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LYNYRD SKYNYRD – SOUNDS Magazine February 28, 1976 Page 19

Thursday, April 28, 2011

1976 - Lynyrd Skynyrd on top of their game

1976 - Lynyrd Skynyrd on top of their game

1976 - Lynyrd Skynyrd

1976 - Lynyrd Skynyrd

LYNYRD SKYNYRD – SOUNDS Magazine February 28, 1976 Page 19

Written by Kate Simon and Jonh Ingham

LYNYRD SKYNYRD on Tour in Britain

QUESTION: What’s sillier than a four-month tour of America?

ANSWER: A one week tour of Britain.

Kate Simon’s mother used to warn her, “Katherine, beware of people who
drink before two p.m.” My mom advised me to keep that first glass at a
party firmly affixed to the right hand and stretch out its contents over
the course of the evening, keeping a sharp eye and firm resolution for
those only too eager to top up the wassail bowl. If they could only see
us now, Mrs. Simon’s daughter consorting with people who slip into their
first drink before noon.

Kate doesn’t understand the subtleties of alcohol indulgence, how that
double screwdriver, Bloody Mary, Jack Daniels, or Heinekens isn’t so
much addictive greed as medicinal; that, ultimately, the simplest and
best way to cure a hangover is to have another drink. Ah, innocence.
LYNYRD SKYNYRD are very knowledgeable about alcohol. Ronnie Van Zant
and Gary Rossington used to knock off two-fifths of whiskey a day each;
Ronnie professes a real appreciation for scotch. Now, though, Ronnie is
probably straightest of all the lads.

Apart from keyboards whiz Billy Powell, those in the band with a tast
for a tripple tend to favour bourbon (brandy in a pinch), always double.
Straight up, with a chaser on the side. No timewasters, these guys.
Thursday night in Glascow, the one free night on their recent
whirlwind tour, proved to be a quiet affair. At the dinner table sat
Billy and Steve Gibbons, owner and operator of the Steve Gibbons Band,
tour support.

Billy has a very open face; he tends to take things at face value. He
wore Levi’s and a check shirt. Steve Gibbons cultivated an outlaw pose,
face moulding to brooding, fiery perfection, clothes very unique, very
Steve Gibbons.

Within 90 minutes Billy had revealed most of his life, described his
impressive home backing onto a lake stocked with bream, perch, and
trout, and shown a wallet photo of his wife and beautiful child.
Steve Gibbons had said about ten words, he looked amazing. As Billy
piled into his fourth double scredriver — as you sipped your second
glass of wine — with the same gusto as he had the first, it occurred
that one was in the presence of seasoned drinkers.

Over in the corner, Billy Connolly and Mike McGear began to amass a
court, everybody turning onto the funny stuff, which wasn’t too hard,
since Connolly has never heard W.C.Fields. He confessed that when
everbody started comparing him Lenny Bruce he had to go to the library
and get all his books to discover who the blighter was. He and McGear
had taped a TV show to be broadcast at 10 the next morning. After a
while, Connolly leaves

The party returned to the bar. At the Albany, the bar never closes. A
local fellow joins the encampment, hankering for a sing-song. “All you
kinky people — none of you want to have a sing-song. Woddy Herman and
his lot were here last week; they didn’t want to sing, either. C’mon,
which one of you can sing?” He takes off his jacket and tie, unbuttons
his cuffs, orders four bottles of champagne, and settles in.

Steve Gaines and Ronnie Van Zant of Lynyrd Skynyrd

Steve Gaines and Ronnie Van Zant of Lynyrd Skynyrd

Immediately to his left sit Ronnie Van Zant and Steve, both watching
him with bemusement. People are pointed out as singers. One of these is
Watson, sound engineer for Tommy and the Bijoux, moonlighting with the
Steve Gibbons Band and therfore incognito. Tommy had ordered a vacation,
but Mr. Watson needed some seven per cent solution.

“Any Umbrellas!” he cried whe hearing of a sing-song. “C’mon,’Any
Umbrellas’! Let’s see you do that! You want to hear what Holmes has to
say on the subject?” He grabs a volume of almost compleat Sherlock
Holmes and starts rifling through the pages. “Its so hard to find your
place with so many pages…”

The first bottle of champers exhausted, Watson was thinking of bed,
when the hotel sneakily offered to uncork a bottle of Dom Perignon, at
15 pounds, the bottle.

