Here's a blog I wrote for GRITZ back in 2008. For all the Skynyrd fans. This will be included in my upcoming book, The Buffalo Reader.
Free
Bird Factoids (Jul 15, 2008)
There’s a reason
why “Free Bird” is one of the best-loved Southern Rock song in history. Actually, there are a lot of
reasons.
Every 15 seconds,
someone, somewhere in the world is listening to a Lynyrd Skynyrd Song. 60
percent of the time, that song is “Free Bird.”
“Free Bird” is
the most played and most requested song in classic rock radio history, topping
even “Stairway to Heaven.”
Rolling Stone magazine ranked it the 191st greatest
song in 500 Greatest Songs of All Time. Personally, I would like to challenge
that ranking.
“Free Bird” made
the charts on numerous occasions in both the U.S. and UK but only reached #19
in the U.S. Billboard charts.
The song was
written by Allen Collins and Ronnie Van Zant in 1970
The opening verse, "If I leave here
tomorrow, would you still remember me?" was inspired by Allen Collins'
girlfriend who had asked him the question during a fight.
Allman Brothers
Band guitarist Duane Allman died around the same time “Free Bird” was released.
Skynyrd sometimes dedicated it to Allman at concerts, but it was written long
before his death, so rumors that it was written about Duane are false. The
double guitar solo at the end is the same style as many early Allman Brothers
songs on which Duane played.
First recorded as
a demo for Shade Tree Records, 1970, “Free Bird” was recorded again around the
same time at Quinvy Studios in Muscle Shoals (Jimmy Johnson producing). The song appears on the band’s debut Pronounced Leh-nerd Skin-nerd clocking
in at 9:18. In 1976 appeared on the double live album One More from the Road, timing out at 14:25, which later prompted
the Drive By Truckers on their epic Southern
Rock Opera to say “It’s a very- long- song.”
The slow ballad
moving into an intense Southern Rock jam ending concept inspired other bands to
write songs like “Green Grass and High Tides,” and “Highway Song.”
It’s the only song
in the band’s catalog that has been played at every single Lynyrd Skynyrd
concert since they took the Skynyrd name.
The conductor of
the Charleston (SC) Symphony Orchestra, David Stahl, irritated by outbursts of
"Free Bird!" at concerts, had the orchestra learn to perform the song
so that they could go directly into it from whatever piece they were performing
at the moment.
Cover Versions:
The band Will To Power scored a minor hit in 1988 with a medley of “Free Bird”
and Peter Frampton's "Baby, I Love Your Way;” In 1994, a cover version was recorded by
country music artist Wynonna; also doing "Free Bird," progressive
metal band Dream Theater; Mexican rock duo, Rodrigo y Gabriela (played on
acoustic guitars with nylon strings); Phish, done acappela, including the
guitar solo; Kid Rock r; Built to Spill;
The Charlie Daniels Band; Tally Hall; The California Guitar Trio; Dash Rip Rock
(a parody mashup of "Freebird" and Led Zeppelin's "Stairway To
Heaven" titled "Stairway To Freebird"); the punk band Towers of London; Larry Cordle
& Lonesome Standard Time released an awesome bluegrass version on 2004’s Lonesome Skynyrd Time.
In the 1980s,
Chicago Radio DJ Kevin Matthews urged his listeners to shout "Free
Bird!" at a Florence Henderson concert as a sort of joke towards the
musician and actress. Credited with starting the tradition of yelling
"Free Bird!," but not actually doing so, he stated that "It was
never meant to be yelled at a cool concert -- it was meant to be yelled at
someone really lame. If you're going to yell “Free Bird,” yell “Free Bird” at a
Jim Nabors concert.
An eternal hit.
An iconic Southern Rock anthem. This bird you’ll never change.
-Michael Buffalo Smith