Lynyrd Skynyrd - Freebird - 7/2/1977 | Singer Reacts |
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- čas přidán 28. 12. 2023
- I highly suggest you listen to the original song without my commentary:
Lynyrd Skynyrd - Freebird - 7/2/1977 - Oakland Coliseum Stadium (Official)
• Lynyrd Skynyrd - Freeb...
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Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing.
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#lynyrdskynyrd #freebird #reaction #musicreactions #musicreaction - Hudba
All of those grandparents & and great-grandparents in the audience. That's right, we rock back then.
Daisy dukes and all...❤🎉😊
I was at this concert. Peter Frampton was the headliner but Skynyrd stole the show. We waited all day in the July sun to hear this song. It was their encore and 70,000 plus teens who had veen stoned and sun stroked came alive at the 12 minute guitar solo. Yeah we were blessed to have these bands. Don't try to hard to analyze, just let go and enjoy.
Amen
No, you weren't. That was Frampton Oakland 77 . This concert was in San Francisco, 76 Winter PARK.
No, laurabartholomew was correct, you’re wrong. This is the Oakland ‘77 show headlined by Frampton. The ‘76 Winterland show was filmed in B&W, and appeared to be a nighttime show, you can find it on CZcams as well.
I wasn't born yet, but man, I've loved this song ever since I first heard it just over 10 years ago. Anyway, your comment got a 'Like' from me from the time I read your very first sentence: "I was at this concert."....LOL
Can't find music like that today 😮 That era produced so many good musicians.
Saddest thing about watching this is that all these original members are now gone, guitarist Gary Rossington having passed just a few months ago. Brilliant, historical performance.
The drummer is still alive. Lives in Florida
@@andreadeamon6419 You are correct, Artimus Pyle (the drummer in this video) is still living. Founding drummer Bob Burns, who played drums on the original recording, is no longer with us. Thanks for catching my error.
Imagine what could’ve been.
Rickey Medlocke is an original member. That's why the band included him in the hall of fame induction ceremony. They started out with two drummers , Bob Burns, and Rickey Medlocke. Rick left prior to the recording of their debut album, but Gary and the rest of the band always considered him an original member.
@@Jaybird_67 Ricky isn’t an original member of Lynyrd Skynyrd - they formed in 1964 and he was only involved for about a year in 1971-1972 filling in for original drummer Bob Burns. He left in 19872 to reform his band Blackfoot and didn’t return to Lynyrd Skynyrd until 1996.
When she said, "I'm interested in what they do next," I just thought, man, buckle in. You're going on the ride of your life.
No fancy light show, no stage theatrics, and no autotune. Just pure talent front and center!
You got that right, you sho got that right! Pun intended.
Music we'll NEVER see again!!
No I phones or Botox either !
The biggest difference being everything back then was new, most of the pioneers were absolutely great but it was partly because there was less creative space being taken up. In todays world you can find tens of thousands of musicians capable of what only a few were back then, it almost forces new artists into "light shows and stage theatrics".. doesn't mean they arent just as good
Lol the complete opposite of a KISS show
The guitarist jumping wrote this song in high school at 17 years old. That's incredible!
This is my first choice to be played at my funeral
The guitarist in white jamming at the end of Free Bird is Allen Collins. Allen and Ronnie Van Zant co-wrote Free Bird. Allen Collins was one of the greatest blues guitarist of that era.
It is indeed incredible...and even more so...many those nice looking ladies at the 5:30 mark are now grandmother
The "Four Horseman of the music apocalypse ". Here is how the song works. Gary Rosington on lead slid guitar in the beginning. Allen Collins (in white) takes over lead and Gary goes to rhythm guitar. Steve Gaines who has been also been playing rhym up till now syncs with Allen playing duel lead. He inserts additional leads over Allen's leads during the song. At the same time. Leon Wilkinson is flying all over his bass guitar. You will never see talent on a stage like this again
Correct. I have to explain to people all of the time that that’s not just Allen playing that by himself. 👍
Yes man this will never be repeated
Awesome Insights! Ty!
