This song was one of the anthems of my teenage years so it is forever burned into my soul, but after seeing Fil and his love of this music, I've got to believe that the fire that drove Lynyrd Skynyrd does live on in some of today's musicians--they just have not introduced themselves to us yet. :)
@@dickphukwede1856 Yes. I saw them in 1976, and this is exactly what they looked and sounded like. It was a great performance. I consider myself extremely so fortunate to have seen them live.
This was a Day on the Green in Oakland. I was there. One of my friends is in the front of the stage. She is immortalized on film, seventeen years old forever. Every time I watch this, I relive that day. Special memory.
That's sounds so cool. I remember someone also said that one of the ladies in front was their grandma, it amazing how great songs and great bands stand the test of time.
Tim Dooley If the term, “boomer,” is meant to be a slight, you missed your mark. I saw all these iconic bands perform live and you didn’t. Too bad for you.
@@sassyt1545 I am another proud boomer, these youngsters can only hope and pray they effect society as much as we did in a positive way. We did good! Proud to be a "boomer"! People like Greta aren't going to cut it with their hate and angst. Too shallow! We changed things for the environment and society. Later generations gave us "dress for success", disco and "greed is good". We get blamed for that, and it's not warranted that's not what we were about! I supported Gene McCarthy and at eighteen I couldn't even vote for him at the time.
Sassy1 i saw the Rolling Stones at day on the green in Oakland and many others. Mick Jagger got on a cherry picker that swung him out over the audience and threw roses over everyone, very cool right
Chris Minshew Very cool. I was there too and again when the Stones played at Candlestick Park in 1981. It was a special time to be young, living in the SF Bay Area. Thanks to Bill Graham, we got to see all the greats.
Yes siree, lead guitar players are usually so egotistical, hard to get them to cooperate with each other, but F@wKKKK these guys did it, with solid pride.
Remember. WHAT AL COOPER, SAID WHEN HE DISCOVERED UM HED NEVER SEEN ANYTHING LIKE THEM, IN THE STOUDIO, ,WHY THEY PRACTICE EVERY DAY, NO MONEY, THEY BUSTED THERE ASS
Its so fucking funny . All old Skynyrd fans say the same exact thing ,and Skynyrd guitarist fans all say this ! It is true , & goes way deeper .no pyro ,crazy lighting , coustumes like "Kiss" ( they fucking suck so much, think how much they suck compared to Skynyrd !!! ) No lip sync bullshit , no auto-tune ,no computers , no backing tracks , no high heel boots ! ,very few guitar efects Ronie fuckin' barefoot ! & yes 3 guitars ,bones , bass !!! insane .
And they were "tight" . I think the key was Allen & Gary learning guitar together, practicing every day together, teaching each other what the other had learned. This was before they were a band, back when Allen played w/the Mods. It was like the 2 of them were linked mentally , like siblings & best friends, they knew each other well. You add Ed King then Steve Gaines who were both phenomenal players, they both fit right in musically. The guys were amazed by Steve esp when he auditioned which was come to a show, come out on our jam song, T for Texas & show us what you got. They only talked for a few min before show & when he came out jamming on T for Texas, their jaws all dropped. That says a lot abt Steve as a guitarist to have a "live"audition & not let his nerves get to him. He was the complete package for sure!
I've watched this many times, and am 63 years old.Something has made it hit so much harder this evening, and yes,its a sadness I can't describe. Losses of such magnitude,in so many ways. I'm not articulating this well at all.Just feeling it.
My boyfriend was in a band that did southern rock. My first concert was in Richmond and caught roses he threw out! Sadly my boyfriend wrote me the lyrics to Free Bird in a letter and shot himself. 40 years later, I can finally listen to it.
The addition of Steve Gaines IMO raised everyone in Lynyrd Skynyrd to a higher level he was invaluably impactful to their live shows which made the tragedy even more tragic
Wild to think that his sister Cassie said, "Hey my brother can play guitar and I know we want another guitar player...." His 'audition' consisted of the band calling him up on stage, during a gig.
He is really an underrated Guitar player, but I can see why, but I agree if you were to judge each member individually Steve Gaines was probably the most talented, these guys had such crazy rhytms and he was the driving force. But he got recognized by Ronnie, everyone knows that :P
They say Ronnie Van Zant, did not write down his lyrics, it was all from memory, The band members pleaded with Ronnie to put the lyrics in writing. Ronnie said if it's worth singing, it's worth committing to memory. This band worked exceedingly hard, they had a beyond crazy work ethic! Awesome "guitar power" in this band!
It's nigh on impossible to imagine Van Zant today - had he survived - taking to the stage with one of those godawful charcoal grey music stands with holes in front of him. It's probably irrational but they really piss me off big time; I just wish they could be banned. If you can't remember the words, find something else to do.
Most bands do. Punk bands sat in their 6ft x 8ft bedroom (bedsit) and would practice their guitar all day for 2 solid years. That's how Steve Jones and Mick Jones learned. Stevie Wonder would work ALL NIGHT and the session mudicians would bail as he laid down the synclavier parts to Superstition. James Brown notorious for working his band to death. Miles the same. Steely Dan. The perfectionism of Tom Scholz of Boston. They all had it . All the greats worked like mad. Super disciplined work ethic.
I have to say.... Im am so envy to you guys who grew up thru late 60' and 70' .... I have nostalgic feeling thru music for times that i don't livin....
It was a great time to be alive if it weren't for the draft. As a woman and "free thinker" I felt empowered. Something I don't think kids can even imagine today. Having a bit of a problem realizing I'll be 70 in April. But I am still that kid of the sixties and seventies. Still value the same things!
Seeing Allen Collins here as such a deeply talented, young man and knowing how much tragedy awaited him - the loss of his bandmates/friends, the death of his wife, paralysis from another accident and death at 37 - can be heartbreaking, but his sheer exuberance burns away some of those shadows.
Yeah, Allen's sheer enthusiasm was infectuous and made the audience's heart leap for joy along with his legs. While the Pete Townsends of the world (and the punkers who came along in Skynyrd's wake) snarled and jumped up and down in mock anger, Allen was actually set free by what he was doing and it showed. He couldn't contain it. I don't want to overstate the case, but my heart is moved almost to tears every time I see him do that jump...
@@semifast2 I have no idea what your point is, but no, I don't, because I don't know if Moon knew how to play guitar or not. I know Townsend, Entwhistle, and Daltrey did. Anyway, my point is that Townsend's jumping, his windmill strumming, his guitar and amp destruction, etc. was just an act. Same with the punks who came later. It was pure theater, deliberately calculated and executed for effect. I never considered Collins' jumping to be in the same category. It looked to me like he was jumping out of sheer joy because he couldn't contain his excitement.
@@jimnewl I feel so much the same way : I live near Greenville SC the last concert . I was going but was moving and was going to a later concert. Heartbroken I didn't go. I heard somewhere how someone had to leave at the end of concert and that the auditorium was literally vibrating. Imagine. Yes, so sad what lay ahead for Allen Collins but here he was so happy. Freebird now for many years. RIP
I love all the shots away from the band of the crowd. This performance is an 11 minute snapshot of what people, fashion, lifestyles and general life was like in western America in 1977. Everyone looks free flowing and free spirited, the girls have their flowers in the hair, the sun is scorching down but nobody cares - they're just having the best time of their lives, and the band are providing the soundtrack with an unbelievably impressive performance. Wish I was there
Just hope that one blonde in the yellow shorts got out of the sun. She was already bright red and this was before we really understood the dangers of overexposure to the sun it's relation to skin cancer.
Hi everyone. I just want to share my memories of seeing Lynyrd Skynyrd live. By the time they played this concert they were a very well known and popular band and everyone knew Free Bird. You can see the crowd getting excited in anticipation of the guitar frenzy they know is coming. But I saw them play at the Rainbow in London in 1974. I think this was the very first time they played outside the US? Can anyone confirm or refute this? In early 1974 they were still relatively unknown outside the US with just 1 album under their belt. I had never heard of them but a friend of mine had and he persuaded me that we had to go and see them. I reluctantly agreed to go but I am so glad I did because it was the greatest concert I have ever been to and I have been to many great concerts. It was the 1st album line-up, Ed King, Gary Rossington, Allen Collins - we had never heard 3 lead guitarists before. I heard Free Bird for the first time being played live by the original band members. Can you imagine how amazing that was? What started as a slow ballad turned into a crescendo with 3 lead guitars competing for dominance. At the time quite innovative but sheer bloody amazing. I was priviledged to see the original Lynyrd Skynyrd. RIP all members no longer here. Thank you for the great music!
The quickening of the tempo in live performances that was brought up is a pet peeve of mine for any band . There is one person to thank for that not happening with Skynyrd and that was Ronnie . He simply didn't allow it . If you watch him admiring the results while solos were being played like he was playing it himself you will know . Anyone that saw the coverband that followed after 1977 never saw Lynyrd Skynyrd .
