A
Tribute to
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The
following article was conceived, edited &
outlined by Leon Tsilis & written with love by
the Late, Great "Ann (Coyote Red) Bixby"
for Skymarshall Productions.
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It
was in the summer of 1964 that Gary Rossington, Allen Collins, and
Ronnie Van Zant began playing together for the first time.
At the time, Rossington (guitar) was in a band called "Me,
You, and Him" with Bob Burns (drums) and Larry Junstrom (bass).
Van Zant was singing with a band called "Us", and Collins
played guitar in a band called the "Mods". Rossington
and Collins were about 14, Van Zant two years older.
The
story of their original meeting is a fitting one for a band that
carried a reputation as roughnecks throughout their career. All
three played Little League baseball. One day when Rossington and
Burns were watching the older boys play, Van Zant hit a line drive
that caught Burns in the head and knocked him out. After the game
Van Zant looked them up to be sure Burns was all right. They A Tribute
to introduced themselves, went over to Burns' house still
in their uniforms and played some songs together. Rossington
said,"That was it, that was the start of Lynyrd Skynyrd. So
if Ronnie wouldn't have hit that foul ball, there wouldn't be no
Skynyrd."
After
a while, the group decided that they needed another guitar player
because, as Rossington put it, "I didn't know barre chords
real good, and the little amp built into my guitar just wouldn't
cut it. We knew this little skinny kid, Allen Collins, who had a
big amp and knew barre chords. He was good, you know." So they
went looking for him. When they found him he was afraid that Van
Zant, who had a reputation as a brawler, was going to beat him up.
He ran from them, and they had to chase him down. When he realized
that they just wanted to talk, he was so relieved that he agreed
to try playing with them. They took his amplifier over to the Burns'
garage, where, according to Rossington,"We stuck both of our
guitars in the bright channel, and Ronnie put his microphone in
the normal, so we were all three on one amp, and Bob played drums.
That was how it started."
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For
the next few years, under a variety of names (The Noble Five, The
Wildcats, The One Percent, among others), the new band played teen
dens, church socials, and local juke joints. Influenced by the British
bands the Beatles, the Stones, the Yardbirds the boys
grew their hair long, which in those days meant barely brow-or ear-length.
It was still long enough to get them in trouble at school. To comply
with the dress code, they would slick it back with vaseline for
class, and comb it out after school. But they had to shower after
gym, and their coach, Leonard Skinner, often caught them literally
with their hair down. That resulted in so many trips to the principle's
office, and so many suspensions, that eventually the boys quit school.
They wanted to escape the hassles, and to be able to devote themselves
full-time to the band. A
few days after Rossington, the first to quit, left school, they
played a gig at Jacksonville's Forest Inn. When he introduced the
band, Van Zant said, "We're the One Percent, but we're gonna
change our name tonight. Everybody who wants to change it to Leonard
Skinner, applaud." The crowd knew the story, and they knew
Skinner the applause was deafening. So the band kept the
name, changing the vowels to Ys in a token attempt at anonymity.
The
band's search for a place to work led them to an isolated farm south
of Jacksonville, near a town called Green Cove Springs. The 99 acres
of "cows and mushrooms" contained a little wooden house
with a tin roof, which became known as the "Hell House",
with good reason. It gets very hot in Florida in the summer, especially
under a tin roof with no air conditioning. (When the band later
worked under stage or screen lights, they took it in stride, and
didn't seem to sweat as much as other groups. They were used to
the Hell House temperatures of two hundred or so degrees, and could,
so to speak, take the heat.) It was here in the Hell House that
the sound of Lynyrd Skynyrd was born.
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Ronnie
Van Zant
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Gary
Rossington
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Allen
Collins
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Billy
Powell
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Leon
Wilkenson
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Ed
King
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Bob
Burns
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Artimus
Pyle
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Working
sun-up to sun-down, writing and rehearsing, the band began to take
shape. They won a Battle of the Bands in Jacksonville, and landed
their first tour, as the warm-up band for Strawberry Alarm Clock.
