5 Surprising Facts About Tom Petty’s ‘Wildflowers’

Released in 1994, Wildflowers wasn’t just another album — it was Tom Petty at his most raw, reflective, and free. It captured heartbreak, healing, and hope in one beautifully understated package. And behind its acoustic guitars and Rick Rubin’s warm production lie stories you probably haven’t heard.

1. It Was Supposed to Be a Double Album (And One of the Best Songs Was Given to Rod Stewart?!)
Tom Petty originally recorded 25 songs for Wildflowers, fully intending it to be a sprawling double album. But Warner Bros. exec Lenny Waronker thought it was “too long” (we strongly disagree). So 10 tracks were left off—including “Leave Virginia Alone,” which was so good, Petty gave it to Rod Stewart, who turned it into a hit the following year. Others were chopped up, reworked, or saved for the She’s the One soundtrack. It took until 2020 for the full version to finally get released as Wildflowers & All the Rest. Worth the wait? Absolutely.

2. The Heartbreakers Were There—Even If They Weren’t on the Cover
Though Wildflowers is technically a Tom Petty solo album, it was basically a Heartbreakers project in disguise. Everyone played on it except drummer Stan Lynch, who was fired right before the album dropped. Petty brought in Steve Ferrone after a long audition process—and Ferrone later became the Heartbreakers’ full-time drummer. So yes, it’s “solo” on paper, but it still has that full Heartbreakers soul and swagger.

3. “Wildflowers” Took 3½ Minutes to Write. Seriously.
Petty described writing the title track as one of the most effortless moments of his life. He said he took a deep breath, hit record, and the entire song just flowed out in a single take. No edits. No rewrites. Just pure stream-of-consciousness magic. He actually thought something must be wrong with it because it came too easy. Sometimes the best songs don’t come from effort—they just arrive fully formed, like gifts from the universe.

4. “You Don’t Know How It Feels” Was Too Honest for TV—So They Played It Backwards
The single “You Don’t Know How It Feels” became a massive hit—but also sparked a mini scandal. The line “Let’s roll another joint” freaked out radio and TV execs, so they created versions where “joint” was played backwards, replaced with other words like “hit,” or just blanked out completely. Still, the song hit #1 on the Billboard Rock charts and won a GRAMMY for Best Male Rock Vocal Performance. Censorship couldn’t stop the vibe.

5. “Girl on LSD” Was Too Wild for Wildflowers
There was one B-side even too wild for Petty’s most vulnerable album. “Girl on LSD,” originally intended for Wildflowers, was booted off by Warner Bros. for being “too controversial.” In it, Petty sings about girls on every substance from coffee to crystal meth—and in the chorus, confesses that no drug compares to love. It’s bizarre. It’s hilarious. It’s heartfelt in a weird way. And it shows just how unafraid Petty was to push boundaries, even in his most introspective moments.

The album is a diary, a road trip, and a quiet rebellion. It may have come from a place of personal unraveling, but it ended up becoming one of Petty’s greatest triumphs. Whether you heard it back in ’94 or are just discovering it through Wildflowers & All the Rest or the stunning 2021 doc Tom Petty: Somewhere You Feel Free, one thing’s for sure: This record was always meant to find you—whenever you were ready.