Correct! It's all about the Harmonics!
Allen helped write the song and music for this and many other songs. Probably one of the top 3 leads in history.
This is one of best live performances of all time and we are blessed it was recorded for us to enjoy today. This was just before the tragic plane crash that devastated the band. These guys were in the prime of their career and makes you wonder what great music we missed out on because their lives were cut short.
Makes me sad to know they died after this.
My Lord you are right. Sweet Home and Gimme 3 steps are my favorite too.
Yeah, puts a new melancholy on the song when you realize that the crash was only a little less than four months after this performance.
*Amen*
Hard to take anyone seriously when they don't even have a stereo system or headphones to listen to it with
Billy Powell was a roadie, trained in classical piano. They heard him messing around on the keys before a set and said, " Hey... wanna sit in?"
I like his can of Bud sitting on top of his grand piano.
@@michaeldonnan6767 I'd pay money for a can like that.
In most of the world, there's an adage that says, "It isn't over until the fat lady sings" (an opera reference).
.
In the South, "It ain't over 'til Skynrd plays FREEBIRD!"
My man Leon be killing it on the base as always. He didnt get the lime light behind Ronnie and guys but his base lines were sublimne. RIP brother.
Yes Sir he was phenomenal
Yes he was.
YES. also, his role is the climax of the guitar solo is so underrated. his climbing line from 14:40 to 14:55 are integral to that energy shift
He played a fish, a bass
@@jefffredenburg7231
And that's why your music sucks.
All those girls you see in the audience are grandmothers now and great grandmothers. We didn’t know how good we had it back in the 70s and 80s relative to music.
They were in their 20s. Mind blowing. I couldn’t even attempt to create a masterpiece like this, even with unlimited time. They left us with many gems, god bless Lynyrd Skynyrd.
One afternoon in 1981, four of our small-town guys died in a car wreck. A bunch of us gathered at the pool hall to try to deal with it- in total shock. One of us rolled in and dumped five dollars worth of quarters in the juke box and played this on repeat- I've never listened to it on purpose since then. That is, until now. Somehow I knew watching you discover it would be worthwhile, and it was. Thank you!
This was played at my nephew's funeral
I get that. I can watch people react to something that I wouldn't watch or listen to again on my own, for whatever reason.
We dedicated this song to my wife's granddaughter who passed away from suicide on Halloween of 2021. I've always loved this song and this performance
This song was played at a army friend's funeral. I used to associate the song with a guy leaving his woman.
This is what concerts used to be.....affordable and fun.
Exactly right
Don't roll your eyes at boomers & GenX when they tell you how much better things were. They were. 💕
Just turned 60 born in 63 and I can def second that!!!!! Funny just clicked the thumbs up and was number 63!!!
Well....compared the skills you see today, these guys, as wonderful as they were, are not even in the same league. Sorry but this boomer sees things VERY differently...
These boys made real music without the tech crutches they use today
We were pretty good once. Might just be so today.
@@The2ndFirst
Well, some are dead, so..
To answer your question yes Gary Rossington was making the whistling/bird sound with his guitar by using the end of his slide bottle on the strings
That takes a lot of talent
He was playing harmonics with his slide, but a slide not necessary to make that sound. Harmonics are natural places on the strings, where a very light touch of the string, without bringing it down to contact the fret, will ring out like that, at a very high pitch. There are harmonics at several places up and down the fretboard. They are located at the 5th, 7th, 12th and 19th(?), plus one more that isn't over the fretboard, closer to the bridge.
The reason he's making that sound is he's imitating Duane Allman, because the song is dedicated to his memory...
You are another dude that that thinks he knows everything just shut up and listen
Its hard to catch most cams miss it
they have a sound that has never been duplicated, piano, numerous guitars, bass, drums, killer lyrics and vocals.
Country music?