The $50 a week that they earned on that tour was twice what they had
been making in Jacksonville (for their very first gig, a private party
in a barbecue joint, the five members of the band had made a grand
total of $10, from which they had to furnish gas money). For the first
time, the band assembled a road crew. It included Kevin Elson, who
later produced "Journey", and mixed "Lynyrd Skynyrd
1991."
By
the fall of 1970, Skynyrd had not only a road crew but a manager,Alan
Waldon, brother of Capricorn Records' Phil. He arranged for them
to record their first demos, at Quinvy Studios outside Muscle Shoals,
Alabama. The band was trying to find its own voice, and they did
- one of the songs they recorded at Quinvy was the original version
of "Free Bird."
Jimmy
Johnson of Muscle Shoals Sound Studio was so taken with the Quinvy
demos that he offered to produce an album for a percentage of the
profit, if and when it was sold. So Skynyrd borrowed money, and
drove to the tiny northern Alabama hamlet of Sheffield to record
for him. There were two series of sessions, in the spring and fall
of 1971. Bassist Leon Wilkeson joined them toward the end of the
second series.
Billy
Powell was one of their original roadies, until Ronnie heard him
playing the piano between sessions one day. Asked why he had never
mentioned that he was a player, Powell responded that he was happy
to have a job as a roadie, and had no ambition to play in the band.
Van Zant, however, had other ideas and before long Billy joined
Lynyrd Skynyrd. Powell was one of the most musically educated of
the group, having taken piano lessons most of his life. Although
Skynyrd was essentially a guitar band, Powell was the one who laid
down the musical backgrounds on most of their songs. It's hard to
imagine, for example, what "Freebird" would sound like
without his unique keyboards.
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During
the Qinivy sessions, Johnson and his partner Tim Smith taught the
band how to record, starting with such basics as putting the bass
and drums together to form a rhythm section. Skynyrd had to work
whenever there was studio time free, even if it was in the middle
of the night, but they were finally recording. During those sessions
they laid down the first multi-track version of "Free Bird",
as well as "One More Time", "I Ain't the One","Trust",
"Gimme Three Steps", and twelve other songs. Ronnie affectionately
dubbed the Muscle Shoals studio crew "The Swampers", and
paid tribute to them on "Sweet Home Alabama."
Although
Alan Waldon shopped the Muscle Shoals tapes around, he found no
takers. Skynyrd returned discouraged to Jacksonville, only to find
that they weren't even welcome to local bookers. They began to commute
to Atlanta, where they found a home base at Funnuchio's, one of
the roughest bars in the city. Although shootings and stabbings
were nightly occurrences, the band began to play there regularly.
They borrowed the money for these trips from Van Zant's wife, Judy.
(He
had met her in 1969, when the band were still calling themselves
the One Percent, and were playing mostly Cream and Creedence covers.
She was with him throughout his career, and had this to say about
marriage to a dedicated musician; "I understood that his music
was what was most important to Ronnie. When you marry a musician,
you have to understand that their music is first and foremost. It's
a different way of life.")
It
was at Funnuchio's in 1972 that Skynyrd ran into Al Kooper, who
was in the process of launching his MCA-backed Sounds of the South
label. Kooper had played with Bob Dylan's first electric band on
"Bringing It All Back home", and was one of the forces
behind Blood, Sweat, and Tears. He also worked with Steven Stills
and Mike Bloomfield on the "Super Session" album. Gary
Rossington said, "Kooper was big-time to us, so we were honored
and freaked out that he was out in the club listening to us. Then
the next night, we looked out and he was in the same seat, so after
the gig we stopped and said, "Hey, what's going on?" The
upshot was that Kooper offered the group a contract, and after some
initial hesitation, they accepted.
