Wildflowers & All the Rest (Deluxe Edition)

Wildflowers & All the Rest (Deluxe Edition)

For an artist who built his career on a certain degree of stubbornness, Wildflowers wasn’t just an admission of vulnerability, it was like standing naked. After two decades of marriage, Petty was heading toward divorce—a personal cataclysm even more pronounced on 1999’s Echo, but you could hear the heartbreak coming. “Wildflowers” isn’t just a metaphor for beauty, but a beauty you can’t possess without ruining it. And when the friends do show up (“You Don’t Know How It Feels”), you suddenly run cold and self-protective. When they rock—“You Wreck Me,” “Honey Bee”—they do it like desperate men. “It’s good to be king/And have your own way,” Petty sings on “It’s Good to Be King.” Sure. The subtext being that it’s a kingdom of one. “It’s a really special record because it has these little surprising things you wouldn't notice,” Heartbreakers lifer Benmont Tench tells Apple Music. “I didn’t for decades know that there are lines in songs where Mike [Campbell] doubled the piano with something called Marxophone. They're all these little things that make the textures a little bit fuller, but never make it sound like a wall of sound. Or it really doesn't sound like anything except the guy singing.” The magic, of course, is that despite the effort and attention, Wildflowers sounds natural and unforced—a sense of intuitiveness attributed, in part, to the influence of new producer Rick Rubin. Petty was writing from a quieter place now. But like the songbird whose song only grows in complexity the less noise he has to compete with (it’s true), he was finding nuance in his solitude, and was lucky enough to keep company with a flock who could hold the space. Petty was, by all accounts, in a generative mind—Rick Rubin said he once paused the tape while playing back a demo and wrote an entirely new song, end to end, in a few minutes. He’d wanted to make Wildflowers a double album, but Warner Bros. didn’t think it warranted the length. But the material was there, and in late 2020 was finally issued under the banner Wildflowers & All the Rest. The material on the double-album version is robust: “Leave Virginia Alone” mines the same ambivalent nostalgia as “Wildflowers”; “Something Could Happen” is a companion to “Wake Up Time”; “Confusion Wheel” is a bluesy, almost Appalachian-sounding song that showed the band’s still-sharp teeth. “Of course, listening to this stuff was a little bittersweet,” Benmont Tench tells Apple Music. And yet: “The discovery and the fact that there is so much good music and it is not by any means some leftover curiosity that you want to hear one time…that’s the sweet part.”

Select a country or region

Africa, Middle East, and India

Asia Pacific

Europe

Latin America and the Caribbean

The United States and Canada