♫ Runnin’ Down A Dream ♫

I must admit I had never heard this song before Keith mentioned it the other day when I played Del Shannon’s Runaway, but then Clive also mentioned it and suggested it might be a good follow-up, so … here we are!  The song itself isn’t likely to hit my top ten list anytime soon … but the video is so much fun that it’s well worth listening a second, or even third time!

Some interesting background from SongFacts …

In this song, Petty sings about driving into the great wide open, with nothing but glorious possibility in his path.

Petty started running down his dream of being a rocker in 1961 when he met Elvis Presley. Petty, 11 years old, came to the Ocala, Florida, set where Elvis was working on the film Follow That Dream – a title Tom took to heart. In a brief encounter, Petty saw how Elvis captivated onlookers and made the girls go crazy. Petty became fascinated with Elvis and set out to follow his path.

The animated video was inspired by a comic strip called Little Nemo In Slumberland by Winsor McKay. Each strip told the story of one of Nemo’s dreams, and at the end, he always woke up.

Full Moon Fever was listed as a Tom Petty solo album even though members of The Heartbreakers played on it. Petty had another band at this time as well: the Traveling Wilburys, which included Jeff Lynne, who co-produced the album and played many of the instruments.

Heartbreakers’ guitarist Mike Campbell wrote this with Petty and Jeff Lynne. The three of them worked on the album at Campbell’s house.

Petty and Campbell were very impressed with Lynne’s production techniques, and learned a lot from the experience. Campbell gave Songfacts an example of Lynne’s style: “We’d put the mics up on the drums, and he’d walk out and take the microphone over the drum and he’d turn it away from the drum facing the corner, and he’d go ‘OK, record it like that.’ Sure enough, 99% of the time he’d be right. We’d go, ‘Yes sir, Mr. Lynne.’ We learned so much from him about arrangements and countermelodies and all kinds of stuff.”

The line, “Me and Del were singin,’ little ‘Runaway'” is a reference to the 1961 Del Shannon hit “Runaway.” Shannon is credited on the album for “barnyard noises,” which can be heard just after this song ends on the album. Under the animal noises, Petty says, “Hello CD listeners. We have come to the point in this album where those listening on cassettes or records will have to stand – up or sit down – and turn over the record or tape. In fairness to those listeners, we will now take a few seconds before we begin Side 2. Thank you, and here is Side 2.”

Those noises were made by Shannon and Jeff Lynne; Petty used them as an interlude to mark the middle of the album, because you don’t have to flip over a CD. This section was included only on CD versions of Full Moon Fever, but survived the transition when the album was released digitally.

The song made it to #23 in the U.S. and Canada, and #55 in the UK.

Runnin’ Down A Dream

Tom Petty

It was a beautiful day, the sun beat down
I had the radio on, I was drivin’
Trees went by, me and Del were singin’
Little runaway
I was flyin’

Yeah, runnin’ down a dream
That never would come to me
Workin’ on a mystery, goin’ wherever it leads
Runnin’ down a dream

I felt so good, like anything was possible
Hit cruise control and rubbed my eyes
The last three days the rain was unstoppable
It was always cold, no sunshine

Yeah, runnin’ down a dream
That never would come to me
Workin’ on a mystery, goin’ wherever it leads
Runnin’ down a dream

I rolled on, the sky grew dark
I put the pedal down to make some time
There’s something good waitin’ down this road
I’m pickin’ up whatever’s mine

I’m runnin’ down a dream
That never would come to me
Workin’ on a mystery, goin’ wherever it leads
Runnin’ down a dream
Yeah, I’m runnin’ down a dream
That never would come to me
Workin’ on a mystery, goin’ wherever it leads
I’m runnin’ down a dream

Songwriters:  Jeff Lynne, Tom Petty, Michael Campbell

♫ I Go To Pieces ♫ (Redux)

I had a couple of new songs (‘new’ meaning ones I haven’t played here before) picked out, but it is after 2:30 a.m. and I’m just too tired to spend an hour researching and writing, finding just the right version, etc., so for tonight I’m going with this one that I played only once back in … 2019, I think it was.


Del Shannon had written I Go to Pieces for an R&B singer named Lloyd Brown whom Shannon discovered at a Michigan nightclub. Shannon arranged and produced Brown’s recording but was unable to find a label interested in releasing the track. Shannon did attempt to himself record I Go to Pieces in the August 1964 session at Mira Sound Studios NYC, but was unable to cut a satisfactory vocal of the song before the three hours booked for the session ran out.  Following the success of the Peter and Gordon version, Del Shannon himself recorded the song at Bell Sound Studio NYC in March 1965.

I Go to Pieces” passed to Peter and Gordon when they and Del Shannon along with the Searchers shared the bill for a tour of Australia in the second half of 1964. At one of that tour’s venues Shannon pitched I Go to Pieces to the Searchers singing it for the group in their dressing room: Peter and Gordon in the dressing room next door overheard Shannon singing it to the Searchers – who weren’t interested in it – and recognizing the song’s potential to become a Merseybeat-style hit, Peter and Gordon asked Shannon to let them record it.