Unsure
of his ability to handle the big time, bassist Leon Wilkeson left
the band. In the search for his replacement, Ronnie remembered Ed
King of Strawberry Alarm Clock, and somehow located him at the small
bar in North Carolina where he had been working. King came down
to the Hell House for a series of frenzied rehearsals, and entered
the studio with the others for the Kooper-produced demos. These
were recorded at Studio One in Atlanta in one live session that
lasted until 3:00 AM. Of this session, Kooper said,"We recorded
everything in one day onto two-track. They were so good, so well-rehearsed,
that we ended up using the stuff that didn't go on the album for
the B-sides of the singles."
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At
this point, the band had a catalogue of almost twenty songs. Deciding
which ones to perform, and how, made Skynyrd's sessions with their
new producer fairly tense. Kevin Elson remembered that "there
was always a touch of tension. Al had a lot of arrangement ideas
and keyboard ideas that the band didn't agree with initially
but I think that the tension and arguing made for a better record
in the end. The band would never back down from what they wanted,
and Al didn't tend to back down anyway."
Kooper
himself said,"I taught them how to use the studio. I also taught
them how to use the bass and the bass drum in a competitive way.
But of all the bands I ever worked with, they were the best-arranged.
What they did with guitar parts was truly amazing - they had the
pulse of the street. They absolutely had it. What fights we had
were over my editorial decisions, and I was often outvoted. Ronnie
ran that band with an iron hand."
Kooper's
knowledge of modern recording techniques gave the band new tools.
A stand-out example is the overdubbed track of "Free Bird",
where Collins added a second guitar part slightly behind his solo.
This created the dual guitar sound, reminiscent of Wishbone Ash's
"Phoenix", that climaxes the album.
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"(pronounced
'leh-nerd skin'-nerd)" was recorded at Studio One in Doraville,
Georgia,(home base for the Atlanta Rhythm Section) and engineered
by the brilliant Rodney Mills. Mills specialized in getting guitars
to speak for themselves, and no band ever offered him a better opportunity.
His work with Skynyrd began with "Simple Man", and continued
throughout their career. Al Kooper was practically a member of the
band on "(pronounced)"; under the pseudonym of "Roosevelt
Gook" he played bass and mellotron andsang back-up. Leon
Wilkeson returned to the group after the recording of "(pronounced)",
which allowed Ed King to move from bass to guitar. When they had
worked out the new division of labor, they found that Collins' stabbing
Gibson Firebird, Rossington's whining Les Paul, and King's metallic
Strat chops complemented each other amazingly well. Although they
had already written most of the songs that would make up the album,
"Second Helping", the new line-up resulted in a burst
of creativity. "Sweet Home Alabama" was written even before
the first album was released.
In
July of 1973, Kooper's Sounds of the South label gave a party for
the music industry at Richard's, an up-scale club in Atlanta, to
introduce three southern bands. One of them was Lynyrd Skynyrd.
They had written a song, "Workin' for MCA", just for the
occasion, which went over well with the crowd. MCA signed them for
$9,000, almost all of which they spent on new equipment.
The
Who's Peter Townsend had heard and liked "(pronounced)",
and he got Who manager Peter Rudge to sign Skynyrd to open for them
on the "Quadrophenia" tour. Skynyrd were used to playing
small clubs, to audiences of two to three hundred people, and opening
night found them facing a crowd of 20,000 at the Cow Palace in San
Francisco. They were terrified, and decided to cope with it by getting
as drunk as possible. They tore through their five-song, twenty-minute
set in a state of panic, but the crowd liked them, and they got
good write-ups. The band did well on that tour, and even managed
to earn encores, which was quite a feat for a little-known band
in the face of a rabid Who crowd. About halfway through the tour,
Peter Rudge approached the group with an offer to become their manager.
They agreed, and left Alan Waldon.
