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  1. Damn the Torpedoes/Southern Accents/Into the Great Wide Open. Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers / Tom Petty. AllMusic Rating. User Rating (0) Your Rating. STREAM OR BUY: Release Date. 1999. Duration. 02:00:28. Genre. Pop/Rock. Styles. Album Rock, Hard Rock, Heartland Rock, Rock & Roll, Contemporary Pop/Rock. Discography Timeline. See Full Discography.

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  2. Damn the Torpedoes is the third studio album by the American rock band Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, released on October 19, 1979. It was the first of three Tom Petty albums originally released by the Backstreet Records label, distributed by MCA Records. It built on the commercial success and critical acclaim of the band's two previous ...

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  4. "Into the Great Wide Open" is a song by American rock band Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, included as the third track on their eighth studio album, Into the Great Wide Open (1991). Released as a single in September 1991, the song reached number four on the US Billboard Album Rock Tracks chart but stalled at number 92 on the Billboard Hot 100 .

    • Rock
  5. Rolling Stone critic Parke Puterbaugh said the album features Petty's best lyrics and is like a cross between Full Moon Fever and Damn the Torpedoes (1979), and much better than Let Me Up (I've Had Enough) (1987), the most recent album credited to Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers.

  6. Into the Great Wide Open Lyrics by Tom Petty from the Damn the Torpedoes/Southern Accents/Into the Great Wide Open album- including song video, artist biography, translations and more: Eddie waited till he finished high school He went to Hollywood, got a tattoo He met a girl out there with a tattoo to….

  7. Never mind that David Farragut, the Naval officer who first used the phrase “Damn the torpedoes,” fought for the Union, not the Confederacy: The “Southern” on Southern Accents represents the parts of us that persist even when we’re pretty sure we might lose.

  8. With Into the Great Wide Open they were afforded room to impose their personalities more forcefully. On paper, at least. “It seemed unnatural for me to work without Jeff,” Petty told Paul Zollo in Conversations with Tom Petty. “But I probably should have had a better overview of things and said, ‘Well, I’ve got to go do the ...

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