At least you got to see them, you prob loved it but didn't really appreciate the greatness that we all see in these videos. You were lucky to get to see them, I didn't. Really 1 of those things in life that makes me sad, prob sounds dumb, my mom was dying 75-77 cancer she died 2 mos before plane crash so at time it was a low priority & like many people assumed we would catch them the next time
I was a senior in High school in 1977, I still believe that I grew up in the best time for Rock music! I wouldn't trade any of it for more time on this planet... 💯💖
Fil for someone like I with family roots in Alabama this band is iconic ..... they may play this at my funeral. The Bird you’ll never change ..... Thanks for showcasing these Southern Boys
My old buddy Carl Ryder was murdered about 10 years ago. They played this in the church at his funeral. Carl was a real GOOD guy! Lost a real good friend. JJ
I turned 16 that summer. Man, what a great time to be a teenager and having all these great Southern rock bands to see live! This is a good video but the one in England really rocks. At one point it shows some kids asleep until Skynyrd hit the guitar solo during Free Bird. Even the local press said Lynyrd Skynyrd stole the show, hands down. Those Southern rockers gave those Brits a dose of Southern Revolution!
I was born in 69 and I loved the 70s and 80s ..we've lost something , I can't quit put my finger on it , but deep down in my soul I want to be back in the 70s . those hard times seem so great now looking back .
Copy that, '70's girls! Silicone and razor blades not welcome at this party (well, maybe a Lady Schick for the legs & underarms). Man-hating 101 was not a college course back then.
60's-80's The Golden Age of Rock. IMO every decade/era had some great music. Early days of Rockn'roll, Jazz, Big Band and Swing, the blues, even going back to the classical era. That is until you get past the early days of Grunge. Sorry, not sorry, I got tired of Boy Bands and Pop-Princesses really quick. What happened to the spirit of rebellion in music? I saw something, years ago, that stated every top charting song of the previous 10 years had been written either of 2 people. No wonder it all sounded alike. I think that's what I miss the most, bands having "their" sound.
Personal note...I was at this concert. It was absolutely awesome. Peter Frampton was actually the headliner with Skynryd playing just before Frampton. Skynyrd blew everyone away and people actually started leaving when Frampton started playing. Best concert I've ever been to. Great analysis too!. Thanks!
Always loved these guys. Giving Jagger the proverbial finger and playing out on the tongue stage after he told them not to...forever cemented my love for them deep in my heart.
@@D3xTRb0y I grew up in a country where the bobbies were polite, councils served you, fines were low and few, traffic was sparse, parking was easy and cheap, and barriers were barely existent - you could roam virtually anywhere, including in disused houses, and do things at your own risk. Children played freely and unsupervised for hours on end in town or countryside. The morals and values of Christianity were taught everywhere (not coercively)and informed the behaviour of the majority. There were no speed trap cameras, CCTV, busybody neighbours or jobsworths spying on you or seeking to cause trouble with 'authorities', and no sneak-on-your-neighbour telephone lines. Discretion was used in the implementing most regulations. People were generally helpful towards each other in all situations and NEVER attempted to silence you for an opinion. Politics was a boring thing in the distance and no-one cared how you voted - it was considered rude to enquire. Differences of opinion weren't a point of hatred or intolerance, and legislation of all kinds was minimal and unrelated to 'Europe'. That was England in the 1960s... Of course we cannot turn back the clock, but we can restore the respect for individuality and freedom of choice and expression that is being curtailed by the 'woke folk' agenda. Unfortunately, we've legislated against, lost or destroyed so much that many people today don't even know what liberty is.
This song(like many of you) is a big part of the soundtrack of my life, it always brings tears of joy because of the memories it evokes. The smile on Fil’s face while listening to this song is a visualization of how I feel every time I hear it.
I vividly recall their crash being reported on WKBW AM radio out of Buffalo, N.Y. the night it happened in 1977. Details were still sketchy, but soon after the details of who was lost came out. A sad day for all.
Classic southern rock n roll! It doesn't get much better than that! As you observed, it's like each one in the band was inside the head of the others anticipation exactly what each other was doing with how tight it is. It still sounds as good now as when I heard it,as,a young teenager. Thanks for doing this one!
While very good, none of the guitarists were the absolute best in the world, but put the 3 off them together, and they did things that no one could replicate.
@@williamkramer9731 Wrong. You need to listen to Steve Gaines's work a little better, pre Skynyrd as well. Listen to his His One in the Sun CD, and be prepared.
seattwa I'll check it out and I hope everything you say is true. I know in Skynyrd they obviously showed great skill, and the talent as a whole for criminally overlooked, but at the same time there was ppl playing more complex solos.
I had the privilege of meeting Billy Powell on several occasions. He was the kindest, most humble person. He had terrible facial scars from the plane crash. RIP Billy
When I was coming up, there were 3 songs that were amazingly over the top ( in a good way). Bohemian rhapsody, Stairway To Heaven, and Freebird ❗️. I remember exactly where I was when the announcement came over my little pocket radio. “ The Freebird has gone down .” The announcer was choked up as he gave the report. All the Rock radio stations [ in St.Louis - anyway] had a minute of silence. I was 16 years old. A very sad day it was. There’s still some mystery over what exactly happened. Cool video. 📻🙂
I was 17... need I saw more? Skynyrd, CDB, MTB, 38 Special, Molley H. outlaws ! Little Feat ! Allman Bro’s. What a genre ! It was a great time for live music, and these bands often traveled in 3’s!!!!!
The smile on your face when the tempo picks up & the crowd goes crazy 😜 gave me chills. Then tears 😭 when I thought 💭 what was coming less than 6 months later.
I’ve seen all The Worlds premier rock bands and I can tell you, Lynyrd Skynyrd we’re in a league of their own. I was also lucky to get to know them. Although looking back I must of drove them mad. I was only 17 and I hero worshipped them. I took my younger sister and her friend to see them once and they were crying their eyes out. They couldn’t contain themselves because of how much they loved it
It’s was exactly 110 days after this performance that the plane crash occurred RIP Ronnie, Stevie, and Cassie, I was a grown man, a Vietnam veteran, and the night of the crash I broke down and cried…peace and love to you all…✌️
Elvis's good friend Charlie Hodge told me in 1979 that Elvis really loved this song not only because it rocked, but most of all the lyrics spoke to him. He knew his life on earth wouldn't be long, and the lyrics reflected how he felt in many ways. I can't hear this without thinking about Elvis.
You're welcome everyone. It says much about Elvis on a few different levels. He appreciated good music, but the lyrics--the message or story of the song--were of utmost importance to him. He connected with this song, and that is pretty darn cool.
I would say you were born in the wrong generation Fil, but I would be mistaken..... We need people like you to carry on the legacy of this great decade in the history of modern music! It is gratifying to know there are intelligent and well-spoken younger people such as yourself who appreciate the amazing contributions to music in all genres that were made during the Seventies.... You continue to produce quality work in all you do! Thanks for the uploads!
I saw practically every tour with the original guys. No one and I mean no one, could touch them. If they opened for someone, that lasted once because they would smoke the headliner. Then when Steve Gaines came aboard, he took them to the next level. Just look how high Allen Collins gets in the air. I grew up playing southern rock guitar. Man I miss them. Try a review of Molly Hatchet. The three guitar attack of southern rock was in a class all its own
Alan Collins, Steve Gains, and Gary Rosington get a lot of credit on their guitar work on this song, and rightfully so. But to me the two who really hold it down in Artimus Pyle on Drums and Leon Wilkeson on Bass. Just look and his fingers on that bass starting at 13:24. People do not realize how incredibly difficult that is. And he does it with such ease.
You can tell they started in a Garage! They where in the Zone! They where Friends! They where Family! I was to go see them in Maryland, and the devastation happened! The Plane Crash!! It was one of the saddest days in Rock and Rolls Music History! To me they where All Natural! and from the Heart! ☆☆☆☆☆
@@sjwillis1137 There's no more white working class. SoCal is a balkanized police state. Notice how fit tan and healthy everyone is in this audience? CA looks like a John Carpenter movie now. Read 'Mass Control' by Jim Keith.
@@sjwillis1137 it has become a cesspool of illegals and homeless due to the Demrat leadership through the yrs who don't care about the quality of life just a never endless supply of tax dollars and handouts. It's a dangerous crime ridden, unaffordable toilet of a state now.
Freebird at Knebworth 1976 is as good as it gets. There has never been, nor ever will be, a better performance. In particular, nobody will ever come close to Allen Collins' performace on that day. It's disappointing that nobody has come close to emulating that performance in 45 years, but also somehow immensely satisfying to know that there is a benchmark for live musicianship and here it is, recorded for all eternity. How I envy the people that were there. They were part of something that can never be repeated.
@Steve P, this performance of Free Bird is from "A Day On The Green" at Oakland Coliseum over July 4th weekend 1977, and no offense, but it's frankly a much better live performance of Freebird than the band played at Knebworth in 1976. The sound from Knebworth for the entire show was really poor. Some songs really hard to hear at all, and at Knebworth most of the band was pretty lit from having gotten to the gig way early and partying all day with famous movie stars and musicians before they went onstage. Musically this is a much better live performance of Freebird, IMO.