In
spite of the fact that "Free Bird" was dominating the
FM stations, and in spite of the critical success of their first
album, neither "(pronounced)" nor its single, "Gimme
Three Steps", made any impact on the charts. When Kooper took
the band into the Record Plant studio in Los Angeles to begin recording
the second album, everyone was feeling the pressure to produce a
Top Forty hit. It didn't help that the atmosphere in the LA studio
was very different from what they were used to. Kevin Elson recalled,"The
problem was that we were in one studio, the Eagles were in another,
Stevie Wonder was recording in a third, and John Lennon and Jackson
Browne were walking around. The band just felt really unnerved a
lot of the time, especially the day that John Lennon walked into
our control room. They all froze that was the end of work
that day."
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Van
Zant wanted to record "Sweet Home Alabama" as "Second
Helping"'s single, but both Kooper and the MCA brass thought
it was too regional. They opted for "Don't Ask Me No Questions"
instead. In fact "Don't Ask Me ..." didn't do well, and
three people from the MCA promotion department decided to push "Alabama".
MCA's southern promotion team of Jon Scott, Mike Scherlock, and
Leon Tsilis got Top Forty stations to start playing the song, and
it became an enormous hit in the southern states. The popularity
of the song kept growing, and eventually MCA couldn't ignore it
any longer. They released "Alabama" as a single in June
of 1974, and it became Skynyrd's only Top Ten single, peaking at
number 8. By September, both "Alabama" and "Second
Helping" were gold records, followed in December by "(pronounced)."
The
success of "Alabama" had another consequence; it identified
Skynyrd as a "Southern Band"; MCA's decision to add a
Confederate flag to their live stage backdrop completed the image.
The common conception is that Ronnie Van Zant was some kind of Dixie
reactionary, but the truth is that his lyrics express the frustrations
and aspirations of the downtrodden everywhere, not just of the South.
There is something traditionally Southern, however, about the way
his outrage was often mixed with humor, a wry blend that has been
characteristic of the region since the loss of the War of Northern
Aggression.
Lynyrd Skynyrd toured extensively in support of their first two
albums, and it became too much for Bob Burns. Pleading exhaustion,
he left the band, and was replaced on drums by Artimus Pyle.
When
the group went into Webb IV Studios in Atlanta in January of 1975,
they had only one song ready for recording. This was "Saturday
Night Special", which Burns had recorded with them before his
departure. In 21 days, averaging 16 hours a day, they managed to
crank out seven more songs, but the quality of the material was
a sad falling-off from the previous albums. There was a reason that
Van Zant named this one""Nothin' Fancy."
The
band went on a 90 day, 61 date, "Torture Tour" in support
of the album. Although it was a commercial success, the tour left
a trail of fistfights, wrecked hotel rooms, sloppy performances,
and cancelled dates. Van Zant said of this tour,"We were doing
bottles of Dom Perignon, fifths of whiskey, wine, and beer. We couldn't
even remember the order of the set; some guy sat crouched behind
an amp and shouted it at us. We made the Who look like church on
Sunday. We done things only fools would do." Halfway through
the tour, Ed King left the band, unable to cope with the pace and
the lifestyle. Collins and Rossington divided King's parts for the
remainder of the tour.
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For
Skynyrd's fourth album, Rudge arranged for Tom Dowd (producer of
Aretha Franklin, Cream, and the Allman Brothers, among many others)
to take over the controls. Dowd's approach involved rehearsing and
recording each song with the band as a unit, in contrast to Kooper's
penchant for overdubbing. They learned things from him about arrangements
and chord patterns, but the resulting album, "Gimme Back My
Bullets", lacked energy. It was, in fact, a low point in the
band's career, the worst-selling album they ever put out. Part of
the problem was lack of time; they had had years to prepare the
material that went into the first two albums, and the third and
fourth were virtually written in the studio. There were problems
with the title track as well.
Van
Zant said,"We had to quit doin' that song, because almost every
audience would throw a handful of bullets, you know, like .38 slugs.