I was there...yes, Oakland Coliseum 1977. Went to Skyline High School in Oakland back in the day Class of '75' Went to every Day on the Green for years. Always had 3 to 5 bands at each one. Where else could you see the Grateful Dead and the Beach Boys at the same concert. They killed it !!!! Back then, it was Real Rock and Roll and it RULED the day !!!!
This proves how great the 70's were for music!
Well done. I never get tired of watching newbies seeing it for the first time!
Agreed! When they begin to realize that the guitars aren't stopping, thats a great moment.
Aye
The piano player Billy Powell started out with them as a roadie. That is until one day during a break they heard him playing the piano and found out he was a classically trained pianist.. They hired him for the band and the rest as they say is history!!
Gary Rossington was an awesome guitar player especially when he did the slide on Freebird. Rest in peace Gary fly free with your brothers.
Allen, Gary and Steve are three very underrated guitarist, very talented
They are the pride of Jacksonville, Florida. Jacksonville was a really small town back then, it's hard to wrap your head around there being that much talent on the Westside, that could get together and create something magical.
Jacksonville was much smaller then, but later, to increase revenue, some of the surrounding counties were incorporated into Jacksonville, making it much larger.
@BrandonLeeBrown no, they didn't incorporate any other counties. They made the entire county, Duval, part of the city of Jacksonville. Jacksonville is the largest city in the country in land size.
He’s right Jacksonville encompasses the entire county. And the west side is the best side. Grew up and still live a mile from where most of them lived. Lake Shore/ Murray Hill.
Music is a pretty powerful thing isn't it!? Cool to see this iconic performance hit you the way it did.
In the mid-90s I saw the Skynyrd “Reunion Tour” with Jonnie van Zant as the vocalist. He sounded incredibly like his older brother. During the encore they started playing Freebird…
Jonnie sang the first verse of the song…walked up to the microphone and set his hat on it ( looked just like Ronnie’s hat in this video). He said, “There’s only one man that can sing this song”, and stepped back. The remainder of the song was played as an instrumental…The crowd was jumping up and down as they are in this video…not a dry eye in the house
Johnny sounds nothing like Ronnie
Is there a video by any chance?
@@jamestate5059No one sounds exactly like Ronnie…
Live at Knebworth opening for the Stones is cool as they were told to stay off the tongue and Ronnie said he would have pushed the piano down there as well. Badass.
They lost the lead singer Ronnie Van Zant, guitar player and vocalist Steve Gaines and his sister Cassie who sang backup, and assistant road manager Dean Kilpatrick. The pilot and his 1st officer were also lost. 20 people survived. All because the plane ran out of fuel. That should never happen ever! Yesterday, today, or tomorrow. What a loss!
Gary’s bird sound that he made with his guitar is legendary. The way he expressed himself with his guitar, it sounded like a bird. One of the many reasons why this song is a Legend of a song.
Btw your input of this song is amazing. I love sitting down and just closing my eyes to this song. So much is happening all at once and you were very descriptive ❤ loved this!
One of the great live performances ever !
Real musicians with no tricks or computers !
It's such a shame at what lots of young kids call music these day's !
What about that crowd !
Thanks for your review 😎✌
That crowd is the best. Gave them honest love. All of them despite today's focus on the confederate flag.
That wuz a very WHITE crowd...
@aloneranger3980
By choice. No one said, " black people don't come. There were a few black folk out there brave enough to go against the cultural grain and listen to " white music," to probably realize as Gen X did, music is music. My communities choice is not to listen. Music is for everyone.
@@JaquelineGoodspeed true, I'm Asian but I enjoyed listening to Fortunate Son, Born In The USA & of course this song
I was lucky enough to see them live
You would love “Simple Man, Tuesday’s Gone, That’s Smell, Ballad of Curtis Lowe, etc etc etc. The live Concert at Knebworth 1976, opening for the Rolling Stones, who they blew away, was iconic in really propelling them to Super-Star status on the world stage!