Released in the UK on 20 November 1964, I Go to Pieces became the second consecutive Peter and Gordon single to miss the UK Top 50 but like the preceding Nobody I Know, despite missing the UK charts it became a hit in the US where the “British Invasion” craze was at its height in 1964-65.

Now I’m wondering, though, if rawgod wanted Patsy Cline’s I Fall to Pieces?  Sigh.

I Go to Pieces
Peter and Gordon

When I see her comin’ down the street
I get so shaky and I feel so weak
I tell my eyes look the other way
But they don’t seem to hear a word I say

And I, go to pieces and I want to hide
Go to pieces and I almost die
Every time my baby passes by

I tell my arms they’ll hold someone new
Another love that will be true
But they don’t listen, they don’t seem to care
They reach for her but she’s not there

And I, go to pieces and I want to hide
Go to pieces and I almost die
Every time my baby passes by

I remember what she said when she said
“Goodbye baby. We’ll meet again soon maybe.”
“But until we do, all my best to you.”
I’m so lonely, I think about her only

I go to places we used to go
But I know she’ll never show
She hurt me so much inside
Now I hope she’s satisfied

And I, go to pieces and I want to hide
Go to pieces and I almost die
Every time my baby passes by

Go to pieces and I cry
Every time my baby passes by
Go to pieces and I cry

Songwriters: Del Shannon
I Go to Pieces lyrics © BMG Rights Management

♫ Runaway ♫ (Redux)

In a comment on my Charlie Brown post a few nights ago, Keith mentioned Del Shannon’s Runaway, which naturally stuck in my head … Keith has a way of planting those ear worms!  I did not think I had played this before, but it turns out I had … twice!!!  But not since 2019, so I figure it’s due for a redux!  I think my memory is due for a reboot, but that’s a story for another day.

This song was released in 1961 … sixty-two years ago … I was ten years old.  Wow.

A lot of Shannon’s songs were about broken relationships. He once said he wrote the words to this about himself because he was forever running away from relationships.  The song came about, according to Shannon, thusly …

“We were on stage and Max [Crook] hit an A minor and a G and I said, ‘Max, play that again, it’s a great change.'” The drummer, Dick Parker, followed them and after 15 minutes, the manager of the club shouted, ‘Knock it off, play something else.’ That night I went back to the club and I told Max to play an instrumental on his musitron for the middle part, and when he played that solo, we had ‘Runaway.'”

This was Shannon’s biggest hit. His career trailed off a few years later, and sadly he killed himself in 1990.  Shannon was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame posthumously in 1999.

This song is a rarity in that it hit #1 in Canada, the UK, and the U.S., as well as a number of other countries!

Runaway
Del Shannon

As I walk along, I wonder
A what went wrong with our love
A love that was so strong

And as I still walk on
I think of the thing’s we’ve done
Together, while our hearts were young

I’m a walkin’ in the rain
Tears are fallin’ and I feel a pain
A wishin’ you were here by me
To end this misery

And I wonder, I wa wa wa wa wonder
Why a why why why why why
She ran away
And I wonder where she will stay
My little runaway
My run run run run runaway

I’m a walkin’ in the rain
Tears are fallin’ and I feel a pain
A wishin’ you were here by me
To end this misery

And I wonder, I wa wa wa wa wonder
Why a why why why why why
She ran awayway
And I wonder where she will stay
My little runaway
A run run run run
Runaway

Songwriters: Del Shannon, Max Crook
Publisher: BMG RIGHTS MANAGEMENT US, LLC
Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

♫ Runaway ♫

Hop into your time machines, for tonight we are traveling back … to 1961!  I was only ten, but I remember this song well.

Del Shannon once said he wrote the words to this about himself because he was forever running away from relationships.  Shannon and his keyboard player, Max Crook, came up with this while they were playing a club in their hometown of Battle Creek, Michigan. Crook played a keyboard called a “Musitron” on the song.

According to Shannon …

“We were on stage and Max hit an A minor and a G and I said, ‘Max, play that again, it’s a great change.'” The drummer, Dick Parker, followed them and after 15 minutes, the manager of the club shouted, ‘Knock it off, play something else.’  That night I went back to the club and I told Max to play an instrumental on his musitron for the middle part, and when he played that solo, we had ‘Runaway.'”

The song hit #1 in the U.S., Australia, Canada, and the UK to name a few.  This was Del Shannon’s biggest hit, and a few years later his career trailed off.  Del Shannon committed suicide in 1990.

