Free Fallin'

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"Free Fallin'"
"Free Fallin'" cover
Single by Tom Petty
from the album Full Moon Fever
B-side(s) "Free Fallin" (Live) US 7" single only
"Down the Line" US cassette single only
"Love Is a Long Road" UK 12", 7" and CD single only
Released 1989
Format 7" single
cassette single (US)
12" single (UK)
CD single (UK)
Recorded 1989
Genre Rock
Length 4:14
Label MCA Records
Writer(s) Tom Petty, Jeff Lynne
Producer(s) Tom Petty, Jeff Lynne, Mike Campbell
Chart positions
Tom Petty singles chronology
"Feel a Whole Lot Better"
(1989)
"Free Fallin"
(1989)
"Yer So Bad"
(1989)

"Free Fallin" is the opening track from Tom Petty's 1989 solo album, Full Moon Fever. The song was written by Petty and his writing partner for the album, Jeff Lynne. The song was released as a single, and was a top 10 U.S. hit in January, 1990. It also topped the Mainstream Rock Tracks chart.

Considered to be one of the more introspective songs in Petty's body of work, "Free Fallin'" uses a simple acoustic riff coupled with offbeat lyrics. The song has an easy, mid-tempo acoustic rock structure, and features Petty's signature vocal style.

[edit] Lyrics

The lyrics describe a relationship between a "good girl" and a "bad boy." The "good girl" loves Jesus and horses, while the "bad boy" breaks her heart and doesn't even miss her, though some of the later lyrics suggest that he has not gotten over her.[citation needed] Imagery of the Los Angeles area is evident throughout the song, with references to:

[edit] Inspiration

In interviews, Petty says the song was written after a roadie purchased a keyboard that Tom did not particularly care for. The roadie told Petty that if he wrote one song on it, that it would pay for itself. Petty ended up writing "Free Fallin'" on the keyboard, and played the opening riff for Jeff Lynne, his producer. "Just to make Jeff smile I sang 'She's a good girl, loves her mama' and from there I wrote the first and second verses completely spontaneously," Petty said.

Axl Rose once asked Tom how he came up with the line about vampires to which Tom replied, "When I'm driving, sometimes I see these shadowy-looking people just off the sidewalks, around the post office. I always thought of them as vampires for some reason."

[edit] Trivia