If you want to see a version that was filmed far better, check out the Knebworth 1976 version! Far less footage of the crowd, the camera is focused on the band for most of the song.
I'm sure for musicians it probably is better, but the crowd shots of this video are what truly capture this moment in time for so many of us. This video takes us back to a much simpler time by seeing how people used to be. We've had the audio for years but, to me, the scenes of the crowd are what make this video so special. I'm not musician, however, so what do I know?
@@marshmutt8975 I can understand that. Just as a musician who's a big fan of this band and Allen Collins, it's really cool to see him playing the solo.
I dont like that one as much, its fuzzy and the crowd is dead.......they came to see the stones and they were laying down waiting for them to play. some of the fans got up to cheer with the guitar rifts......but it was no where near the crowd here in oakland.
@@jacklewis5452 For me that's one of the reasons the Knebworth video is so good though. Skynyrd were overseas with an audience consisting mainly of Rolling Stones fans and when they began their set the majority of the crowd were sat down and disinterested. However, by the time they'd finished they had won the crowd over and everyone was on their feet cheering
Fil is one of the best song analysts I have ever seen. He is just top level excellence, high intelligence, deep understanding of technique and art of music. I enjoy every one of these and learn something new everytime.
Not much of a comment guy but dude, i love your videos keep up the good work. Glad your giving skynyrd the recognition they deserve as one of the greatest band that ever played!
Fil, you are without question the most genuine, positive man I have ever seen. You can see the admiration for every artist you critique, love the way you think, would love to have a few beers and just listen to you, you're a good man.
Oh yes Lynyrd Skynyrd. Feeeeeeeeeeeeeel good music. Wicked. You just want the song to never end. Crazy lead and don't forget the busy bass and drums, wow. Awesome song. Thanks for sharing Fil and always a great analysis.
Ronnie was a tough taskmaster from what I have learned and he demanded perfection to the point that he could be abusive if the musicians in the band didn't do everything perfectly. As much as that might taint his genius in the minds of more sensitive people it is a common trait among many creative types. They have a vision of perfection that they seek to create and replicate. That isn't to say that he deserves all credit because that certainly isn't true at all! Skynyrd was great because everyone involved was extremely talented and when all that talent came together it was pure awesomeness!
He would get upset and loudly verbalize his dissatisfaction, put that was nothing back then. That what’s wrong with music nowadays, if you award mediocre all you get is the crap 💩 that’s played now on the radio!!!!!!! Everyone doesn’t deserve a trophy after 5-6 years old because the accolades and praise is giving because of hard work and being the best at what you’re involved in whatever it might be!!!!!! That’s a huge problem with what’s happening now in life, kids graduating colleges/universities with worthless degrees and then can’t find any jobs that pay them more than what a high school diploma or a GED alone can get you!!!!!! Students graduating from technical colleges/schools, even high GPA students from high school are doing so much better with salaries and job security plus they don’t have much of or any big loans to payback!!!!!!!
Also, with a band that large and a room/stage/studio full of egos, plus a bit of that good ole boy mentality, someone had to be in command and keep the train on the tracks, otherwise it could have degenerated into improvisational chaos. Ronnie was the guy to keep it all together, and he had the personality to pull it off. If you watch the Knebworth version of this song, he's constantly giving cues and hand signals to keep the jam somewhat orderly, including a very definite cut-off signal. AND he's the one that had the balls to get the guitar players to venture onto the "tongue" of the stage, where they were specifically forbidden to go because only the Stones (who were headlining) were allowed to go there - Ronnie said the hell with that and pushed the guitarists down the tongue (Leon Wilkeson tried to follow, but ran out of cord - the old days before cordless guitars).
Sweet guitar !! Allen Collins and Gary Rossington were two great and, IMO, very underappreciated guitarists. Thanks for the video !! It was hugely enjoyable. More Skynyrd please !!
Really that's what you have, stupid cell phones? I grew up in the '60s and '70s and would have loved to have a cell phone back then. My first cell phone was a giant bag phone which needed to be plugged into the cigarette lighter and had a curly cord attached to the receiver. When I left the car the phone had to stay in it. C'mon man.
OTOH, having been to at least a dozen of these arena rock shows in CA in 1977, including Skynyrd a month after this was recorded, a cell phone video would be nice to have given how stoned and sunburned we all were. Can't remember a damn thing about these concerts !!!
They were so tight because Ronnie demanded it and the practices were long and brutal. I’ve always believed he was so obsessed because he knew their wasn’t another train coming he could hop on to go find their piece of the American dream. There was never going to be anything after Skynyrd for Ronnie I don’t believe... RIP
I’d love to have seen where he would’ve taken it. Somehow I doubt the band would’ve stayed together too much longer. Maybe a few years. The unstoppable punk genre was on deck, then grunge not far behind. I think Ronnie would’ve gone solo and dabbled in a bit of country.
When Lynyrd Skynyrd played Knebworth in 1976 they blew the Rolling Stones away. (There are videos posted on here of that gig). Jagger was super pissed because Ronnie broke his rule for opening acts. *NOBODY* was to go out on the tongue but the Stones. Afterwards Ronnie had a t-shirt made that he wore that said, "Who the fuck are the Rolling Stones?". I give the win to Ronnie for that one. 👍🏻🤠
@@urex1717 Excellent point. I saw the Stones in San Diego 1981. George Thorogood opened followed by The J. Geils Band. Thorogood tore it up on guitar... of course. J. Geils stole the show. When they hit the stage, they truly were one of the hardest working live acts at the time. Hot and tight best describes them. The Stones on the other hand, never were a great live band. The time that they were worth seeing was when they had Mick Taylor. That boy could play circles around Richards. 😆
Somewhere among the crowd my sister and her friends are sandwich in that Oakland Coliseum Stadium back in July of 1977 She said "Freebird" was the highlight of the concert. great analysis again Fil.
This was our anthem back in 1976. I saw the original band live then at Pittsburgh’s Civic Arena with Mountain. The concert is still one the highlights of my youth. I was Twenty two. Thanks again, Fil, for the positive analysis and the respect you extend to a legendary band. Rock! 🤘👍
I really love Lynyrd Skynyrd and this song in particular with all of it's tempo changes, remind me of a true religious experience. Watching the crowd even being synchronized with the music being played brings this feeling to mind. Ronnie was a true leader. He was a masterful orchestrator who knew the strengths of each member of his band and knew how to bring the absolute best out of them. All of the other members looked to him with confidence and loyalty and put forth their best efforts. And yes they practiced their music relentlessly. I can never forget that terrible crash. Being a teenager, it felt like it was the end of something big, and it was. Within a year, I began to hear punk rock music and it felt like music moved out of the bright daylight and into the darkness of small clubs. And once that music was gone, you just knew it could never come back like that, sweet, airy, sunlight filled time we had before. I sure miss those days.
TuckerSP2011..Unfortunately that "religious experience" which you speak of was accompanied by drugs and alcohol which killed the likes of Janice Joplin,Jimi Hendrix,Jim Morrison,and a lot of fans of "said religious experience"!
THIS IS Southern Rock in the USA back then. The South is so hot and some places humid, you tend to do things more slowly. This song starts off completely Southern, then goes into a complete jam session. How could you stand still listening to this song? Thanks Fil for sharing this and for your analysis. God bless. 🌹
This solo by Allen - I think is one of the greatest solos ever performed - its starts off like a ferrari and just when you think its topped out, it turns into a rocket ship and shoots into space, the sheer pace of it is something really special, and the way he controls it so expertly to give that feeling of manic urgency right from that start, while still saving another gear for the end.
The crowd footage mixed in to the editing is part of what makes this video so great, you get to experience the feed back and how much everyone was getting into the music and performance!
Ahhh thank you Fil. I've always preferred the live version. Singling out instruments during different parts. Leon's bass runs , amazing. Artemus steady as a rock early , fevered after. Billy's melodic piano love his ending playing during the jam. Gary, Allen , Steve ahhhh. It's how well everyone blends but every part can be heard. How tough is that. And to think this was from their first album.
Hi Fil! The 70’s brought us a bit of a different sound! I remember the year this song was released! I was up all night rocking my newborn baby, and listening to the radio, and this music! Thanks for the memories! I just love how you cover so many different sounds! A big ‘’mom hug’ to you! Have a wonderful weekend!
"Free Bird" has bittersweet memories for me. "If I leave here tomorrow, would you still remember me?" .... I remember the day my younger brother called me into his room to listen to this amazing band and song "Free Bird" that he had just discovered while learning to play electric guitar. He was so excited to share this great music. It wasn't long after, that members of the band Lynrd Skynrd and my brother were taken from us in tragic accidents.
I have seen Lynyrd Skynyrd live, and they are one of the very few bands that sound far better live than on their albums, even though their albums are fantastic.
This analysis just made me smile as Fil gives a brief description of the event then allows it to carry on until the triple-guitar attack. I felt whisked back to 77 for a moment in time. Then back we go until it finished. Although I'm a northerner at about 13 years old back then I've always had a soft spot for Southern boogie played by Skynyrd, Outlaws, Blackfoot, etc... As usual, I'm impressed by Fil's analyses and think he really should be called "Wings of the rock n' roll historian" I'm constantly learning more about music I thought I knew so well.