Runaway
Del Shannon

As I walk along, I wonder
A what went wrong whit our love
A love that was so strong

And as I still walk on
I think of the thing’s we’ve done
Together, while our hearts were young

I’m a walkin’ in the rain
Tears are fallin’ and I feel a pain
A wishin’ you were here by me
To end this misery

And I wonder, I wa wa wa wa wonder
Why a why why why why why
She ran away
And I wonder where she will stay
My little runaway
My run run run run runaway

I’m a walkin’ in the rain
Tears are fallin’ and I feel a pain
A wishin’ you were here by me
To end this misery

And I wonder, I wa wa wa wa wonder
Why a why why why why why
She ran awayway
And I wonder where she will stay
My little runaway
A run run run run
Runaway

Songwriters: Del Shannon, Max D. Crook
Publisher: BMG Rights Management

♫ I Go To Pieces ♫

Tonight’s song is for our friend rawgod … he mentioned this some time ago … maybe as long as a year ago … and I put it on the list, but just never got around to playing it.  My apologies, rg, but tonight’s is just for you!   Only thing is … since it’s been so long, I don’t remember what artist we might have been talking about when you mentioned this one, so I’m not sure if you wanted Peter & Gordon’s, or Del Shannon’s version.  I’m going to guess, knowing what I do about your tastes, Peter & Gordon.  However, to be on the safe side, I shall play both!

Del Shannon had written I Go to Pieces for an R&B singer named Lloyd Brown whom Shannon discovered at a Michigan nightclub. Shannon arranged and produced Brown’s recording but was unable to find a label interested in releasing the track. Shannon did attempt to himself record I Go to Pieces in the August 1964 session at Mira Sound Studios NYC, but was unable to cut a satisfactory vocal of the song before the three hours booked for the session ran out.  Following the success of the Peter and Gordon version, Del Shannon himself recorded the song at Bell Sound Studio NYC in March 1965.

I Go to Pieces” passed to Peter and Gordon when they and Del Shannon along with the Searchers shared the bill for a tour of Australia in the second half of 1964. At one of that tour’s venues Shannon pitched I Go to Pieces to the Searchers singing it for the group in their dressing room: Peter and Gordon in the dressing room next door overheard Shannon singing it to the Searchers – who weren’t interested in it – and recognizing the song’s potential to become a Merseybeat-style hit, Peter and Gordon asked Shannon to let them record it.

Released in the UK on 20 November 1964, I Go to Pieces became the second consecutive Peter and Gordon single to miss the UK Top 50 but like the preceding Nobody I Know, despite missing the UK charts it became a hit in the US where the “British Invasion” craze was at its height in 1964-65.

Now I’m wondering, though, if rawgod wanted Patsy Cline’s I Fall to Pieces?  Sigh.

I Go to Pieces
Peter and Gordon

When I see her comin’ down the street
I get so shaky and I feel so weak
I tell my eyes look the other way
But they don’t seem to hear a word I say

And I, go to pieces and I want to hide
Go to pieces and I almost die
Every time my baby passes by

I tell my arms they’ll hold someone new
Another love that will be true
But they don’t listen, they don’t seem to care
They reach for her but she’s not there

And I, go to pieces and I want to hide
Go to pieces and I almost die
Every time my baby passes by

I remember what she said when she said
“Goodbye baby. We’ll meet again soon maybe.”
“But until we do, all my best to you.”
I’m so lonely, I think about her only

I go to places we used to go
But I know she’ll never show
She hurt me so much inside
Now I hope she’s satisfied

And I, go to pieces and I want to hide
Go to pieces and I almost die
Every time my baby passes by

Go to pieces and I cry
Every time my baby passes by
Go to pieces and I cry

Songwriters: Del Shannon
I Go to Pieces lyrics © BMG Rights Management

♫ Runaway ♫

I had every intention of playing Donna Summer’s Last Dance tonight.  I have no idea where that trail derailed, but derail it did, and somehow I have ended up about about 17 years before Summer would record her hit.  The artist … Del Shannon.  Why?  Because it’s there?

This song was released in 1961 … fifty-eight years ago … I was ten years old.  Wow.

A lot of Shannon’s songs were about broken relationships. He once said he wrote the words to this about himself because he was forever running away from relationships.  The song came about, according to Shannon, thusly …

“We were on stage and Max [Crook] hit an A minor and a G and I said, ‘Max, play that again, it’s a great change.'” The drummer, Dick Parker, followed them and after 15 minutes, the manager of the club shouted, ‘Knock it off, play something else.’ That night I went back to the club and I told Max to play an instrumental on his musitron for the middle part, and when he played that solo, we had ‘Runaway.'”

This was Shannon’s biggest hit. His career trailed off a few years later, and sadly he killed himself in 1990.  Shannon was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame posthumously in 1999.

Runaway
Del Shannon

As I walk along, I wonder
A what went wrong whit our love
A love that was so strong

And as I still walk on
I think of the thing’s we’ve done
Together, while our hearts were young

I’m a walkin’ in the rain
Tears are fallin’ and I feel a pain
A wishin’ you were here by me
To end this misery

And I wonder, I wa wa wa wa wonder
Why a why why why why why
She ran away
And I wonder where she will stay
My little runaway
My run run run run runaway

I’m a walkin’ in the rain
Tears are fallin’ and I feel a pain
A wishin’ you were here by me
To end this misery

And I wonder, I wa wa wa wa wonder
Why a why why why why why
She ran awayway
And I wonder where she will stay
My little runaway
A run run run run
Runaway

Songwriters: Del Shannon, Max Crook
Publisher: BMG RIGHTS MANAGEMENT US, LLC
Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind