Heartbreakers guitarist Mike Campbell insisted his “conscience is obvious” over his bandleader Tom Petty‘s 2017 death from an accidental drug overdose.
“I don’t torture myself [over Petty’s death],” Campbell, 75, instructed Guitar Player in an interview revealed on Tuesday, March 11.
Petty’s dying at age 66 despatched shockwaves by means of the rock group, particularly after a coroner’s report decided that a mixture of opioids — together with fentanyl and oxycodone — in his system contributed to a deadly “combined drug toxicity.” The rock legend had gone by means of intervals of drug use all through his life, however famously received clear in 1999 when his future spouse, Dana York, satisfied him to go to rehab.
Campbell defined in his new interview that whereas he acknowledged Petty was now not sober close to the tip of his life, he felt it was not possible to get by means of to his longtime bandmate.
“With Tom it was like, ‘Your non-public life is yours, and mine is mine. I can see what you’re doing, however out of respect for you, I’ll belief you’ll do the appropriate factor. In case you want me, name me,’” he recalled. “I might have gone to him and mentioned, ‘Hey, you’ve received to chop this s— out,’ which I form of did as soon as to the supervisor. However the factor with Tom was, you can say that and he would simply have a look at you want, ‘However I’m Tom Petty. I’m going to do no matter I f—ing need. Get out of my face.’”
Campbell prompt that “the perimeters of [Petty’s] persona” all the time made it difficult to get near the musician he labored with for greater than 40 years.

“He was intimidating, however there was love there. I believe one purpose we stayed collectively is as a result of we stored our non-public lives separate. We didn’t socialize that a lot off tour,” he insisted.
The final time the pair labored collectively was solely every week earlier than Petty’s dying, once they concluded their fortieth Anniversary Tour on the Hollywood Bowl in September 2017.
When Campbell was pressed on why he didn’t “get in [Petty’s] face” about his noticeable decline, the musician replied: “I don’t torture myself. My acutely aware is obvious as a result of Tom knew that I knew, and Tom knew that I wasn’t forcing him and getting in his face about it.”
The guitarist added that there was “an invisible understanding” between himself and Petty about their private lives.
“I didn’t need to confront him, for him to understand how I felt about it,” Campbell mentioned. “Like I mentioned, there was no second ideas or reservations about going out on tour. The truth is, the final dialog I had with Tom about it, I mentioned, ‘Are you certain you wish to do that? Are you as much as it?’ He mentioned, ‘I’m not staying house. I’m going out. I wish to do it. If I’ve to be in a wheelchair, I’m going to do it.’ I mentioned, ‘OK, then what?’ He mentioned, ‘Properly, when the tour’s over, I’m going to go get my [hip] surgical procedure. We’ll write some extra songs, make one other file.’ That was the plan.”
Campbell continued: “It was form of enterprise as standard. I do know that Tony [Dimitriades], our supervisor, spoke to him and gave him choices like, ‘We are able to postpone this. You will get your surgical procedure now.’ Tom mentioned, ‘I should be on the market. I wish to play with the band, and we’re going to do it. I’ll be OK.’ So I’ve no second ideas about it. I don’t beat myself up like that. I miss them — similar with [Howie Epstein, the Heartbreakers’ bassist, who died at 47 in 2003] — however I did all I might.”
Since Petty’s dying in 2017, Campbell and Crowded Home’s Neil Finn have joined Fleetwood Mac as replacements for Lindsey Buckingham following the latter guitarist’s acrimonious departure from the group. Campbell has written a memoir about his profession with Petty referred to as Heartbreaker, out on Tuesday, March 18.