Oh boy, my heart breaks every time I see this. I love this band, these boys were fun in my youth. They played their instruments well and you could tell there was a good relationship within the group. Family and fans were very affected by their deaths. It wasn’t all of them but the ones that died RIP.
Lynyrd Skynyrd was the apex of rock talent and the crowds were the apex of rock audiences. This was a unique time and experience never to be replicated since. Having been there myself and a musician in those days I can say that with absolute certainty. This is why this video is a treasure. It perfectly captured these two elements frozen in time for generations later to see as evidence. So sad it's gone and yet so happy it was saved on film!
Billy Powell on piano really steals the show. Fantastic performance of FB - right up there w/ Knebworth '76, and The Old Gray Whistle Test in '75. Thx Fil.
The front crowd is all girls around 17 years old, which I would have been in 1977. No sunscreen or sunblock. Halter tops were everywhere, and we never wore bras. Never wear a bra with halter tops because the straps would show. Totally opposite now. And the wide load, peroxide blonde was gonna hurt in the morning. I lived on Sweet Home Alabama while getting ready for school. 7:15 am, it comes on the radio and stopped everything to dance for 3 minutes. Musically, I was all Osmonds during those years, with Styx as a backup when I needed variety. This song was a bit long for me, but in this video, with your narration it is fabulous. I am still amazed by the front row crowds and how young they all were. Cool.
Hey Fil, As a man with parents from Alabama, this song and band was very special to me. One week your doing Tina Turner, the next week your doing Lynyrd Skynyrd. Freaking Brilliant! P.S. I know they were from Jacksonville.
Skynyrd is a serious band with some of the finest songwriting in rock music history. That includes some powerful tearful ballads too. You can tell someone is musically clueless and gets their musical opinions from USA Today and Readers Digest when you see them roll their eyes when you say something like this.
Thanks for another great video and analysis, also love the Neil Young 'Tonight's the Night' T-shirt Ronnie is wearing, showing any 'dispute' was tongue in cheek, he and his band were big Neil fans
Allen Collins, one of the most underrated guitarist EVER. Just the playing on this solo should garner him icon status. The man just simply rips that Korina V apart. I have seen Skynyrd many times. Most recently, last spring. Ricky Medlocke does a wonderful job on the solo. But, Allen was just tore it up. Lynyrd Skynyrd, truly one of the all-time greats. And they are still killing it today. With Gary being the only original member left. And not in the best of health. It's time to call it quits. They have blessed us with a lifetime of music. They are the soundtrack to my youth. It's time!!!
Correction on my part. Allen is playing a Korina Explorer in video. Not a "V".Infact, I have never seen a picture of any member of Skynyrd playing a "Flying V". That's mistake on my part. Sorry folks.
Glad to see my fellow Jax natives getting some more love man! From what I understand, one of the reasons their live performances were so great was because they rehearsed their butts off. Not a lot of improvising going on but it looked so natural because it was practiced so many times. As good as Ed King was, I really wish we all could have seen more of what they would have done with Steve Gaines. ✌🏻🎸🎼
Certainly a trip down memory lane... lol. Seems like a lifetime ago, partying with friends, smoking pot and drinking Boones Farm , 16 years old and thinking THAT was the life, lol. 🤔🤪
Another great analysis, Fil! I honestly never would have put Skynyrd and prog rock in the same sentence, but you're absolutely dead on. Thank you as always.
There’s not a band on the planet today that could follow that Skynyrd line up. They don’t get near the respect I believe they deserve
This song was one of the anthems of my teenage years so it is forever burned into my soul, but after seeing Fil and his love of this music, I've got to believe that the fire that drove Lynyrd Skynyrd does live on in some of today's musicians--they just have not introduced themselves to us yet. :)
@@dickphukwede1856 Yes. I saw them in 1976, and this is exactly what they looked and sounded like. It was a great performance. I consider myself extremely so fortunate to have seen them live.
Definitely not the "cover band" that claims to be them today.
That day it was Peter Frampton following. Skynyrd took all the air out of the room. I was there.
Bob Seger and the Silver Bullet band.
This was a Day on the Green in Oakland. I was there. One of my friends is in the front of the stage. She is immortalized on film, seventeen years old forever. Every time I watch this, I relive that day. Special memory.
That's sounds so cool. I remember someone also said that one of the ladies in front was their grandma, it amazing how great songs and great bands stand the test of time.
Tim Dooley If the term, “boomer,” is meant to be a slight, you missed your mark. I saw all these iconic bands perform live and you didn’t. Too bad for you.
@@sassyt1545 I am another proud boomer, these youngsters can only hope and pray they effect society as much as we did in a positive way. We did good! Proud to be a "boomer"! People like Greta aren't going to cut it with their hate and angst. Too shallow! We changed things for the environment and society. Later generations gave us "dress for success", disco and "greed is good". We get blamed for that, and it's not warranted that's not what we were about! I supported Gene McCarthy and at eighteen I couldn't even vote for him at the time.
Sassy1 i saw the Rolling Stones at day on the green in Oakland and many others. Mick Jagger got on a cherry picker that swung him out over the audience and threw roses over everyone, very cool right
Chris Minshew Very cool. I was there too and again when the Stones played at Candlestick Park in 1981. It was a special time to be young, living in the SF Bay Area. Thanks to Bill Graham, we got to see all the greats.
If you’ve never played in a band, you don’t realize how hard it is to meld three guitars like this without overplaying. Amazing dynamics.
I know
Yes siree, lead guitar players are usually so egotistical, hard to get them to cooperate with each other, but F@wKKKK these guys did it, with solid pride.
Remember. WHAT AL COOPER, SAID WHEN HE DISCOVERED UM HED NEVER SEEN ANYTHING LIKE THEM, IN THE STOUDIO, ,WHY THEY PRACTICE EVERY DAY, NO MONEY, THEY BUSTED THERE ASS
Its so fucking funny . All old Skynyrd fans say the same exact thing ,and Skynyrd guitarist fans all say this ! It is true , & goes way deeper .no pyro ,crazy lighting , coustumes like "Kiss" ( they fucking suck so much, think how much they suck compared to Skynyrd !!! ) No lip sync bullshit , no auto-tune ,no computers , no backing tracks , no high heel boots ! ,very few guitar efects Ronie fuckin' barefoot ! & yes 3 guitars ,bones , bass !!! insane .
And they were "tight" . I think the key was Allen & Gary learning guitar together, practicing every day together, teaching each other what the other had learned. This was before they were a band, back when Allen played w/the Mods. It was like the 2 of them were linked mentally , like siblings & best friends, they knew each other well. You add Ed King then Steve Gaines who were both phenomenal players, they both fit right in musically. The guys were amazed by Steve esp when he auditioned which was come to a show, come out on our jam song, T for Texas & show us what you got. They only talked for a few min before show & when he came out jamming on T for Texas, their jaws all dropped. That says a lot abt Steve as a guitarist to have a "live"audition & not let his nerves get to him. He was the complete package for sure!
This is almost too emotional to watch, the beauty of the day, the crowd, the extreme talent and emotion of the song ~ you just want it on a loop.
I've watched this many times, and am 63 years old.Something has made it hit so much harder this evening, and yes,its a sadness I can't describe. Losses of such magnitude,in so many ways.
I'm not articulating this well at all.Just feeling it.
@@patricialehrke7688 understood. thnx.
I saw them in a National Guard Armory in Mobile, AL before they were famous. It was mind blowingly good. Damn, these ole boys could rock !
My boyfriend was in a band that did southern rock. My first concert was in Richmond and caught roses he threw out! Sadly my boyfriend wrote me the lyrics to Free Bird in a letter and shot himself. 40 years later, I can finally listen to it.
@@teresavance1643 I'm so sorry to hear that. May he RIP. 🙏
The addition of Steve Gaines IMO raised everyone in Lynyrd Skynyrd to a higher level he was invaluably impactful to their live shows which made the tragedy even more tragic
Wild to think that his sister Cassie said, "Hey my brother can play guitar and I know we want another guitar player...." His 'audition' consisted of the band calling him up on stage, during a gig.
@@CineSoar Yeah Cassie like her brother were class acts God Bless them both
He is really an underrated Guitar player, but I can see why, but I agree if you were to judge each member individually Steve Gaines was probably the most talented, these guys had such crazy rhytms and he was the driving force. But he got recognized by Ronnie, everyone knows that :P
Steve was probably the most talented musician in the band but i always Loved Ed King the most for some reason
Ronnie said something to the effect of “we’re all gonna be left in this guy’s dust one day”. Steve was an amazing talent.
They say Ronnie Van Zant, did not write down his lyrics, it was all from memory, The band members pleaded with Ronnie to put the lyrics in writing. Ronnie said if it's worth singing, it's worth committing to memory. This band worked exceedingly hard, they had a beyond crazy work ethic! Awesome "guitar power" in this band!