"Simple Man" is a must listen...
One of the greatest guitar solos that has ever been recorded!!! By one of the greatest bands that there ever has been!!!
Their '77 tour was awesome. The last tour as the plane crash happened. I went to this one in Oakland
how was it like ? tell us we that are too young to have known that ^^
I was only 10 - i knew the songs as it was all my babysitters listened to
@@antoinebrg6299 It was just like you saw here, plus being in a crowd crowd of 60,000. It was just great, so I went and saw them again two days later. Peter Frampton, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Santana, and The Outlaws played.
@@andreadeamon6419now you wish you could've thanked her for getting you into our old American rock 🎸💙🙏🍺🗽🗽🗽
The sounds you weren’t familiar to you on guitar were slide guitar where the guitar is tuned to an open chord and the slide (which can be metal or glass (in this case glass) is touched onto the strings and moved up and down the fretboard to different chords but the chords blend into each other. It’s the same idea as lap steel guitar basically, which you hear in country music and Hawian music.
An absolutely iconic song from an amazing band, such a shame that they left us too soon 🥲😢
Nice reaction Rachael 🌹
@@jimspetdragons3737 Do you play guitar? I suspect not because I do and have done for a very long time and have played Freebird many times - that’s how I know how it’s done; the chirping sounds are harmonics, the slide is on the 12th fret where you get harmonics by touching the strings very lightly. What this is, is a live performance, whether it’s overdubbed or not that’s what’s being done in this performance by the player with the red Gibson SG!
@@DarrellW_UK That would be Gary Rossington. He died in march of 2023. He was the last of the musicians you see on stage here. They all died relatively young. Even Gary was only 71.
@@janpcs thanks, I got a bit annoyed by a stupid remark that seems to have disappeared, yeah, I had a bit of a memory glitch 😆
Yeah, it was a tragic thing to happen! I didn’t know that Gary was still alive until this year he was a great slide player!
@@janpcs Artimus the drummer is still alive.
@@DarrellW_UK Gary got that sound by putting fret wire behind the 1st fret.
This is classic southern fried rock. I am 62 and from Florida and the Van Zant family were family friends. I remember this music fondly. The music of my youth. As well as Molly Hatchet, .38 Special. God I miss it!! It was really funny when I played this for my youngest son when he was 15. His mouth hung open and he said "GEEZUS' when the guitar piece broke out. Huge hip hop and rap fan, grunge fan , and alt fan. This song inspired him to play guitar! LOVE IT!!!
I’m so blessed to have grown up in the sixties and seventies when the best bands were around. And getting to see most of them.
Very sad indeed. This concert was their last before the tragic plane crash in October 77, 3 months after this concert. The Knebworh Concert in 76 in England supporting the Rolling Stones. That concert is considered the best ever LIVE PERFORMANCE EVER. A must watch
I met Allen Collins once down in Sunrise Fla. After a Rossington - Collins band concert and I gotta tell ya he was one of the nicest guys I ever met. He signed an autograph for my girlfriend and it said God Bless you Joanna , Allen Collins. Now how cool is that.
Sadly all original members are gone now but their music will live on forever. Peace!
These guys rehearsed and rehearsed and rehearsed to perfect their sound. Ronnie was the leader and a taskmaster and wanted all their songs to sound just like the albums.
Allen Collins (in all white) wrote the solo portion on the last half of this song when he was 18.
Watching this always dredges up emotions, especially knowing what would happen on October 20th of that year.
The crowd having the time of their lives with no phones or cameras and just enjoying the greatness of this band.
They released 5 studio albums and 1 live album between 1973 and 1977. The last was Street Survivors, which came out just 3 days before the crash.
What a band, and what a tragedy, and it is still painful to think about 46 years later.
Southern Rocks Gold Standard and one of the best (live) bands ever.
