
It was back in August when I saw the announcement that Skipperâs Smokehouse â the recently reopened, venerable restaurant and music venue in North Tampa â was going to host a Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers tribute band in honor of what would have been the late rockerâs 71st birthday.

I told Jannah, who is as big a fan of Pettyâs music as I am, that I was buying tickets right away â after all, if we canât ever see Gainesvilleâs favorite son in person anymore, we might as well go spend an evening sharing our love for him, his band and his music with a few hundred other people at the first live show weâve attended at Skipperâs since it reopened.
The show took place on Oct. 16, four days before Tomâs birthday and twelve days after the fourth anniversary of his passing from what has been ruled an accidental overdose of the prescribed painkillers he took in order to be able to keep performing for his legion of fans.
When I bought our tickets online, I didnât realize that the show, which started at 8 p.m., was actually a twin bill â prior to the Petty tribute by the Broken Hearts Band, the Stevie Nicks Experience (SNE) tribute band opened the show with a full 90+-minute set of tunes by Fleetwood Mac and from Stevieâs solo career. Considering that Nicks and Petty became close friends as part of the Los Angeles rock music scene in the mid-to-late â70s, the combination wanât surprising, but it did make for a long night, especially considering that I was on deadline with this issue.
Even so, both bands performed their tribute hits admirably. The SNE got the fans going by rocking out on âThe Chain,â âYou Make Lovinâ Fun,â âLandslideâ and pretty much every recognizable song by Fleetwood Mac and Nicks herself. Although the fans were very receptive to the performance, there were only a few hardcore Nicks lovers dancing to the music and honestly, the set was probably at least 15-30 minutes too long because most everyone in attendance was there (us included) to celebrate Pettyâs birthday, not Fleetwood Mac.
The SNE closed their set with the Petty-Nicks duet âStop Dragginâ My Heart Around,â with Broken Hearts Band frontman Shawn Scheller coming out from backstage to sing Tomâs part, but his microphone seemed a little off for the song, which made me (and Jannah) a little nervous about how Scheller and his band would sound when it was their turn to take the stage.
But, we were wrong. Scheller and the Broken Hearts sounded perfect, from âJamminâ Meâ to open the set to âDonât Do Me Like That,â âMary Janeâs Last Danceâ and, of course, âAmerican Girl.â
The crowd was much more raucous and the dance floor more packed for this second set, but there were very few people under age 50 in attendance and the Skipperdome offers very little seating for attendees, so people with bad knees (like me) were begging for more places to sit during the show. The much sadder thing for us, though, was that the magic we hoped to feel by sharing our love for a true Rock & Roll Hall of Famer somewhow wasnât there.
Although Scheller & Co. were pretty spot-on with most of their renditions, the performance overall felt more like listening to Tom Petty Radio on Sirius XM in my car than it did a Petty concert, which is what I guess I wanted it to feel like. Yes, I got to sing along with most of my Petty favorites, but I do that whenever Jannah and I go to karaoke bars, so I left feeling a little empty.
The show was a too-real reminder that while his music lives on, Tom himself is sadly gone forever and it seems that no tribute band will ever make me feel the way Tom, Mike Campbell, Benmont Tench and the rest of the Heartbreakers did.
But, speaking of Tom Petty Radio, yours truly will be a guest DJ on the channelâs âThe Last DJâ show, where Petty fans get to pick and introduce their five favorite songs by Petty, The Traveling Wilburys, etc.
Because he has such a legion of devoted fans, my âLast DJâ segment wonât air until early 2022, but Iâll give you a heads-up once that date is actually announced.
RIP, Tom. We miss you.