Our Scot friend baulked at the price, but threw caution to the wind,
soon enough, Mr. Watson was dancing on the table. Behind him, McGear was
telling bass wizard Leon Wilkeson about Penny Lane in Liverpool. “Some
friends of mine wrote a song about it a few years ago.”

He produces a photo from his wallet, showing a line-up of rock n’ roll
finery. There’s Billy Fury, looking more-like Eddie Cochran than the man
himself, who stands a few persons away. God, Adam Faith looks so
spindlely! Gene Vincent leers with finesse, and elsewhere are Joe Brown
and Marty Wilde. Now that’s some photo you got there, Mike.
As the sixth through tenth bottles of champagne appear on the horizon
it becomes all too much. Exit. There was no sing-song.

Friday is Lacey’s birthday. Lacey is Ronnie’s father, touring with the
band for the first time. He is 61 today. He sits quietly in the corner,
doling out homilies. ‘You come here wanting and you leave here wanting.’
‘Its never late until two, and two’s too late.’

He and Mr. Watson are the two reasons to be in a room. He spends
Friday afternoon sipping Canadian Clubs and eyeing Glascow’s wonderful
women, especially the waitresses. ‘That pretty black uniform? And that
white trim across the bottom? Boy, it catches mah eye.’

Lynyrd Skynyrd are from Jacksonville, Florida, which isn’t as South as
Alabama or Georgia is mythically South, but it does imbue them with a
sense of being southerners. They’re very polite, these boys applaud
after the dinner jazz combo’s every number, and toast their audiences.
Their accent is a soft drawl, with a choice of words that is
consisitently entertaining. They’re one of the few American bands to
come out of the poor working class and in England at least, look exactly
like their audience. (There isn’t a Robert Plant, Rod Stewart or Steve
Gibbons among them, though I bet Allen Collins fancies himself a bit of
a looker.) They play some amazing music.

The pre-gig dressing room atmosphere is unusually relaxed — in fact,
its just the party continuing in a different room. The band aren’t
really into dressing that much, but the three lady singers
counter-attack with a vengeance.

Cassie Gaines, Leslie Hawkins and JoJo Billingsley

Cassie Gaines, Leslie Hawkins and JoJo Billingsley

Leslie is a vision in white, Cassie — who spent six months in Santa
Fe and a year in Mexico — favours sueds and dripping turquoise, while
Jo is definitely ina Billie Holiday vein, turquoise rings on every
finger, lots of boas, and feathers in her hair.

She turns to Ronnie and drawls, “Do you think we’re overdressed?”
Ronnie looks her up and down and grins. She looks pretty amazing, “Well,
if that’s how you feel comfortable, then dress like that.” Ronnie is in
patched jeans, Confederate flag t-shirt and a faded denim jacket patched
with flags and embroidered on the back with a huge sun covered in rain
and a Rolling Stones eagle-jet.

The girls are a new addition. Ronnie’s so tickled with the idea he
can’t look at them onstage for fear of laughing.
Trevor Burton, bassist with the Steve Gibbons Band, bounces in with
good news from the front lines. He’s wearing a Jimi Hendrix T-shirt.
Ronnie listens to him. “Yeah, but when you tour America with the WHO”
– The Gibbons Band is doing this in March — “Its a whole different
ballgame. Those kids are out there to see one group. Our first big
concert was our first night with them. We got on stage and just lost it.
The second and third nights weren’t much better.”
Treveor nods, but it hasn’t sunk in.

Suddenly there is that ritual, the exchanging of the T-shirts. Jimi,
still damp from the ardours of the stage, settles himself on Ronnie. “He
was one of my heroes.”

After the gig, the party continues. Some people got off, some didn’t.
Mr. Watson jovially accosts Gary Rossington, who is developing a Greg
Allman style beard that outshines the original.

“I’m beginning to find out you’re quite a rascal. Outside of Eric,
you’re the person I know who can sound like FREE. I respect you for that
because he’s bloody hard to beat.” Mr. Watson is referring in this
instance to Paul Kossoff.

Gary ragrds him with a bemused eye. “Yeah, well he copied me.” He
cracks up and then collapses in a fit of flu.
Lacey’s birthday party was a quiet affair though the volume was high.
Watson and Leon danced pas-de-deuxe on the tables, champagne flowed
freely. My Holmes prescribed freely, and toasts were made. A family
affair.

During ‘Happy Birthday’ drummer Artimus Pyle called out “to the man
who made it all possible,” and another mentioned, while watching Lacey
eyeing the proceedings with wonderment, that in the early days he had
given the band considerable support, but Lacey is deprecating on the
matter.

“When yuh do something for a group of people, and then talk ’bout it,
that’s patting yuhself on the back. What yuh do for yuh family comes
from the heart, not the pocket book.”

He and Ronnie have a tight bond. When Ronnie is off the road the
family immediately get together. Ronnie’s younger brother has a band,
.38 Special, another brother is just beginning in a band, and two
sisters sing. Lacey played and sang in the forties and reckons his
relatives still berate him for not sticking to music. Although he
doesn’t work much now, he’s a trucker. So he’d understand all that lingo
in ‘Convoy’? “Oh yes.”

The reception area snapped to gestapo alert at the sound of breaking
glass, not knowing that an over enthusiastic Billy was harmlessly
disposing of half a dozen empty champagne bottles. The party was shut
down. The barflies gravitated towards the watering hole, propping up the
bar until six. The bus left for Leeds at ten-thirty.

“What’s wrong with you?!? Sitting on the bus as if you’ve been up all
night! We didn’t have this back in Poona in ’32 with Lord Flooty and the
14th Doozahs!”

Watson strides the length of the bus with the energy of a man well
rested in body and spirit; parhaps the moral concern of his
two-year-old son, whose first question was to ask if daddy was being
good, was inspiring discipline. Leon bounces with him, self-appointed
tour guide and music co-ordinator. The others sleep or take in the
Northumbrian countryside.

During lunch break in some hamlet, Artimus occupies his time
purchasing a pair of thick, woolen socks, which seems as typical Artimus
as anything. With his amazing mane of hair he looks like one of William
Blake’s wilder visions. Watson, meanwhile, discovers a man celebrating
his 60th birthday the next day. He intends drinking 60 pints.
The afternoon rolls by. Lacey watches the band’s activities slightly
wide-eyed. Touring, he says, is an education. At the back of the bus the
Steve Gibbons Band is intensely into the Steve Gibbons Band. Manager
Peter Meaden can earbash about the band and its connections ad
infinitum.

They slip a cassette of their upcoming album into a portable deck and
and a fine roar blasts out. The band tap to the beat, grinning and
commenting. Steve stands behind them all, still more devoted to attitude
dancing than verbalising. Which is great, but it could get boring on a
desert island.

Leon sits with them and listens; later they are joined by Artimus, who
comments on the great chord progression that suddenly leaps out of
‘Tupelo Mississippi Flash’, “I don’t know how you do that, but keep on
playing it…”

“You know, that’s the trouble with this kind of set-up — none of us
can jam together.” The others nod. “Because that’s the only way I can
learn something new — to play with different people. Otherwise you dry
up.”

The half-dozen surrounding him voice agreement. The front half of the
bus sleeps on. In two weeks they start a four month tour of America.
“One hundred and something dates.”
But four months only has 120 days…