It's nigh on impossible to imagine Van Zant today - had he survived - taking to the stage with one of those godawful charcoal grey music stands with holes in front of him. It's probably irrational but they really piss me off big time; I just wish they could be banned. If you can't remember the words, find something else to do.
Hell House baby!
Most bands do.
Punk bands sat in their 6ft x 8ft bedroom (bedsit) and would practice their guitar all day for 2 solid years.
That's how Steve Jones and Mick Jones learned.
Stevie Wonder would work ALL NIGHT and the session mudicians would bail as he laid down the synclavier parts to Superstition.
James Brown notorious for working his band to death. Miles the same. Steely Dan. The perfectionism of Tom Scholz of Boston. They all had it .
All the greats worked like mad.
Super disciplined work ethic.
Ronnie didn't sing lyrics, he declared them.
Grew up on Zeppelin and Lynard Skynyrd, man life was great for a teenager in the 70s we got rocked
I have to say.... Im am so envy to you guys who grew up thru late 60' and 70' .... I have nostalgic feeling thru music for times that i don't livin....
Ozren Radovanović
It was certainly an interesting time❗️
📻🙂
Chris Minshew they sure were.... I feel spoiled.
It was a great time to be alive if it weren't for the draft. As a woman and "free thinker" I felt empowered. Something I don't think kids can even imagine today. Having a bit of a problem realizing I'll be 70 in April. But I am still that kid of the sixties and seventies. Still value the same things!
Pat Hacker
Oh , it wasn’t all perfect.
There were problems.
But it sure was interesting.
Seeing Allen Collins here as such a deeply talented, young man and knowing how much tragedy awaited him - the loss of his bandmates/friends, the death of his wife, paralysis from another accident and death at 37 - can be heartbreaking, but his sheer exuberance burns away some of those shadows.
Yeah, Allen's sheer enthusiasm was infectuous and made the audience's heart leap for joy along with his legs. While the Pete Townsends of the world (and the punkers who came along in Skynyrd's wake) snarled and jumped up and down in mock anger, Allen was actually set free by what he was doing and it showed. He couldn't contain it. I don't want to overstate the case, but my heart is moved almost to tears every time I see him do that jump...
@@jimnewl dude, you know how many guitar players were in the Who ?
@@semifast2 I have no idea what your point is, but no, I don't, because I don't know if Moon knew how to play guitar or not. I know Townsend, Entwhistle, and Daltrey did. Anyway, my point is that Townsend's jumping, his windmill strumming, his guitar and amp destruction, etc. was just an act. Same with the punks who came later. It was pure theater, deliberately calculated and executed for effect. I never considered Collins' jumping to be in the same category. It looked to me like he was jumping out of sheer joy because he couldn't contain his excitement.
@@jimnewl Me too, this band was one of the best. Allen, Gary, Steve, Ronnie, Billy, Leon, and Artimus, holy fuck!!!
@@jimnewl I feel so much the same way : I live near Greenville SC the last concert . I was going but was moving and was going to a later concert. Heartbroken I didn't go. I heard somewhere how someone had to leave at the end of concert and that the auditorium was literally vibrating. Imagine. Yes, so sad what lay ahead for Allen Collins but here he was so happy. Freebird now for many years. RIP
I love all the shots away from the band of the crowd. This performance is an 11 minute snapshot of what people, fashion, lifestyles and general life was like in western America in 1977. Everyone looks free flowing and free spirited, the girls have their flowers in the hair, the sun is scorching down but nobody cares - they're just having the best time of their lives, and the band are providing the soundtrack with an unbelievably impressive performance. Wish I was there
Amen and Amen !!! 👍👍✌
The women were not gorditos.
Yeah I would travel back to the 70’s if I could
Just hope that one blonde in the yellow shorts got out of the sun. She was already bright red and this was before we really understood the dangers of overexposure to the sun it's relation to skin cancer.
I was thirteen in 1976. Even my teacher wore a see through blouse with no bra in class. Great times!
Hi everyone. I just want to share my memories of seeing Lynyrd Skynyrd live. By the time they played this concert they were a very well known and popular band and everyone knew Free Bird. You can see the crowd getting excited in anticipation of the guitar frenzy they know is coming.
But I saw them play at the Rainbow in London in 1974. I think this was the very first time they played outside the US? Can anyone confirm or refute this?
In early 1974 they were still relatively unknown outside the US with just 1 album under their belt. I had never heard of them but a friend of mine had and he persuaded me that we had to go and see them.
I reluctantly agreed to go but I am so glad I did because it was the greatest concert I have ever been to and I have been to many great concerts. It was the 1st album line-up, Ed King, Gary Rossington, Allen Collins - we had never heard 3 lead guitarists before. I heard Free Bird for the first time being played live by the original band members. Can you imagine how amazing that was? What started as a slow ballad turned into a crescendo with 3 lead guitars competing for dominance. At the time quite innovative but sheer bloody amazing.
I was priviledged to see the original Lynyrd Skynyrd. RIP all members no longer here. Thank you for the great music!
Was that when they played at the Old Grey Whistle test? There is some video of that on UA-cam.
Fantastic memory!😁
Oh man Fil, you should have been a teenager in the 1970's! It was unbelievable!!!!!
TN Moppy Laura... When it come to music? I would say Fil is a teenager at heart!
Think fil would be a hippy or a straight edge in the 70’s 🤔🤷♀️😏
Love me some Skynyrd. While I would rather see the band, it was nice seeing the crowd enjoying the music with out damn mobile phones ruining the vibe.
Lol
lets not forget, how often these days do you see girls/women up front of the scene?
@@miou-miou- this was the days of festival seating which ended in 79 at a Who concert when 11 people died in the crush to get to the front
Really nice to see a reactor who isn't just blown away by the solos and outro and acutally point out what a well-constructed piece of music this is.
The quickening of the tempo in live performances that was brought up is a pet peeve of mine for any band .
There is one person to thank for that not happening with Skynyrd and that was Ronnie . He simply didn't allow it .
If you watch him admiring the results while solos were being played like he was playing it himself you will know .
Anyone that saw the coverband that followed after 1977 never saw Lynyrd Skynyrd .
Somewhere in that crowd is 13yr old me at my first concert. Little did i know that i would never see this lineup again.
😟
At least you got to see them, you prob loved it but didn't really appreciate the greatness that we all see in these videos. You were lucky to get to see them, I didn't. Really 1 of those things in life that makes me sad, prob sounds dumb, my mom was dying 75-77 cancer she died 2 mos before plane crash so at time it was a low priority & like many people assumed we would catch them the next time
Ahhh fantastic!!! What a wonderful memory and to be able say "I was there". Beautiful!!
I was a senior in High school in 1977, I still believe that I grew up in the best time for Rock music! I wouldn't trade any of it for more time on this planet... 💯💖
You could probably tell by my pfp that I love Rock Music...💯😏👋
Class '75 rocked!
All those young, fresh happy teens in the crowd. I miss the 70s.
There are still crowds of happy young people enjoying music. We all grow old. Youth continues.
@@ThalassicMeasure teens seem so edgy today.
This song was and is an Anthem
Anthems are usually not a band's best work, just the song they are most well known for unfortunately.
Duh!
Fil for someone like I with family roots in Alabama this band is iconic ..... they may play this at my funeral. The Bird you’ll never change ..... Thanks for showcasing these Southern Boys
They are from Jacksonville Florida
Mark Fair yes sir they are still Southern Boys but thanks for clarifying
My old buddy Carl Ryder was murdered about 10 years ago. They played this in the church at his funeral. Carl was a real GOOD guy! Lost a real good friend. JJ
My uncle actually had this played at his funeral 😓
I turned 16 that summer. Man, what a great time to be a teenager and having all these great Southern rock bands to see live! This is a good video but the one in England really rocks. At one point it shows some kids asleep until Skynyrd hit the guitar solo during Free Bird. Even the local press said Lynyrd Skynyrd stole the show, hands down. Those Southern rockers gave those Brits a dose of Southern Revolution!
I was born in 69 and I loved the 70s and 80s ..we've lost something , I can't quit put my finger on it , but deep down in my soul I want to be back in the 70s . those hard times seem so great now looking back .
I was 16 September,6th same age!
We love em over here
Like the comment.
Do you know the location of the show
in England?
@@markrymanowski719 Knebworth 1976
Nothing more chill than Lynyrd Skynyrd and Rowdy Ronnie. None hotter than the 70's girls.
Copy that, '70's girls! Silicone and razor blades not welcome at this party (well, maybe a Lady Schick for the legs & underarms). Man-hating 101 was not a college course back then.
Absolutely!! Doesn't seem right somehow to highlight one individual but that being said...the young lady in the yellow top 😍
Agree completely. Married one 42 years ago and still love her as the day is long!
The 1970’s...best decade for music
and best decade for hair apparently lol I'm a woman and my hair couldn't look like that on a good day
Definitely! ^_^ 💗
60's-80's The Golden Age of Rock.
IMO every decade/era had some great music. Early days of Rockn'roll, Jazz, Big Band and Swing, the blues, even going back to the classical era. That is until you get past the early days of Grunge. Sorry, not sorry, I got tired of Boy Bands and Pop-Princesses really quick. What happened to the spirit of rebellion in music? I saw something, years ago, that stated every top charting song of the previous 10 years had been written either of 2 people. No wonder it all sounded alike. I think that's what I miss the most, bands having "their" sound.
