Best known as the longtime pianist and keyboard player for
Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers,
Benmont Tench is one of rock's most respected instrumentalists, as he's guested on countless recordings other artists. Born on September 7, 1953, in Gainesville, Florida,
Tench took up piano at an early age, playing recitals at the age of six. But shortly after discovering
the Beatles,
Tench turned his back on lessons and focused on '60s rock & roll. As a teenager,
Tench met another up-and-coming rocker,
Tom Petty, at a local music store. Several years later (while on break from college),
Tench caught
Petty's band,
Mudcrutch (which also included future
Heartbreaker Mike Campbell on guitar), in concert, and after sitting in with the band on several different occasions, went back to school.
Petty asked
Tench shortly thereafter to quit school and join
Mudcrutch full-time, which after some deliberation, he agreed to.
After a demo tape featuring the new lineup was recorded, the quartet landed a recording contract with Shelter Records. But before they could record an album, the band split up.
Tench contemplated launching his own band (which he would double in as lead vocalist), before
Petty convinced
Campbell and
Tench to come back. Recruiting additional members
Stan Lynch (drums) and
Ron Blair (bass),
Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers was officially formed in 1976, resulting in a deal with
MCA, and by the '80s (on the strength of such hit albums as
Damn the Torpedoes,
Hard Promises,
Southern Accents, etc.),
the Heartbreakers had become one of the top rock bands in the world. Beginning in the middle of that decade,
Tench became a much sought-after session player, lending his talents to recordings by such varied artists as
Jackson Browne,
Johnny Cash,
Elvis Costello,
the Cult,
Neil Diamond,
Bob Dylan,
Brian Eno,
Hall & Oates,
Green Day,
Don Henley,
Indigo Girls,
Ziggy Marley,
Alanis Morissette,
Stevie Nicks,
Bonnie Raitt,
Remy Zero,
the Rolling Stones,
U2,
Robin Zander,
Ryan Adams,
Travis Tritt, and
Ringo Starr, among many others. But despite it all,
Tench never let this session work get in the way of playing with his main band on 14
Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers albums, in addition to countless tours. In late 2013, he announced plans for the February 2014 release of his first-ever solo album. Produced by
Glyn Johns, the sessions for
You Should Be So Lucky took place at Sunset Sound in L.A. and featured input from a veritable roll call of cohorts, from
Ryan Adams to
Don Was. ~ Greg Prato