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Wildflowers

Tom Petty

1994

Wildflowers

Album Summary

Wildflowers is the second solo studio album by American musician Tom Petty, released on November 1, 1994, by Warner Bros. Records. It was the first album released by Petty after signing a contract with Warner Bros., where he had recorded as part of the Traveling Wilburys. It was the first of three of his albums produced with Rick Rubin. Wildflowers was very well-received by critics upon release and was certified 3× platinum in the United States by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA). In 2020, Wildflowers was ranked at number 214 on Rolling Stone's list of the "500 Greatest Albums of All Time". Wildflowers was credited only to Petty and not to his usual band, Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers because, in Petty's words, "Rick [Rubin] and I both wanted more freedom than to be strapped into five guys." Nonetheless, the Heartbreakers predominantly served as the musicians on the album. The album features all the band's members with the exception of drummer Stan Lynch. Petty auditioned numerous drummers for the album, and eventually chose Steve Ferrone. Petty fired Lynch from the Heartbreakers just before the album's release, and Ferrone officially joined the touring band the following year, and later became a full band member. (Lynch did play on one outtake from Wildflowers, "Something Could Happen").

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Rating

3.63

Votes

24

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Oct 07 2025
4

Didn't think I'd enjoy this but it was really good

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Oct 09 2025
4

This was pretty cool. 4/5.

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Oct 13 2025
4

An excellent album. 4 stars.

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Oct 13 2025
4

Good album

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Oct 14 2025
4

Quite good but found Honey Beea bit creepy

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Oct 12 2025
2

Did not enjoy 2

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Oct 14 2025
2

Always struggle with Tom – I enjoy his more rock-centric tracks and liked ‘Torpedos’ quite a bit, but he struggles with knowing when to let a good track end. Every song on this LP runs 1-2 choruses too long, and even the more enjoyable tracks wear a bit near the end. Couple that with songwriting which leans heavier into balladry rather than rocking, and I don’t think I’ll be returning to this one anytime soon.

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