Simple Man, Call Me The Breeze, Gimme Back My Bullets, Tuesdays Gone, The Ballad Of Curtis Loew, Gimme Three Steps and many others to enjoy and react to.
Thanks for the reaction.
It ends like a freight train running at full speed down the tracks.
One of my favorite things is when young people watch this and it's dawns on them, through the video itself, or from a comment like mine, that all these audience members are their GRANDPARENTS now! We aren't so different after all!
Yes back when no one was offended..if you could play good rock and roll no matter where you are from you're in brother..people lived them southern boys with their southern rock in California !!! They had the biggest rebel flag that will ever be in California ..great reaction !!
Great reaction! Speaking as an old fart that was around back then, as long as young people continue to experience the sheer joy that they shared, and the amazing skills, they will continue to live on...
Growing up in Alabama in the 70s and 80s lynyrd skynyrd was /is a religion !
RIP my brothers ❤
Right next door to you brother in Mississippi
@@BullseyeForever24 Right next door to where LS originated. Alas, moved to Nashville just as they were starting and never saw them.
Amen!!! Same from us in texas!!!!
Religion? ALL religion crashes and burns. Following Jesus not religion. Religion is stale dead and boring.
My Florida beach town wore out Sweet Home Alabama on the radio stations back then. Panama City Beach is Florida Lower Alabama! Fla. Jeff your comment is mine too, just put Florida in it for me.
The live version shows you the intensity. The studio version allows you to hear the details and enjoy the mastery.
What else is melancholy about this video is I was about the same age as the crowd at this time. All these people are in their sixties now and their youth is long gone but what a great moment in time and wonderful memory to have in their golden years. We may be old but we got to see all the cool bands.
Crazy to think most of the people in the crowd are now in their late 60's early 70's
This live performance is iconic
Fantastic reaction. This is definitely one of the most iconic songs ever written. This was one of the bands last performances before their infamous plane crash, and one of the best performances of this song ever. Long live Lynyrd Skynyrd.
😭😭😭👍
That was fun. You will probably hear this a lot in the comments but a really great next choice to check out by them is The Ballad Of Curtis Loew. It is just beautiful and warm and fantastic storytelling.
THAT WAS MY EXACT THOUGHT!
Either that or Simple Man
LS "Lord help me I can't Change"
Every groupie in the crowd "I can change him"
Allen Collins with the solo at the end is just legendary! Rip Allen ,Gary,Steve,Ronnie,Leon,Billy,Cassie
In the summer we hitched to their concerts and the Allman Bros concerts. We stayed sunburnt all summer long from the outdoor concerts. It was so worth it. This was the last concert I saw befire I joined the Air Force. The last of my hitchhicking hippie days. I was 21. God I miss thos summers in the late 60s early seventies clear to the end of the 70s. Life has bever been as free since for any of us.
They did an even longer solo at their 1976 Knebworth performance. Like another solid minute of soloing
I was at this concert. The lineup, in order of appearance, The Outlaws (Green Grass and High Tides, There Goes Another Love Song) Santana (Oye Como Va) Lynyrd Skynyrd (Sweet Home Alabama, Gimme Three Steps, Simple Man); Peter Frampton, (Do You Feel Like We Do)
It was a great show, my first concert.
Gary Rossington played lead slide guitar in the opening section, with Allen Collins shredding it in the closing.
Since this was filmed, I wonder if the whole show & maybe even the entire day was also filmed. What a killer first concert to attend! I think that's the best crowd I've ever seen, so much energy/synergy.
Damn! What a great line-up! Back when Rock was ROCK!
What a jaw dropping first concert to have been a part of👍👍👍
I saw Lynyrd Skynyrd live in the “Warehouse March 30, 1975”
New Orleans,La.
It was the Nuthin’ Fancy Tour
I was 17 years old at the time…
I am truly blessed.
Hypnotic is the word that explains the feeling, from the slide guitar work.
Making it look easy is a combination of talent, passion and a hell of a lot of hard work.