We wrote it about the bullets in the music industry trade magazines,
but I'd say "Gimme back my bullets", and they'd let me
have it."
After
the "Bullets" album, Skynyrd added a trio of female gospel-type
singers to their act; Jo Billingsley, Leslie Hawkins, and Cassie
Gaines. With the next recording session set for July of 1976, the
band set about finding a third guitarist before then. They had auditioned
players like Leslie West and Wayne Perkins when Cassie Gaines mentioned
that her younger brother Steve was a guitarist. They agreed to audition
him more as a favor to Cassie than anything else, but once he started
jamming with them it was clear that a match had been made. Van Zant
said of him,"This kid is a writing and playing fool. He's already
scared everybody in the band into playing their best in years".
Gary Rossington said,"He was a freak of nature, he was so good.
He inspired us tremendously. He was a great singer, too, and it
sort of kicked Ronnie in the ass a little bit. He had to try harder
because Steve was there."
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Gaines
was familiar enough with Skynyrd's work that his band, Crawdaddy,
played "Saturday Night Special" as part of their regular
set, but there was only a month before recording was to start. He
spent the month of June in marathon "cramming and jamming"
sessions. The album was recorded live in the Fox Theatre in Atlanta,
a small venue chosen specifically for its acoustics. With the addition
of Steve Gaines, and the direction of Tom Dowd, the band turned
in a classic performance. Dowd described the working arrangements
that resulted in "One More for the Road": "Each night
after the show I'd make them listen to the whole thing. I'd say,"We
have to do this song again. This one over here, we have to change
this way", and so on. We changed two or three songs a day,
so that no two shows were the same, and in the end we had more than
ten or twelve songs to pick from."
Although
the live album was good, it could not convey the excitement of an
actual gig. Skynyrd was by now one of the premier performance bands
in the world. At the Gator Bowl benefit for President Jimmy Carter
in July of 1976, Skynyrd was the main attraction; in August they
performed at Britain's Knebworth Festival, earning rave reviews
at the expense of the headlining Rolling Stones. Still, "One
More for the Road" quickly entered the Top Ten, earning gold
and then platinum status. In part to celebrate this success, the
band traded their touring bus for a private plane.
Skynyrd
and Tom Dowd went into Miami's Criteria Studios in April of 1977
with enough material to complete an album. Once the recording was
done, however, disagreements broke out over the post-production
values, and the band went on tour none too satisfied with the results
of the sessions. In spite of those problems, the band's summer tour
in 1977 was their most impressive ever. The San Francisco Examiner
said that they "overpowered most of the other acts" and
that "a tidy mixture of country standards, hard-rocking originals,
and unconcerned euphoria gained for Skynyrd what none of the other
bands were able to match: a straight-forward triumph."
At
the end of the tour, the band booked themselves into Doraville's
Studio One to finish the album begun at Criteria. Tom Dowd was committed
to a project in Toronto, and sent engineer Barry Rudolph to Georgia
as his surrogate. Rudolph had engineered Waylon Jennings' classic
"Are You Ready for the Country?"album, and those credentials
made him welcome in the Skynyrd studio.
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Van
Zant had often said that Lynyrd Skynyrd were just "street people".
From this, and from their reputation for brawling, came the title
of this next album, "Street Survivors". It contained some
of the most concise writing Van Zant had ever done, in part because
MCA had decreed that this album was to produce at least three hit
singles - that is, songs no more than three minutes long. At the
time, that was as long as a song could be and still expect popular
airplay. Tom Dowd remembered how difficult this was for Van Zant;
"He'd come to me with a song, and say,"How long is that?",
and I'd say," About 3:45", or whatever. Ronnie would say,"I
can't cut no more out of that", and I'd say,"We'll speed
it up and shorten the intro." When the whole thing was over,
Ronnie said to me,"That's the last time I ever write a three-minute
song, as long as I fuckin' live. If I want to write a book, I'm
going to write a book and not a piece of toilet paper."