It's close between the '60s and '70s.
Listening to Free Bird is like being on a roller coaster. Slow going up the hill then going fast downhill.A very nice ride.
Allen wrote this when he was 17 or 18. The level of talent in this band is exceptional. One of the best bands ever, especially live.
Personal note...I was at this concert. It was absolutely awesome. Peter Frampton was actually the headliner with Skynryd playing just before Frampton. Skynyrd blew everyone away and people actually started leaving when Frampton started playing. Best concert I've ever been to. Great analysis too!. Thanks!
Peter Frampton wasn't no headliner for Skynyrd.Not when I saw them the year before.Not by a longshot
I was there also
I never liked Peter Frampton. I would have left as well.
With respect to Frampton, how could he possibly compete with this?
How fortunate!!!
Always loved these guys. Giving Jagger the proverbial finger and playing out on the tongue stage after he told them not to...forever cemented my love for them deep in my heart.
Dude I forgot about that 🤣🔥
Ronnie was probably one of the greatest front man in rock history.
Not only great front man! There writing those legionary. Songs ! There abilty to compose them ! Some of the best song ever put on venal
@@scottmartin2411 & never wrote any lyrics down on paper
@@muffginter6759 Yep...he said if you can't remember the words, they're not worth remembering. Epic.
@Colmillo Blanco shut up
@@FRAME5RS plus he wrote a majority of songs in the shower so would be kinda hard to write it down too. Lol
Gary Rossington, Allen Collins and Steve Gaines!
Greatest trio ever to play together.
Ronnie was the soul of Lynyrd Skynyrd and Allen was the heart. My favorite band of ALL-TIME.
Great review! I enjoy watching your videos.
Unless you lived through the 1970's you will never understand the lack of freedom of today: this song says it all...
Aye
Couldn't have said it better,like a totally different world then compared to now
roltyd22 Can I ask how? Just curious
@@D3xTRb0y Everyone was free to speak evenly, no political correctness BS for one..No cancel culture BS
@@D3xTRb0y I grew up in a country where the bobbies were polite, councils served you, fines were low and few, traffic was sparse, parking was easy and cheap, and barriers were barely existent - you could roam virtually anywhere, including in disused houses, and do things at your own risk. Children played freely and unsupervised for hours on end in town or countryside. The morals and values of Christianity were taught everywhere (not coercively)and informed the behaviour of the majority. There were no speed trap cameras, CCTV, busybody neighbours or jobsworths spying on you or seeking to cause trouble with 'authorities', and no sneak-on-your-neighbour telephone lines. Discretion was used in the implementing most regulations. People were generally helpful towards each other in all situations and NEVER attempted to silence you for an opinion. Politics was a boring thing in the distance and no-one cared how you voted - it was considered rude to enquire. Differences of opinion weren't a point of hatred or intolerance, and legislation of all kinds was minimal and unrelated to 'Europe'. That was England in the 1960s... Of course we cannot turn back the clock, but we can restore the respect for individuality and freedom of choice and expression that is being curtailed by the 'woke folk' agenda. Unfortunately, we've legislated against, lost or destroyed so much that many people today don't even know what liberty is.
This song(like many of you) is a big part of the soundtrack of my life, it always brings tears of joy because of the memories it evokes. The smile on Fil’s face while listening to this song is a visualization of how I feel every time I hear it.
Rusty Chain this 💯
Thanks for the ❤️ Fil...may I suggest you check out Justin Johnson.
I cry when I hear Ronnie singing this, it was his Swan Song, I was 16 the year they died...💯😟
I vividly recall their crash being reported on WKBW AM radio out of Buffalo, N.Y. the night it happened in 1977. Details were still sketchy, but soon after the details of who was lost came out. A sad day for all.
Classic southern rock n roll! It doesn't get much better than that! As you observed, it's like each one in the band was inside the head of the others anticipation exactly what each other was doing with how tight it is. It still sounds as good now as when I heard it,as,a young teenager. Thanks for doing this one!
While very good, none of the guitarists were the absolute best in the world, but put the 3 off them together, and they did things that no one could replicate.
@@williamkramer9731 Wrong. You need to listen to Steve Gaines's work a little better, pre Skynyrd as well. Listen to his His One in the Sun CD, and be prepared.
@@Mr.56Goldtop Truth
seattwa I'll check it out and I hope everything you say is true. I know in Skynyrd they obviously showed great skill, and the talent as a whole for criminally overlooked, but at the same time there was ppl playing more complex solos.
I had the privilege of meeting Billy Powell on several occasions. He was the kindest, most humble person. He had terrible facial scars from the plane crash. RIP Billy
When I was coming up, there were 3 songs that were amazingly over the top ( in a good way). Bohemian rhapsody, Stairway To Heaven, and Freebird ❗️. I remember exactly where I was when the announcement came over my little pocket radio. “ The Freebird has gone down .” The announcer was choked up as he gave the report. All the Rock radio stations [ in St.Louis - anyway] had a minute of silence.
I was 16 years old.
A very sad day it was.
There’s still some mystery over what exactly happened.
Cool video.
📻🙂
Thick as a Brick?
It’s so nice to see someone who can really appreciate Lynyrd Skynyrd and understand how great they were.
I was 17... need I saw more? Skynyrd, CDB, MTB, 38 Special, Molley H. outlaws ! Little Feat ! Allman Bro’s. What a genre ! It was a great time for live music, and these bands often traveled in 3’s!!!!!
I was 16 in 1977 What a Great decade to be a teenager!
The smile on your face when the tempo picks up & the crowd goes crazy 😜 gave me chills. Then tears 😭 when I thought 💭 what was coming less than 6 months later.
I’ve seen all The Worlds premier rock bands and I can tell you, Lynyrd Skynyrd we’re in a league of their own. I was also lucky to get to know them. Although looking back I must of drove them mad. I was only 17 and I hero worshipped them. I took my younger sister and her friend to see them once and they were crying their eyes out. They couldn’t contain themselves because of how much they loved it
Skynyrd is one of my all time favorite bands they are and always will be the greatest
It’s was exactly 110 days after this performance that the plane crash occurred RIP Ronnie, Stevie, and Cassie, I was a grown man, a Vietnam veteran, and the night of the crash I broke down and cried…peace and love to you all…✌️
You nailed it. This version of Lynyrd Skynyrd is one of the top 10 bands in music history!
Elvis's good friend Charlie Hodge told me in 1979 that Elvis really loved this song not only because it rocked, but most of all the lyrics spoke to him. He knew his life on earth wouldn't be long, and the lyrics reflected how he felt in many ways. I can't hear this without thinking about Elvis.
Wow, thanks for the nugget!
aw, what a memory.
I thought I knew everything a fan would know about Elvis. I didn’t know this. Thank you!
I didn't know that, that is so cool,thxs for the info 🤘
You're welcome everyone. It says much about Elvis on a few different levels. He appreciated good music, but the lyrics--the message or story of the song--were of utmost importance to him. He connected with this song, and that is pretty darn cool.
One of the Best Bands of all time ! THANKS FOR THIS , ROCK ON ♡♡♡♡
Freebird 💓💓 Thank you Fil!
I would say you were born in the wrong generation Fil, but I would be mistaken.....
We need people like you to carry on the legacy of this great decade in the history of modern music!
It is gratifying to know there are intelligent and well-spoken younger people such as yourself who appreciate the amazing contributions to music in all genres that were made during the Seventies....
You continue to produce quality work in all you do! Thanks for the uploads!
I saw practically every tour with the original guys. No one and I mean no one, could touch them. If they opened for someone, that lasted once because they would smoke the headliner. Then when Steve Gaines came aboard, he took them to the next level. Just look how high Allen Collins gets in the air. I grew up playing southern rock guitar. Man I miss them. Try a review of Molly Hatchet. The three guitar attack of southern rock was in a class all its own
They smoked The Who. They smoked everybody that shared their stage.
Donjuans Recklessdaughter it was either.38 Special or Marshall Tucker.
I am envious.
Steve was a guitar god in Oklahoma! We old Rockers miss him still...
There are only 2 original bands I'd give one of my balls for, to see. Lynard Skynard and Pantera.
One of my favorite classic rock songs. I think the live version is much better than the studio version.
You know that drunk guy in the audience that is always shouting "Free Bird!". Yep, that's me.
I think I heard you at a Tori Amos concert.
Boone Docker Yup. For a while if ya wanted to piss off a bar band you could yell out "Freebird!!" It was akin to playing Stairway in a guitar shop.
I saw this pop up and I was like hell yes!!!!
Yep, I was on it like it white on rice!
Vickie Ray me too
I said oh, yes !,got to jump on this!!
Yasss!
Vickie Ray same! 🥰
Alan Collins, Steve Gains, and Gary Rosington get a lot of credit on their guitar work on this song, and rightfully so. But to me the two who really hold it down in Artimus Pyle on Drums and Leon Wilkeson on Bass. Just look and his fingers on that bass starting at 13:24. People do not realize how incredibly difficult that is. And he does it with such ease.