Veterans Memorial Auditorium, Columbus, OH, United States May 18, 1976. I was there. :) Your reaction is priceless.
That's back when we enjoyed real talent and real songs
Best reaction yet. Heartfelt and real. The music I grew up on, and this song was our anthem.
Please react to I’d Love To Change The World by Ten Year’s After.
This is my favorite version of the tune. Great sound, everyone is on fire. The piano player used to be one of the crew, then he mentioned he wrote a piano intro to free bird and next thing you know, he is in the band. Nice!
Alan Collins survived the plane crash, but was never the same after. Think today we would call it PTSD. It is a sad story.
I can watch this video over and over again. I saw Skynyrd 2:54 05/30/76 at RFK Stadium in DC. They played w/Aerosmith, Nazareth and Ted Nugent. The concert lasted all day and Skynyrd blew everyone away. Freebird was the highlight of the day. The song takes you through every emotion culminating with guitars solos unmatched by anyone since. Van Zant was the leader of the band and he made sure that every band member had their moment to shine. I miss those days so much.
The song Free Bird was written by Allen Collins and lead singer Ronnie Van Zant. It was inspired when Allen had a fight with his GF Kathy. She asked him if he would remember her if she left. There are only two greatest concerts songs to this day. Free Bird and Stairway to Heavon.
I worked with them on a German tour about 10 years ago. Only 1 guitarist was the same as the gig you just watched, but I still considered it an honour to be there and they were still really good. (I was stage manager for an English band called 'The Brew' who supported them on that tour).
Yep, Gary Rossington, who just passed away March 5th of this year.
@@notablindliberal896 hope his old friends welcomed him up there, RIP
Yes Johnnie is good.
@antoinebrg6299 I bet there was one hell of a party that night.
The best part of this was watching your reactions. Like a lot of us that are still here, we've lived through this. And it was frigging amazing, watching you melt into this performance. Wishing you were on the front row. Lol .I'm glad young folks are still listening and learning. Yeah it was a fantastic time. So much just raw damn talent 🎉
Transcendental music, nothing more needs saying. Amen...❤
simply amazing! this concert footage will never get old to me! God i wish i was there!
It was intentionally melancholic as he is explaining his end to the relationship, and then erupts into him reveling in his freedom. The accelerating tempo is incredible in the last two thirds of the song (it's a lot like "Stairway to Heaven"), as is the resounding bass, which is hard to get on computer speakers. Equally important to the video is the response of the women to the music, particularly the lady with the black hair, yellow shirt and her hands on her head, she seems to find Cloud 9. One of the most incredible live performances of all time. Also "and this bird you cannot chain", not change. "Sweet Home Alabama" from 1976 Knebworth concert. Thanks a lot for the video.
I read a comment about this song where it was suggested this should be our national anthem. I half agree!
They were in their late mid 20's ! If they all lived and stayed together, they could have have been the greatest band of all time! As it was, they have an AMAZING body of work ❤❤❤
This video can evoke a sadness as you watch knowing this was just a few weeks before the plane crash. I think this may have been the last time performed this song together as the original band, but I may be wrong on that. When you watch this from the perspective of knowing the future, it can be very emotional.
Yes it is just like that. Sad but beautuful at the same time.
It was actually a few months before the crash. They played this Day On The Green then went east. It was a little over 3 months later
A cornerstone of Southern Rock....epic live performance. Glad you enjoyed this, have another live concert suggestion; Peter Frampton "Do You Feel Like We Do" from the Frampton Comes Alive tour & The Who "Who Are You", live at Shepperton Studios!!! You will love them🤟😎
One of the best videos. The unity makes me just remember the times of love for each other. Its missed.
How is it possible that a band whose songs have always brought a sense of peace and tranquility could have had such a sad and heavy fate?
One of the Greatest Bands of All Time.
Love your reaction! You were so surprised about how the guitars took off and played airborne rock. They had been playing this song at hundreds of concerts four or so years previously. That’s why they have everything down pat and were in total synch.