AllenCollins - 1976

AllenCollins - 1976


Lynyrd Skynyrd Sounds Magazine

Allen Collins Remembered 1952-1990

Friday, April 22, 2011

Allen Collins the unforgettable sound of the original Lynyrd Skynyrd

Allen Collins the unforgettable sound of the original Lynyrd Skynyrd

Allen Collins-Forever a Free Bird

MUSIC MAGAZINE February 10, 1990

Written by Tony Paris

Allen Collins 1952 – 1990 A FREE BIRD

Allen Collins died two weeks ago. One time guitarist for LYNYRD
SKYNYRD, he survived the plane crash that killed three other members of
that band in 1977, only to suffer what seemed a steady stream of
tragedies the rest of his life.
Collins was the tall, thin third of the guitar trio that was the
Jacksonville band’s trademark lineup; along with fellow guitarist Gary
Rossington, he was the heart to leader Ronnie Van Zant’s soul in a band
that defined the term SOUTHERN ROCK for the rest of the world!
While the Allman Brothers Band had established Southern Rock with its
double guitar duels and extended blues jams. LYNYRD SKYNYRD took the
idiom further, borrowing musically from British rock and extending the
guitar lineup to drive home the realities of Van Zant’s bruising,
brawling lyrics. With songs like THE NEEDLE AND THE SPOON, SATURDAY
NIGHT SPECIAL, SWEET HOME ALABAMA, SIMPLE KIND OF MAN, THAT SMELL, and,
of course, FREE BIRD (the second most requested song in FM radio
history, next to Led Zepplin’s STAIRWAY TO HEAVEN), LYNYRD SKYNYRD
within four years, quickly came to embody the spirit of macho,
tough-rocking Southern pride.
After the October, 1977 plane crash — which took the lives of Van
Zant, guitarist Steve Gaines and back up singer Cassie Gaines — the
rest of the band slowly recovered from the physical and emotional wounds
suffered.
In 1980, a number of the original members regrouped as the
ROSSINGTON//COLLINS BAND, basing their sound on Collins and Rossington’s
guitar interplay and the LYNYRD SKYNYRD legend. During the height of
the ROSSINGTON//COLLINS BAND’s popularity, Collins’ wife Kathy died in
the midst of his continued battle with other personal demons. The band
was short lived.
Four years ago, Collins was involved in an automobile accident that
killed his girlfriend, paralyzed most of his body and put him in a
wheelchair. In 1987, when the remaining members of the original LYNYRD
SKYNYRD regrouped for a “TRIBUTE TOUR” to mark the tenth anniversary of
the death of their three band members. Collins, once the fire and
brimstone of a LYNYRD SKYNYRD show, could only join them at their
Jacksonville rehearsals in the role of “Musical Director.” On the tour,
he appeared only at selected dates, and, even then, it was just to watch
his band from the side of the stage.
Four and a half months ago, a weak Collins entered a Jacksonville
hospital suffering from what has been described as “complications from
paralysis.” Five days before his death, when it was certain he wasn’t
getting any better, his life support system was pulled.
I remember sitting in some small southern hotel room with Allen
Collins and Gary Rossington one night during their first
ROSSINGTON//COLLINS BAND tour. I thought the whole scene was somehwat
ironic. I was never much of one to listen to LYNYRD SKYNYRD, and though
there was a world of fans who would’ve done anything to be having a beer
with them, I was pretty indifferent to being there. And besides, Johnny
Rotten was going to be interviewed by Tom Snyder that night, something I
was sure those two guys weren’t interested in, and I didn’t want to have
to miss it. It finally became too much, and I got up and turned the TV
on just as Snyder was welcoming his orange spiked-hair guest. I waited
for the grumblings from the rest of the room. They sat watching in
silence.
On screen, Lydon was at his most irrepressible, having just completed
a triumphant return of his own after the demise of the SEX PISTOLS with
the first Public Image Ltd. tour. He was ranting and raving to Snyder
about the evils in the music business, the problems artists encounter
with record companies trying to control them, about dinosaur bands and
how audiences want to live in the past and how he was going to have none
of it. As it was getting heavy, and Snyder’s eyebrows were raising way
past his forehead, Allen Collins jumped up and started yelling, “He’s
right! Gary, He’s Right!” He exclaimed, much to my amazement. “Just
listen to him man, listen! Man, that’s the same stuff Ronnie used to
say!”
After that night, I saw those guys in a little different light.

For Allen. Fly on Free Bird !!!
Special Thanks To Mr. Kent Griffith
Ronnie Van Zant and Allen Collins-The heart and soul of Lynyrd Skynyrd

Ronnie Van Zant and Allen Collins "The Heart And Soul" of the original Lynyrd Skynyrd Band

Ronnie Van Zant and Allen Collins "The Heart And Soul" of the original Lynyrd Skynyrd Band

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