👍
Leon was a monster bass player. Artimus is still rocking with his tribute band. They are super tight.
You can tell they started in a Garage! They where in the Zone! They where Friends! They where Family! I was to go see them in Maryland, and the devastation happened! The Plane Crash!! It was one of the saddest days in Rock and Rolls Music History! To me they where All Natural! and from the Heart! ☆☆☆☆☆
I love your facial expressions, you have a real joy of music
This is the California I grew up in. It no longer exists. I am sad now.
Yeah it's a flaming pile of Liberal crap now. The 70's were an amazing time to grow up in Calif
What do You mean ?? What is different ?? What has gone wrong ?
I hear what you are saying . I am just interested to know what you kind of mean . 🤔
@@sjwillis1137 There's no more white working class. SoCal is a balkanized police state. Notice how fit tan and healthy everyone is in this audience? CA looks like a John Carpenter movie now. Read 'Mass Control' by Jim Keith.
@@sjwillis1137 it has become a cesspool of illegals and homeless due to the Demrat leadership through the yrs who don't care about the quality of life just a never endless supply of tax dollars and handouts. It's a dangerous crime ridden, unaffordable toilet of a state now.
Freebird at Knebworth 1976 is as good as it gets. There has never been, nor ever will be, a better performance. In particular, nobody will ever come close to Allen Collins' performace on that day. It's disappointing that nobody has come close to emulating that performance in 45 years, but also somehow immensely satisfying to know that there is a benchmark for live musicianship and here it is, recorded for all eternity. How I envy the people that were there. They were part of something that can never be repeated.
@Steve P, this performance of Free Bird is from "A Day On The Green" at Oakland Coliseum over July 4th weekend 1977, and no offense, but it's frankly a much better live performance of Freebird than the band played at Knebworth in 1976. The sound from Knebworth for the entire show was really poor. Some songs really hard to hear at all, and at Knebworth most of the band was pretty lit from having gotten to the gig way early and partying all day with famous movie stars and musicians before they went onstage. Musically this is a much better live performance of Freebird, IMO.
If you want to see a version that was filmed far better, check out the Knebworth 1976 version! Far less footage of the crowd, the camera is focused on the band for most of the song.
I'm sure for musicians it probably is better, but the crowd shots of this video are what truly capture this moment in time for so many of us. This video takes us back to a much simpler time by seeing how people used to be. We've had the audio for years but, to me, the scenes of the crowd are what make this video so special. I'm not musician, however, so what do I know?
@@marshmutt8975 I can understand that. Just as a musician who's a big fan of this band and Allen Collins, it's really cool to see him playing the solo.
I dont like that one as much, its fuzzy and the crowd is dead.......they came to see the stones and they were laying down waiting for them to play. some of the fans got up to cheer with the guitar rifts......but it was no where near the crowd here in oakland.
to see what we looked like and our spirit. the crowd footage shows that.
@@jacklewis5452 For me that's one of the reasons the Knebworth video is so good though. Skynyrd were overseas with an audience consisting mainly of Rolling Stones fans and when they began their set the majority of the crowd were sat down and disinterested. However, by the time they'd finished they had won the crowd over and everyone was on their feet cheering
Fil is one of the best song analysts I have ever seen. He is just top level excellence, high intelligence, deep understanding of technique and art of music. I enjoy every one of these and learn something new everytime.
Appreciate you not glossing over the critique. And, for the record, Steve Gaines is one of the biggest lost artists of all time.
That's one Oklahoman that will never be forgotten!
Steve Gaines = Legend. RIP Cassie, Steve, Ronnie, Billy, Allen, Leon and Ed
Man.."Freebird" was like a religion when I was in High school. Skynyrd ruled. They had like 8th grade educations but they revolutionized rock music.
Not much of a comment guy but dude, i love your videos keep up the good work. Glad your giving skynyrd the recognition they deserve as one of the greatest band that ever played!
Fil, you are without question the most genuine, positive man I have ever seen. You can see the admiration for every artist you critique, love the way you think, would love to have a few beers and just listen to you, you're a good man.
Skynyrd, The Cars, Boston, Aerosmith, Blue Oyster Cult, BTO, Heart, so much good music.
Oh yes Lynyrd Skynyrd. Feeeeeeeeeeeeeel good music. Wicked. You just want the song to never end. Crazy lead and don't forget the busy bass and drums, wow. Awesome song. Thanks for sharing Fil and always a great analysis.
Ronnie was a tough taskmaster from what I have learned and he demanded perfection to the point that he could be abusive if the musicians in the band didn't do everything perfectly. As much as that might taint his genius in the minds of more sensitive people it is a common trait among many creative types. They have a vision of perfection that they seek to create and replicate. That isn't to say that he deserves all credit because that certainly isn't true at all! Skynyrd was great because everyone involved was extremely talented and when all that talent came together it was pure awesomeness!
He would get upset and loudly verbalize his dissatisfaction, put that was nothing back then. That what’s wrong with music nowadays, if you award mediocre all you get is the crap 💩 that’s played now on the radio!!!!!!! Everyone doesn’t deserve a trophy after 5-6 years old because the accolades and praise is giving because of hard work and being the best at what you’re involved in whatever it might be!!!!!! That’s a huge problem with what’s happening now in life, kids graduating colleges/universities with worthless degrees and then can’t find any jobs that pay them more than what a high school diploma or a GED alone can get you!!!!!! Students graduating from technical colleges/schools, even high GPA students from high school are doing so much better with salaries and job security plus they don’t have much of or any big loans to payback!!!!!!!
So RIGHT
Also, with a band that large and a room/stage/studio full of egos, plus a bit of that good ole boy mentality, someone had to be in command and keep the train on the tracks, otherwise it could have degenerated into improvisational chaos. Ronnie was the guy to keep it all together, and he had the personality to pull it off. If you watch the Knebworth version of this song, he's constantly giving cues and hand signals to keep the jam somewhat orderly, including a very definite cut-off signal. AND he's the one that had the balls to get the guitar players to venture onto the "tongue" of the stage, where they were specifically forbidden to go because only the Stones (who were headlining) were allowed to go there - Ronnie said the hell with that and pushed the guitarists down the tongue (Leon Wilkeson tried to follow, but ran out of cord - the old days before cordless guitars).
I'm always in for skynyrd!!!
...the greatest southern rock anthem of all time...enjoyed it, Fil...
Cutter & Ms C
Sweet guitar !!
Allen Collins and Gary Rossington were two great and, IMO, very underappreciated guitarists. Thanks for the video !! It was hugely enjoyable.
More Skynyrd please !!
Truly good times, without stupid cell phones.
Really that's what you have, stupid cell phones? I grew up in the '60s and '70s and would have loved to have a cell phone back then. My first cell phone was a giant bag phone which needed to be plugged into the cigarette lighter and had a curly cord attached to the receiver. When I left the car the phone had to stay in it. C'mon man.
Truly good times, without ugly tattoos covering girls' bodies. Those were the days.
Before cellphones were getting in the way at shows.
OTOH, having been to at least a dozen of these arena rock shows in CA in 1977, including Skynyrd a month after this was recorded, a cell phone video would be nice to have given how stoned and sunburned we all were. Can't remember a damn thing about these concerts !!!
Would love to have been at a Beatles concert, front row and with one.
And they were free as a bird. Great slide guitar work. Unforgettable song and iconic band.
Fil, have you ever covered Duane Allman- he was amazing.
What a tragedy that plane crash was.
Aerosmith tour execs passed on using that plane due to reasons they deemed unsafe.
amen bro
They were so tight because Ronnie demanded it and the practices were long and brutal. I’ve always believed he was so obsessed because he knew their wasn’t another train coming he could hop on to go find their piece of the American dream. There was never going to be anything after Skynyrd for Ronnie I don’t believe... RIP
I’d love to have seen where he would’ve taken it. Somehow I doubt the band would’ve stayed together too much longer. Maybe a few years. The unstoppable punk genre was on deck, then grunge not far behind. I think Ronnie would’ve gone solo and dabbled in a bit of country.
melodymakermark
I’d like to think you are right. It would have been great watching him evolve with the times
When Lynyrd Skynyrd played Knebworth in 1976 they blew the Rolling Stones away. (There are videos posted on here of that gig). Jagger was super pissed because Ronnie broke his rule for opening acts. *NOBODY* was to go out on the tongue but the Stones. Afterwards Ronnie had a t-shirt made that he wore that said, "Who the fuck are the Rolling Stones?".
I give the win to Ronnie for that one.
👍🏻🤠
Is there any band that did not blow the Rolling Stones away?
Great scene on stage at Altamont with one of the Hells Angels looking at M.J. like WTF!
That’s exactly what happened, don’t you dare walk on Mick’s tongue. Stones didn’t come out for many hours after.
@@urex1717 Excellent point. I saw the Stones in San Diego 1981. George Thorogood opened followed by The J. Geils Band. Thorogood tore it up on guitar... of course. J. Geils stole the show. When they hit the stage, they truly were one of the hardest working live acts at the time. Hot and tight best describes them.