No
matter how Van Zant felt about it, "Street Survivors"
was a fantastic success. It was the first Skynyrd album to be certified
gold upon release, and all indications were that it would become
the most popular in their twelve year career. The album cover, showing
the band standing tall while surrounded by flames, seemed likely
to become an American icon.
"Street
Survivors" was released on October 17, 1977. On October 20,
Lynyrd Skynyrd's private 1947 Convair 240 plane ran out of gas due
to "an engine malfunction of undetermined nature", and
crashed in a forest near McComb, Mississippi. Steve Gaines, Cassie
Gaines, and Ronnie Van Zant were killed upon impact. The rest of
the band suffered serious injuries that, in some cases, caused permanent
physical damage. The final irony was that this had been billed,
after the album, as the "Tour of the Survivors."
After
two long years of physical healing, the surviving members of Lynyrd
Skynyrd also began to recover musically. Their first public appearance
came in January of 1979, when they reunited for a special appearance
at Charlie Daniels' Volunteer Jam V, where an instrumental performance
of Skynyrd's signature tune, "Free Bird," served as a
fitting eulogy for the lost members and, seemingly, for the band
itself. After that they carried on in various configurations, the
best known of which was probably the Rossington-Collins Band. In
addition to Rossington and Collins, it contained keyboardist Billy
Powell, third guitarist Barry Harwood, bassist Leon Wilkeson, and
Rossington's wife, Dale Krantz, on vocals. The line-up originally
called for Artimus Pyle to resume his duties on drums, but he suffered
a severely broken leg in a motorcycle accident. The band had planned
on recording in late 1979, but these dates were pushed back to allow
time for Artimus to heal. In fact, however, Pyle did not return
to the project. Leon Wilkeson explained, "With Artimus in the
condition he was in, having to play with his left leg to rehearse,
it was kind of like we were all at the Indianapolis 500 squealing
tires and just couldn't run the track. I guess Artimus could see
that frustration, could see that we were ready to go."
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The
band called on Derek Hess to replace Pyle. He remembered, "It
happened all of a sudden, like over a weekend. I was just doing
another straight job, as a ship's chandler. I was extremely frustrated
and about ready to hang it up. Billy Powell called me and said this
is a good chance, and it kept me awake the rest of the night."
The
band then entered about a month's worth of heavy rehearsals to bring
Derek up to date on the material. The band gelled, and Rossington
Collins debuted at a series of concerts in Orlando, Gainesville
and New Orleans. Although the band entered these shows with a great
deal of trepidation, the audiences not only accepted the them, they
"nearly tore the theater apart with their wild cheering, stomping
and demands for more encores." Of course, there could be only
one encore. According to Phil Kloer, who reviewed the show for the
Florida Times Union, 'Freebird' was the "most intense, moving,
musically brilliant quarter hour of rock I have ever heard."
Rolling
Stone published an account of the "Collins Rossington Band"
that quoted Gary saying, "We're not copying Lynyrd Skynyrd.
We're not using the name and we're not falling back on it at all,
but we did write the music and play it, so I guess it will sound
like that. It's good as shit music."
The
next project was a Lynyrd Skynyrd greatest hits album. There are
at least two stories about how this album got its name. According
to Rossington, he and Collins met at his house in Jacksonville to
discuss their options for the future. As they talked, Gary absently
picked up Steve Gaines' gold-top Les Paul guitar, which Steve's
widow, Teresa,had given him. Sitting there idly strumming the guitar,
he noticed an old platinum dobro and thought, "Wow! Gold and
platinum. At the time, Allen was talking about the need for a Skynyrd
greatest hits album. He said,"Let's get all the best songs
and put them out on a record." So that's what we did. We came
up with the cover, but it was kind of simple."
