Tom Petty And The Heartbreakers - Hard Promises [Backstreet Records BSR-5160] (5 May 1981)

Released: 5 May 1981
Country: US
Label: Backstreet Records
Catalog: BSR-5160
Genre: Rock

Item# SR-BABSR5160
Ratings: C=VG+; LP=VG+


T R A C K L I S T:
01 The Waiting
02 A Woman In Love (It's Not Me)
03 Nightwatchman
04 Something Big
05 Kings Road
06 Letting You Go
07 A Thing About You
08 Insider
09 The Criminal Kind
10 You Can Still Change Your Mind




Hard Promises
Tom Petty And The Heartbreakers


LP to Digital [FLAC] transfer bundle
$39.99 plus shipping


Order ships in 3 to 6 weeks.




Submit an album review.

Album Review

Stephen Thomas Erlewine [allmusic.com]

Damn the Torpedoes wasn't simply a culmination of Tom Petty's art; it happened to be a huge success, enabling him to call the shots on its successor, Hard Promises. Infamously, he used his first album as a star to challenge the record industry's practice of charging more for A-list artists, demanding that Hard Promises should be listed for less than most records by an artist of his stature, but if that was the only thing notable about the album, it would have disappeared like Long After Dark. Instead, it offered a reaffirmation that Damn the Torpedoes wasn't a fluke. There's not much new on the surface, since it continues the sound of its predecessor, but it's filled with great songwriting, something that's as difficult to achieve as a distinctive sound. The opener, ''The Waiting,'' became the best-known song on the record, but there's no discounting ''A Woman in Love (It's Not Me),'' ''Nightwatchman,'' ''Kings Road,'' ''Insider,'' and ''The Criminal Kind,'' album tracks that would become fan favorites. If Hard Promises doesn't have the sweep of Damn the Torpedoes, that's because its predecessor was blessed with good timing and an unusually strong set of songs. Hard Promises isn't quite so epochal, yet it has a tremendous set of songs and a unified sound that makes it one of Petty's finest records.