“That was actually the first song that we knew we wanted to record on the record because fans have been asking for years for us to record that ever since we started playing it in our shows. And the late, great Tom Petty - his gentle “Wildflowers” perhaps the inspirational force that launched this album - might have topped them all. The Wailin’ Jennys loved them, from tantalizing cover to cover. Though the front cover of Fifteen is filled with enough deep meaning and symbolism to either amaze or confuse, the thought process behind arranging and self-producing an album of songs originally written and/or made famous by some of music’s most revered artists was simple. The Jennys - Winnipeg’s Ruth Moody and Nicky Mehta and New York’s Heather Masse - pay exquisite tribute to those esteemed artists and more among the nine divine songs on Fifteen, their first full-length album in six years, that was released by Red House Records on Oct. But that doesn’t prevent them from getting down with songs made famous by a rocker who was born a rebel, a Werewolf of London or the darling of Pigeon Forge whose humble beginnings made her work harder than any 9-to-5er. The Wailin’ Jennys are a Canadian-based trio of wonderful women blessed with angelic voices whose three-part harmonies are unparalleled in today’s folk-pop universe.