the Lynyrd Skynyrd band
that a disproportionate number of its stars have died in their creative prime. Some OD’d on the instant fame and the temptations of too much disposable income. Some artists confused drugs and drink for a muse until they became a fatal addiction, especially in combination with overpowered motorcycles and cars. Life in the fast lane(as the Eagles hymned it)only worsened the actuarial odds. The more money that was spent on dangerous pursuits, the more that had to be earned on merciless touring schedules in which the all-night travel miles–and the risk–inexorably mounted. Sometimes, admittedly, the blame was greedy management or perverse fate. But major figures from Buddy Holly(1959) to Otis Redding(1967) and Jim Croce(1973) were lost in plane crashes. The latest was buried near his native Jacksonville last week. He was Ronnie Van Zant, 28, co-founder, writer and lead singer of LYNYRD SKYNYRD. It had supplanted the Allman Brothers as the reigning Southern boogie band and as a leading U.S. challenger to the British hegemony of the concert coliseums. The group members who eight years ago were working $100-a-week Florida
honky-tonks this year reached a new peak of commercial importance–and threat of drunken self-destruction. Single concert-concert guarantees
ranged up to $150,000. Three of their LP’s sold a million. At the same time Van Zant was noting, “we made the WHO look like church boys on
Sunday. We done things only fools’d do.” Ronnie, after a dozen arrests for brawling and misconduct himself, helped convince Lynyrd Skynyrd this
summer that “we had one last chance to get it together–we ain’t getting any younger.” Their latest LP, Street Survivors, which just hit the
stores gold, had been recorded, uncharacteristically, cold sober.
colorful and distinctive artists.
Florida.
Jerome’s Report:
“five years of alcoholism.” Anyone who had heard his pained and snarling blues delivery in performance, seen his barefoot inebriated swagger and
met him backstage afterward–often thicklidded and stuporous–would hardly have recognized him. Alert and athletic, he was trimmer than he had appeared in years and exuberantly personable in conversation. it was a jolt to meet the new Van Zant, legendary trasher of hotels, when he knocked on the door announcing “Room service.” He strode in confidently, his long hair past his shoulders, shoeless and precariously carrying a huge tray of food playfully borrowed from a bellboy. “Will that be all?” he asked, before cracking into a smile. It made one believe that musicians as well as politicians can be reborn. As he hunched over the wheel of his pickup truck driving to his lakeside home 30 minutes from Jacksonville, Ronnie was a vision of self-renewal. He pointed out the track where he was jogging two miles daily to get in shape for the tour, and he detailed the high-protein diet his wife was holding him to. Then he gave in and stopped for a six-pack, apologizing, “This is the most I’ll have drunk in the past six weeks.” As the guided tour continued, he drove by a prison farm. “Hey,” he said, “if prisons, freight trains, swamps and gators don’t get ya to write songs, man,
y’ain’t got no business writin’ songs.” Once at his home, the serenity he enjoyed around his wife of five years, Judy, and daughter Melody was
clear.(He also had a daughter, now 10, by a failed previous mariage.) Van Zant crawled around on the living room rug, circling an armchair with his delighted daughter on it, playing “gonna GETCHA.”"The baby’s had a lot to do with my maturing,” he believed.
whiskey, wine and beer, and we’d all have to puke once each before goin’ onstage. We couldn’t even remember the order of the songs. Some guy
crouched behind an amp and shouted them to us. We once looked at tapes of shows–man, we was sloppy drunk,” he flushed. “I couldn’t believe
kids applauded for that crap.” Other audiences–around his hometown, oddly– were less accepting, and he hadn’t played there in six years.
Ronnie claimed he was once so zonked “I spit up one of my tonsils onstage and walked off. The people demolished our equipment, threw bottles, and four cops were hurt.”
years on the run. He’d bought 29 acres of choice Tennessee hill country where the family had recently camped out for a few days, but Ronnie also
pondered a more family-style neighborhood in Jacksonville. As he said in his idiom, “My wife don’t want our daughter to grow up a swamp hermit.
Other kids’ll be good for her.” Yet on the eve of four rehearsals, Van Zant conceded he felt restless after the unprecendented six weeks
hiatus. He could not deny that “the road is home to you after 12 years.
recalled. “When you’re from the south, man, you learn to work your azz off, and we did. It was HELLATIOUS.” He stopped and turned to invite a
lasting eye contact. After a pause he added: “Hellatious and the best years of our lives.”








