking, letting my mind roam."

2. Ben Frank's. This moderne diner is the site of an apocryphal tale in which the Florida bumpkin Petty walked outside into a phone booth and found a piece of paper with the addresses and phone numbers of all the city's record companies, including his first label, Shelter Records. The place is now Mel's Diner, but it retains its trademark midcentury design. 8585 W. Sunset Blvd.

3. The Sunset Strip. The Strip is the center of Petty's musical L.A., a place where kids with dreams go to try their luck. Petty exposes the naiveté and cynicism of this myth in "Into the Great Wide Open" through the rise and fall of the song's main character, Eddie. For instance, Eddie heads to a Strip tattoo parlor to symbolize his rebellion, only to find a girl "with a tattoo too."

4. Shelter Records Office. The Shelter office was in Hollywood, and by the time of the first Heartbreakers album, producer/co-owner Denny Cordell had moved their studio next door. The label office was the band's hangout. In RDAD, Cordell said "Musicians that had worked with them on this or that project would just drop in." In the evenings, Petty would go to the Shelter offices, and he and Cordell would play records of great songwriters, learning to pick out good songwriting from bad.

5. Hollywood Premiere Motel. Petty and the boys sold all their possessions in Florida and drove back out to L.A. Shelter Records put them up first at this motel, which, Petty remembered, "was really a hooker place." (CWTP) It's got a great neon sign at least. 5333 Hollywood Blvd.

6. Canoga Park. The residences rented for Mudcrutch were in Canoga Park. With no furniture in sight, Petty thought himself a king nonetheless. "We brought all the girls and dogs and everything. This was heavy shit, man. A house with a swimming pool." (CWTP)

7. Travelodge Hotel. Petty lived at the Travelodge with his wife while recording the first album. His daughter was born just after they moved to L.A., and while living at the hotel they put her in a drawer as a crib. 1401 N. Vermont Ave.

8. The Winona. Another "hooker" motel Petty slept in during the early days. It was right across the street from Shelter. Label co-owner Leon Russell would come there to pick Petty up in his Rolls-Royce. 5131 Hollywood Blvd.

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  • Ruby Tuesday + Tom Petty 01/31/2011 8:30:00 AM

    Actually, Tom Petty doesn't have his own radio station on XM, he has a "Radio Show" on the station Deep Tracks. His "show" is called the Buried Treasure Show. :-) Jus' sayin'!

  • Jon Scott 03/19/2008 6:36:00 AM

    I am Jon Scott. You are right, # 12 should say my name NOT Robert Hilburn

  • Rick Harmon 01/22/2008 7:08:00 AM

    Got another one for you. Tom Petty used to live next door to a friend of mine when he was thirteen...back in the day. His mom hated Tom and used to bang on the walls all the time when he would play his guitar too loud or late. Eventually my friends mom moved the family out to a house; couple of houses down from my family house, where I met him. The site of THE APARTMENT (with the neighbors banging on the wall) was Encino on Balboa blvd just north of the Ventura Freeway.Coincidently the apartment is a mere two blocks south from Birmingham High School where the Wilsons (Beach Boys: Brian,Carl and Dennis) went to school before they moved to Torrance. A historical footnote to this would be that:Vickie Blue (The Runaways bassist) lived in the same apartment complex. Rick Harmon

  • Tom Pot Jr 01/19/2008 11:01:00 PM

    wow it's amazing people in LA are getting too high, man what stoners they came with the most bizzare ideas dear lord

  • edjacuzzi 01/19/2008 7:46:00 AM

    Wow i solve this mystery this is part or a diare of great Rock band called $#@ ... hell no i won't say it for now but they are on the road with a new amazing album please and don't miss the concert in LA on March i love those guys from your #1 Fan Myspace/edkacuzzi

  • Sam 01/19/2008 2:14:00 AM

    The escelator scenes for Free Fallin' were not shot at The Galleria, but at The Westside Pavillion.

  • Nathan 01/18/2008 11:15:00 PM

    Wasn't the escalator/Galleria shot done at the Westside Pavillion?

  • LA Weekly Reader 01/18/2008 10:58:00 PM

    Minor correction: the escalator scene from Free fallin was shot at the Westside Pavillion- I watched it when I should have been at work.

  • A Bashar 01/18/2008 8:36:00 PM

    That was cool!

  • Sizzlin 01/17/2008 10:27:00 AM

    # 12 should read Jon Scott, not Robert Hilburn

  • snaptasm 01/17/2008 3:29:00 AM

    Underappreciated? HAHAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHSHSAHSHFSFFSHHHHEEEEET. Pass that joint over here sister. And let's say a prayer for other little-known talents such as Tom Hanks, Stan Lee and KISS.

 

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