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‘Drop Down And Get Me’: Tom Petty Produces His Hero, Del Shannon

The album that Petty produced for Shannon entered the Billboard 200 on December 12, 1981.

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Del Shannon - Photo: David Redfern/Redferns
Del Shannon - Photo: David Redfern/Redferns

No one would deny that the career of Del Shannon was at its zenith in the early 1960s, when he recorded some of the best American pop music of the entire decade. Much of his later work didn’t find the audience it deserved, but in later life, he made a warmly-received comeback with the help of a great admirer of his early work, none other than Tom Petty.

The album that Petty produced for Shannon, the fine, spirited Drop Down And Get Me, entered the Billboard 200 chart on December 12, 1981. It was only Del’s second album chart entry in his entire career, and first since Little Town Flirt reached No.12 all of 18 years earlier, in 1963.

A Top 40 return

The set only reached No.123, but it provided Shannon with a new hit, as he covered Phil Philips’ 1959 rock’n’roll gem “Sea Of Love.” The original was an R&B No.1 and went to No.2 on the pop side in the US. That remake also entered the charts on December 12, and rose to No.33, Shannon’s first singles chart entry in the States since “The Big Hurt” in 1966 and his biggest hit since “Keep Searchin’ (We’ll Follow The Sun)” early in 1965.

Listen to uDiscover Music’s official Del Shannon Best Of playlist.

Tom Petty was an avowed Shannon fan, to the point of quoting one of Del’s biggest hits in one of his own, from the great Full Moon Fever album. “Runnin’ Down A Dream,” written by Petty, Jeff Lynne, and the Heartbreakers’ Mike Campbell, included the line “Me and Del were singing ‘Little Runaway.’” “He was very pleased,” Tom later told Paul Zollo in the book Conversations With Tom Petty. “I got a big smile from him on that. And ‘Little Runaway’ fit the whole concept…Mike wrote that one descending riff, which is the engine of the song.”

Buy or stream Runaway: The Very Best of Del Shannon.

3 Comments

3 Comments

  1. Susan Schattl

    July 13, 2016 at 8:08 pm

    Loved this thank you for posting.

  2. Michael Gittus

    October 7, 2017 at 1:00 am

    Thank you for this post! I saw TP and Del Shannon in 1981 in a small club in Tempe, AZ called After The Gold Rush. What a great show and memory!

  3. Brian W

    July 23, 2019 at 1:59 pm

    Runnin’ Down a Dream i thought had been had been creditted to Tom Petty and Jeff Lynne combination on the Full moon Fever album. Both being very keen admirers of Del’s music and latterley produced Del’s great album Rock On.

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