The Stones on the other hand, never were a great live band. The time that they were worth seeing was when they had Mick Taylor. That boy could play circles around Richards. 😆
The Allman Brothers when Dwayne was alive were the best band to see live.
Somewhere among the crowd my sister and her friends are sandwich in that Oakland Coliseum Stadium back in July of 1977 She said "Freebird" was the highlight of the concert. great analysis again Fil.
This was our anthem back in 1976. I saw the original band live then at Pittsburgh’s Civic Arena with Mountain. The concert is still one the highlights of my youth. I was Twenty two. Thanks again, Fil, for the positive analysis and the respect you extend to a legendary band. Rock! 🤘👍
I really love Lynyrd Skynyrd and this song in particular with all of it's tempo changes, remind me of a true religious experience. Watching the crowd even being synchronized with the music being played brings this feeling to mind. Ronnie was a true leader. He was a masterful orchestrator who knew the strengths of each member of his band and knew how to bring the absolute best out of them. All of the other members looked to him with confidence and loyalty and put forth their best efforts. And yes they practiced their music relentlessly. I can never forget that terrible crash. Being a teenager, it felt like it was the end of something big, and it was. Within a year, I began to hear punk rock music and it felt like music moved out of the bright daylight and into the darkness of small clubs. And once that music was gone, you just knew it could never come back like that, sweet, airy, sunlight filled time we had before. I sure miss those days.
TuckerSP2011..Unfortunately that "religious experience" which you speak of was accompanied by drugs and alcohol which killed the likes of Janice Joplin,Jimi Hendrix,Jim Morrison,and a lot
of fans of "said religious experience"!
THIS IS Southern Rock in the USA back then. The South is so hot and some places humid, you tend to do things more slowly. This song starts off completely Southern, then goes into a complete jam session. How could you stand still listening to this song? Thanks Fil for sharing this and for your analysis. God bless. 🌹
This solo by Allen - I think is one of the greatest solos ever performed - its starts off like a ferrari and just when you think its topped out, it turns into a rocket ship and shoots into space, the sheer pace of it is something really special, and the way he controls it so expertly to give that feeling of manic urgency right from that start, while still saving another gear for the end.
The crowd footage mixed in to the editing is part of what makes this video so great, you get to experience the feed back and how much everyone was getting into the music and performance!
Ahhh thank you Fil. I've always preferred the live version. Singling out instruments during different parts. Leon's bass runs , amazing. Artemus steady as a rock early , fevered after. Billy's melodic piano love his ending playing during the jam. Gary, Allen , Steve ahhhh. It's how well everyone blends but every part can be heard. How tough is that. And to think this was from their first album.
It was never released on radio either. It gets played now, but not back then.
Hi Fil! The 70’s brought us a bit of a different sound! I remember the year this song was released! I was up all night rocking my newborn baby, and listening to the radio, and this music! Thanks for the memories! I just love how you cover so many different sounds! A big ‘’mom hug’ to you! Have a wonderful weekend!
"Free Bird" has bittersweet memories for me. "If I leave here tomorrow, would you still remember me?" .... I remember the day my younger brother called me into his room to listen to this amazing band and song "Free Bird" that he had just discovered while learning to play electric guitar. He was so excited to share this great music. It wasn't long after, that members of the band Lynrd Skynrd and my brother were taken from us in tragic accidents.
Great review by the way! You always break it down to simple but understandable ways! Keep up the great analysis
I have seen Lynyrd Skynyrd live, and they are one of the very few bands that sound far better live than on their albums, even though their albums are fantastic.
5 times better live, I saw their live concerts a few times.
Indeed
I wonder why, Rossington, Collins didn't make it
....Skynyrd, Baywatch girls, Jack Daniels and apple pie.....doesn't get any more American than this
plus some red bud, , .. Apple Pie is actually an English creation but we will take it anyways
Pamela Anderson is Canadian too....We will take it.
Pamela Anderson is a.skank and carries diseases
Big fatty of some Great female plant
This analysis just made me smile as Fil gives a brief description of the event then allows it to carry on until the triple-guitar attack. I felt whisked back to 77 for a moment in time. Then back we go until it finished. Although I'm a northerner at about 13 years old back then I've always had a soft spot for Southern boogie played by Skynyrd, Outlaws, Blackfoot, etc... As usual, I'm impressed by Fil's analyses and think he really should be called "Wings of the rock n' roll historian" I'm constantly learning more about music I thought I knew so well.
No reaction host ever commented on the beginning tempo having to be done just right to unite the whole first half
Oh boy, my heart breaks every time I see this. I love this band, these boys were fun in my youth. They played their instruments well and you could tell there was a good relationship within the group. Family and fans were very affected by their deaths. It wasn’t all of them but the ones that died RIP.
Yep, I saw them at the Hollywood Sportatorium a couple of stops before the plane crash. Glad I got to see them when I did.
Lynyrd Skynyrd was the apex of rock talent and the crowds were the apex of rock audiences. This was a unique time and experience never to be replicated since. Having been there myself and a musician in those days I can say that with absolute certainty. This is why this video is a treasure. It perfectly captured these two elements frozen in time for generations later to see as evidence. So sad it's gone and yet so happy it was saved on film!
Billy Powell on piano really steals the show. Fantastic performance of FB - right up there w/ Knebworth '76, and The Old Gray Whistle Test in '75. Thx Fil.
I enjoyed watching this & your analysis. Always watching. 😘😊🤗💕💕💕
"Sweet Home Alabama" that song is our states anthem played before every Alabama football game, please react to this great song.
Hell Yeahh
The front crowd is all girls around 17 years old, which I would have been in 1977. No sunscreen or sunblock. Halter tops were everywhere, and we never wore bras. Never wear a bra with halter tops because the straps would show. Totally opposite now. And the wide load, peroxide blonde was gonna hurt in the morning. I lived on Sweet Home Alabama while getting ready for school. 7:15 am, it comes on the radio and stopped everything to dance for 3 minutes. Musically, I was all Osmonds during those years, with Styx as a backup when I needed variety. This song was a bit long for me, but in this video, with your narration it is fabulous. I am still amazed by the front row crowds and how young they all were. Cool.
I hope Neil Young remembers . A southern man don't need him around any how .
Yes, but Southern Man needed reminding that some of their folk needed to read what their good book said. Some of them still do.
Ronnie is wearing a Neil Young t-shirt in this video, lol.
Hey Fil, As a man with parents from Alabama, this song and band was very special to me. One week your doing Tina Turner, the next week your doing Lynyrd Skynyrd. Freaking Brilliant! P.S. I know they were from Jacksonville.
Skynyrd is a serious band with some of the finest songwriting in rock music history. That includes some powerful tearful ballads too.
You can tell someone is musically clueless and gets their musical opinions from USA Today and Readers Digest when you see them roll their eyes when you say something like this.
100%. SO UNDERRATED. RVZ wrote raw, real, jagged lyrics.
Thanks for another great video and analysis, also love the Neil Young 'Tonight's the Night' T-shirt Ronnie is wearing, showing any 'dispute' was tongue in cheek, he and his band were big Neil fans
Yeah they were big Neil Young and Cream fans and Neil loved Skynyrd right back!!
One of life's simple pleasures is watching that smile creep its way onto Fil's face whenever some awesome guitar part is being played
Allen Collins, one of the most underrated guitarist EVER. Just the playing on this solo should garner him icon status. The man just simply rips that Korina V apart. I have seen Skynyrd many times. Most recently, last spring. Ricky Medlocke does a wonderful job on the solo. But, Allen was just tore it up.
Lynyrd Skynyrd, truly one of the all-time greats. And they are still killing it today. With Gary being the only original member left. And not in the best of health. It's time to call it quits. They have blessed us with a lifetime of music. They are the soundtrack to my youth. It's time!!!
Correction on my part. Allen is playing a Korina Explorer in video. Not a "V".Infact, I have never seen a picture of any member of Skynyrd playing a "Flying V". That's mistake on my part. Sorry folks.
Glad to see my fellow Jax natives getting some more love man! From what I understand, one of the reasons their live performances were so great was because they rehearsed their butts off. Not a lot of improvising going on but it looked so natural because it was practiced so many times. As good as Ed King was, I really wish we all could have seen more of what they would have done with Steve Gaines. ✌🏻🎸🎼
Certainly a trip down memory lane... lol. Seems like a lifetime ago, partying with friends, smoking pot and drinking Boones Farm , 16 years old and thinking THAT was the life, lol. 🤔🤪
them was da days
@@muffginter6759 true that! Lol
I drank boonesfarm strawberry hill it made ya a man back then, haha
@@treemowerman lol, it was good stuff.
Another great analysis, Fil! I honestly never would have put Skynyrd and prog rock in the same sentence, but you're absolutely dead on. Thank you as always.
Top level professional musicians. You said it all. Professional comment, my greatest compliments for your work.
Lynyrd Skynyrd one of the greatest bands live ever they were absolutedly brilliant LEGENDS OF ROCK MUSIC.