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On
the other hand, MCA rep Leon Tsilis insisted the name came about
when he, Allen and Gary met at Allen's home to discuss a "Best
of ..." album. Leon recalled the three of them looking at Allen's
wall of Lynyrd Skynyrd RIAA awards. "I looked up and said,
'Christ, you guys got a lot of gold and platinum records up here.'
And that's were it came from Gold & Platinum."
MCA
records did not initially support the project. The Skynyrd catalog
sales had drastically declined and the sales department felt the
release of a "Best of..." compilation would kill the remaining
single album sales. They argued that MCA would never sell an original
"Second Helping" or "Street Survivors" because
the new "Gold & Platinum" would contain all the premium
cuts. Tsilis took the case directly to MCA's president who reluctantly
approved the project. In the event, Leon was proved right. "Gold
& Platinum" quickly went multi-platinum, and as a bonus
succeeded in shooting the rest of the Skynyrd catalog back onto
the charts.
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At
MCA's 1980 annual meeting, Tsilis received several awards for providing
the label with the album that made the year. He laughed, "Everybody
was patting me on the back and these were the same people who tried
to stop the album from coming out." Asked about MCA's reluctance
on the Gold & Platinum project, Gary Rossington bluntly replied,
"Well, they're stupid, 'cause it just helped it, didn't it?"
Although it was introduced with a great deal of fanfare, the Rossington-Collins
band released exactly two albums ("Any Time, Any Place, Any
Where" and "This Is the Way") before it fell apart.
There are various explanations for the break-up; the fact of the
matter is that during a 1982 concert, Collins threw his guitar to
the stage floor and walked out, not to return. The band had been
drunk, drugged, and sick for so long that someone's collapse was
inevitable - Collins' just happened to come first. A 1979 article
on RCB includes the following quote from Rossington, which gives
some idea of their state of mind.
"We
will compare our guitar army with any guitar army, past or present.
We are the best and we will show it. We issue a challenge to any
others like us in the world, and, being Southern gentlemen, we will
tip our hats if beat, slip back into a cypress swamp, and emerge
again ten-fold better. There's too many 'gators in those swamps,
so we'll stay out here, because we won't be surpassed by any guitar
army, anywhere, anytime."
After
the demise of RCB, the band members worked on various individual
projects. Rossington and his wife, Dale Krantz, formed the imaginatively-named
"Rossington-Rossington", which released a lackluster album
for MCA Records. After being dropped by MCA, they pulled up their
roots in Jacksonville, Florida, and moved to Jackson Hole, Wyoming.
They secured a contract with Atlantic Records and,under the name
of the "Rossington Band", put out another two lackluster
albums. Artimus Pyle formed a band which made two albums without
achieving much commercial success. Leon Wilkeson, Billy Powell,
and Ed King each spent time playing with various Christian bands.
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Allen
Collins went on to form a band called - can you guess by now? -
the Allen Collins Band. Although this was the most Skynyrd-like
of the post-crash bands, by this time Collins' relationship with
MCA had become too strained to recover. They released one ACB album,
but there was a management shake-up at MCA during this time and
the new boss, Irving Azoff, wanted nothing to do with Collins.
In
1986, Collins was involved in an automobile accident that killed
his girlfriend and left him permanently paralyzed from the waist
down. His injuries were so severe that he only had limited use of
his upper body and arms. In 1989, Allen developed pneumonia as a
result of decreased lung capacity from the paralyzation. On January
23, 1990, in a Jacksonville Hospital, Allen passed away.
As
the tenth anniversary of the plane crash approached, several former
Skynyrd members began discussing the possibility of a reunion concert.
