* En anglais uniquement
Lynyrd Skynyrd is the definitive Southern rock band, fusing the overdriven power of blues-rock with a rebellious Southern image and a hard rock swagger.
Skynyrd never relied on the jazzy improvisations of the
Allman Brothers. Instead, they were a hard-living, hard-driving rock & roll band. They may have jammed endlessly on-stage, but their music remained firmly entrenched in blues, rock, and country. Throughout the band's early records, frontman
Ronnie Van Zant demonstrated a knack for lyrical detail and a down-to-earth honesty that had more in common with country than rock & roll. During the height of
Skynyrd's popularity in the mid-'70s, they adopted a more muscular and gritty blues-rock sound that yielded the classic rock standards "Sweet Home Alabama," "Simple Man," "What's Your Name," "That Smell," "Gimme Three Steps," and "Free Bird." The group ceased operations after the tragic deaths of
Van Zant,
Steve Gaines, and backup singer
Cassie Gaines, who were killed in an airplane crash on October 20, 1977.
Skynyrd re-formed in 1987 with
Ronnie's younger sibling
Johnny Van Zant on vocals, and guitarist and co-founder
Gary Rossington, who would serve as the group's sole constant member over the years. In 2018, after decades of performing and recording, the band embarked on a farewell tour, which was chronicled on the 2020 concert LP and film
Last of the Street Survivors Tour Lyve!While in high school in Jacksonville, Florida,
Ronnie Van Zant (vocals),
Allen Collins (guitar), and
Gary Rossington (guitar) formed My Backyard. Within a few months, the group added bassist
Leon Wilkeson and keyboardist
Billy Powell, and changed their name to
Lynyrd Skynyrd, a mocking tribute to their gym teacher Leonard Skinner, who was notorious for punishing students with long hair. With drummer
Bob Burns,
Lynyrd Skynyrd began playing throughout the South. For the first few years, the group had little success, but producer
Al Kooper signed the band to MCA after seeing them play at an Atlanta club called Funocchio's in 1972.
Kooper produced the group's 1973 debut,
Pronounced Leh-Nerd Skin-Nerd, which was recorded after former
Strawberry Alarm Clock guitarist
Ed King joined the band. The group became notorious for their triple-guitar attack, which was showcased on "Free Bird," a tribute to then-recently deceased
Duane Allman. "Free Bird" earned
Lynyrd Skynyrd their first national exposure and it became one of the staples of album rock radio, still receiving airplay decades after its release.
"Free Bird" and an opening slot on
the Who's 1973
Quadrophenia tour gave
Lynyrd Skynyrd a devoted following, which helped their second album, 1974's
Second Helping, become its breakthrough hit. Featuring the hit single "Sweet Home Alabama" -- a response to
Neil Young's "Southern Man" --
Second Helping reached number 12 and went multi-platinum. At the end of the year,
Artimus Pyle replaced drummer
Burns and
King left the band shortly afterward. The new sextet released
Nuthin' Fancy in 1975, and it became the band's first Top Ten hit. The record was followed by the
Tom Dowd-produced
Gimme Back My Bullets in 1976, which failed to match the success of its two predecessors. However, the band retained their following through constant touring, which was documented on the double-live album
One More from the Road. Released in late 1976, the album featured the band's new guitarist,
Steve Gaines, and a trio of female backup singers, and it became
Skynyrd's second Top Ten album.
Lynyrd Skynyrd released their sixth album,
Street Survivors, on October 17, 1977. Three days later, a privately chartered plane carrying the band between shows in Greenville, South Carolina and Baton Rouge, Louisiana, crashed outside of Gillsburg, Mississippi.
Ronnie Van Zant,
Steve Gaines, and his sister
Cassie, one of the group's backing vocalists, died in the crash; the remaining members were injured. (The cause of the crash was either fuel shortage or a fault with the plane's mechanics.) The cover for
Street Survivors had pictured the band surrounded in flames; after the crash, the cover was changed. In the wake of the tragedy, the album became one of the band's biggest hits.
Lynyrd Skynyrd broke up after the crash, releasing a collection of early demos called Skynyrd's First and...Last in 1978; it had been scheduled for release before the crash. The double-album compilation Gold & Platinum was released in 1980.
Later in 1980,
Rossington and
Collins formed a new band -- naturally named the
Rossington Collins Band -- that featured four surviving members. Two years later,
Pyle formed
the Artimus Pyle Band.
Collins suffered a car crash in 1986 that killed his girlfriend and left him paralyzed; four years later, he died of respiratory failure. In 1987,
Rossington,
Powell,
King, and
Wilkeson reunited
Lynyrd Skynyrd, adding vocalist
Johnny Van Zant and guitarist
Randall Hall. The band embarked on a reunion tour, which was captured on the 1988 double-live album
Southern by the Grace of God: Lynyrd Skynyrd Tribute Tour 1987. The re-formed
Skynyrd began recording in 1991, and for the remainder of the decade, the band toured frequently, putting out albums occasionally. The reunited
Skynyrd frequently switched drummers, but it had little effect on their sound.
During the '90s,
Lynyrd Skynyrd were made honorary colonels in the Alabama State Militia, due to their classic rock staple "Sweet Home Alabama." During the mid-'90s,
Van Zant,
Rossington,
Wilkeson, and
Powell regrouped by adding two Southern rock veterans to
Skynyrd's guitar stable: former
Blackfoot frontman
Rickey Medlocke and ex-Outlaws
Hughie Thomasson. With ex-
Damn Yankee Michael Cartellone bringing stability to the drum chair, the reconstituted band signed to CMC International for the 1997 album
Twenty. This lineup went on to release Lyve from Steel Town in 1998, followed a year later by
Edge of Forever. The seasonal effort
Christmas Time Again was released in fall 2000. Although
Wilkeson died one year later,
Lynyrd Skynyrd regrouped and recorded
Vicious Cycle for a 2003 release. The concert film and LP
Lyve: The Vicious Cycle Tour followed a year later, 2006 saw the release of Face to Face, and 2007 brought Paper Sleeve Box. But death continued to haunt the band, and the lineup continued to change, as much from attrition as anything else.
Wilkeson,
Skynyrd's bassist since 1972, died in 2001 and was replaced by
Ean Evans that same year (
Evans, in turn, died in 2009).
Thomasson left the band to re-form his band Outlaws in 2005, dying two years later in 2007. His spot in
Skynyrd was taken by
Mark "Sparky" Matejka, formerly of
Hot Apple Pie, in 2006. Original keyboardist
Powell died at the age of 56 at his home near Jacksonville, Florida in 2009. That year also saw the release of a new studio album,
God + Guns, on Roadrunner Records. Live from Freedom Hall was released on the same label in 2010. A new studio album,
Last of a Dyin' Breed, produced by
Bob Marlette, recorded at Blackbird Studio in Nashville, and featuring a new bass player,
Johnny Colt (formerly a bassist for
the Black Crowes), appeared in 2012. In April 2015, original
Skynyrd drummer
Bob Burns died in a single-car accident in Bartow County, Georgia. After battling lung cancer, guitarist
Ed King died in Nashville, Tennessee in August 2018. That same year saw the group announce their farewell tour.
Last of the Street Survivors Tour Lyve!, a concert album and film documenting the tour, was released in 2020. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine & Steve Leggett