46 years ago....sure was fun🥰
Classic!
This song never gets old. Played this at a gig in Orewa (New Zealand) last year and was the highlight crowd favorite of the night!
Thanks for the heartfelt reaction to this special song 🎸❤️
Fun little side note to this amazing song and performance. If you listen to their live album (One more from the road) Ronnie asks the crowd what song they want to hear and the crowd roars "Freebird!". For many years after that, people attending concerts of other artists would often hold up lighters during an encore and a segment of the crowd would be chanting "Freebird", kind of a fun tradition...
The reference that in guitar hero 2 as well lol . At the end of the “story” freebird is the final song you have to pass and the crowd chants “freebird freebird!!!”
Lol I’m guilty of that several times over
New subscriber here.I loved your reaction to Freebird one of most iconic songs in history.❤ Much love from Canada❤🇨🇦
Thanks. I'm from Jacksonville same time. Saw last concert in Greenville sc. Before crash. Freebird was there last song. Thanks
This was my older brothers favorite song. Unfortunately he passed away in 1983 of brain cancer. At the age of 24. This song will put you in a trance and later smack you in the head. Excellent song.
Yes he was making that bird sound with his guitar.
They sure don’t make them like that anymore. What a band and what a song.
Died too soon.....but now they are forever in the minds of billions of people for decades to come. Just wow
I grew up on the same street as Pianist Billy Powell "RIP" on the westside of Jacksonville Fl.
Wondering how a guitarist achieves all that speed and energy throughout a massive solo? It’s all in practice and constantly playing live for years. Nobody is born a guitar god, they are hard-working, hard-rocking musicians who perfect their craft through blood, sweat, and tears.
That was actually three guys on that solo. 👍
Eagles’ Hotel California live performance is another iconic song with three lead guitars soloing together
I played this song at my wife’s funeral because this was her favorite Skynyrd song. It was my way of saying goodbye to her one last time…
Back in the day with no cell phones... just kids enjoying the moment!
Them boys could play! Great reaction!
Just FYI, that drummer (Artymus Pyle) is the only one of those musicians still with us today. All the other band members are gone. Well,... I should mention, there is one of the female backup singers from the trio called the Honketts that is still alive as well. Her name is Leslie Hawkins. Although they didn't perform on this particular song, they can be seen on the video of the "Sweet Home Alabama" performance at this same concert.
Ahh the 70s what a cool and fabulous time to be a teenager, and this Southern girl loves Skynyrd ,Allen Collins my favorite guitarist ✝️💜🧂🪖🇺🇸
Even though some will argue that the concert in Knebworth England was a better concert, but for "Freebird" this is the best version. It shows Billy Powell's classical piano training and how the "3 Guitar Army" of Gary Rossington, Alan Collins, and Steve Gaines could jam and play in one accord, and don't forget Leon Wilkeson being amazing on bass. Artimus Pyle with that driving drum set is just unreal. Lead singer Ronnie Van Zant is at the top of his game like never before. Other than Artimus, they are all gone now. He is still playing with his own band that does a lot of Skynyrd songs as a tribute to his fallen brethren.
Knebworth is longer and it has been recorded as the BEST LIVE VERSION IN THE HISTORY OF LS AND HOW LS SMOKED THE STONES AT KNEBWORTH AND PISSED MICK JAGGER OFF!! OAKLAND IS GREAT, A BETTER VIDEO THAN KNEBWORTH !!! AT ONE TIME UNLESS YOU WENT TO LIVE SHOWS OR SAW MUSIC ON TV , YOU LISTEN TO RADIO, 8-TRACKS,CASSETTES AND CD'S !! VIDEOS ARE NICE TO WATCH BUT FOR ME MUSIC SHOULD BE LISTENED TO!!
Plus the crowd in Oakland was more exciting and into the band. Probably 90% of the Knebworth crowd didn’t know the band before they saw them.