Joining Rossington, Powell, Wilkeson and Artimus Pyle were original
guitarist Ed King (who had left the band in 1975) and new guitarist
Randall Hall, a long-time friend of the Skynyrds who had played
in the Allen Collins Band. Collins personally picked Hall to take
his place in the band and served as a consultant on the tour. Perhaps
most significantly, Johnny Van Zant - brother of Ronnie and an accomplished
recording artist in his own right - was enlisted to take over the
lead vocal spot. "It took me a long time to make up my mind
that I was going to do it," Johnny said. "Ronnie was my
brother, he was my hero, he was my everything. He's the reason I
got into the music business. I'm not trying to be Ronnie. Only Ronnie
was Ronnie; he was one of a kind." But, as Gary said, "You
know, they're brothers; they talk alike,and they look alike, and
so they're going to sound alike." In fact, it is safe to say
that it was Johnny's presence that not only made the Tribute Tour
possible, but validated the eventual re-establishment of the band.
 |
Fittingly,
the Lynyrd Skynyrd Tribute Tour made its debut in September,1987,
at the Charlie Daniels' Volunteer Jam XIII. What had originally
been planned as a single show grew to a week, then into a full-fledged
1987 tour (documented on the live album "Southern By the Grace
of God"). The audience response was overwhelming, as hard-core
Skynyrd fans of all ages greeted the band with unbridled enthusiasm.
As
the Tribute band got more shows under their collective belt, the
Lynyrd Skynyrd spirit was rekindled, the passion restored. What
had started out as a tribute to the past quite naturally became
part of the present, and held out prospects for the future. "You
know, at first we weren't going to do anything but the Tribute Tour,"
Gary recalled, "but it was the people who came to see us that
made us realize it was all right to go on. It was like they were
saying, 'It's okay, go for it.' We got a lot of mail from fans while
we were on the road, and they didn't want us to stop."
"At
first, I figured it was going to be just a tour", Johnny concurred,
"and that we would do the best we possibly could, and then
put it to rest again. But we had so much fun, that we decided to
start writing, too. We all got caught up in it, and we said, 'Well,
gosh, should we do a record?' So we decided to just keep writing
and see what would happen."
The
new Lynyrd Skynyrd signed a deal with Atlantic Records in 1990,
then moved to Capricorn in 1994. With the release of their Capricorn
debut album, "Endangered Species", Lynyrd Skynyrd produced
a unique and refreshing project a completely acoustic album,
a first for the band. "We'd wanted to do an acoustic album
for years. All of the songs we write start out just with us sitting
around jamming," said Johnny Van Zant. "This is like a
whole new outlook on Skynyrd, kind of more intimate and behind-the-scenes
album. It's like inviting everyone into our living room and playing
for them, and having a good time. That's the feel."
On
the last weekend of December, 1995, Lynyrd Skynyrd returned to Atlanta
for the premiere of "Freebird - the Movie", a concert
film of the original band's landmark Knebworth performance. It was
preceded by "Freebird - the Jam", a four-hour concert
featuring more than forty different artists. At the end of Al Kooper's
set, several members of Skynyrd came onstage to jam with him. Powell,
Wilkeson, and Rossington were well-received by the crowd, but the
real surprise came when Bob Burns sat down behind the drums
the first time in twenty-one years that he had played with the band.
Cabin
Fever Entertainment is planning to tour "Freebird - the Movie"
around the country in the winter of 1996-97, and arrangements have
been made with MCA Records to release the soundtrack. It has been
digitally re-mastered by Tom Dowd, and its quality is reportedly
excellent. Lynyrd Skynyrd was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall
of Fame in 2006.
The
2006 Lynyrd Skynyrd line-up:
Gary Rossington - guitar
Billy Powell - keyboards
Ean Evans - bass
Rickey Medlocke - guitar
Johnny Van Zant - vocals
Michael Cartellone - drums
Dale Krantz Rossington and
Carol Chase - background vocals
Casework
(as usual) by Special Agent Coyote Red. Source materials provided
(as usual) by the Tsilis Archives. Special thanks to the Webmaster
for sharing his professional recollections and expertise.
Lynyrd
Skynyrd Discography
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