The story behind âFree Birdâ
On this day (October 20)  in 1977, Lynyrd Skynyrd’s twin engine plane crashed in a swamp in Gillsburg, Miss., killing three of the band members – singer Ronnie Van Zant, guitarist Steve Gaines and singer Cassie Gaines – assistant manager Dean Kilpatrick and both pilots on impact. Twenty other people survived with various injuries, some very severe.
The last surviving original member still in the band Gary Rossington is recovering at home from a heart attack. Sending him best wishes and also to early members Ed King, Artimus Pyle, Cassie Hawkins, Larry Junstrom….
In tribute to the band and those lost, this is the story of their most enduring song.

Foto by Kirk West
âFREE BIRDâ
Originally released on pronounced leh-nerd skin-nerd (MCA, 1973)
Guitarist Allen Collins came up with the music to âFree Birdâ very early in the bandâs songwriting process. But while everyone recognized the grace of the chord progression, Ronnie Van Zant could not come up with a suitable vocal melody.
Recalls Gary Rossington, âAllen had the chords for the beginning, pretty part for two full years and we kept asking Ronnie to write something and he kept telling us to forget it; he said there were too many chords so he couldnât find a melody. He thought that he had to change with every chord. Then one day we were at rehearsal and Allen started playing those chords again, and Ronnie said, âThose are pretty. Play them again.â He said, âI got it,â and wrote the lyrics in three or four minutesâthe whole damned thing!
Like âStairway to Heaven,â one of its chief competitors for the unofficial title of rockâs most epic song, âFree Birdâ starts out as a ballad before becoming a solo-fueled rocker. That was not by design, recalls Rossington: âWhen we started playing it in clubs, it was just the slow part. Ronnie said, âWhy donât you do something at the end of that so I can take a break for a few minutes.â I came up with those three chords at the end and Allen and I traded solos and Ronnie kept telling us to make it longer; we were playing three or four sets a night, and he was looking to fill it up and get a break.â

Gary Rossington
The structure of âFree Birdâ was set, but it was still lacking one final element; the elegant piano intro, which was written by then-roadie Billy Powell. âOne of our roadies told us we should check out this piano part that another roadie had written as an intro for the song,â says Rossington. âWe did–and Billy went from being a roadie to a member right then.â
The original album version of the song clocked in at almost 10 minutes and according to Rossington and Ed King, MCA objected to putting such a long song on the bandâs debut album. A 3:30 radio edit was cut and the single, at 4:10, became a Top 20 hit. âMCA said we couldnât put a 10-minute song on an album, because nobody would play it,â recalls King. âOf course, that was the song everyone gravitated towards!â
On Skynyrd’s first live album, 1976’s One More from the Road, Van Zant can be heard asking the crowd, “What song is it you wanna hear?” The overwhelming response leads into the 14-minute version of the song that became iconic. Though Van Zant often dedicated âFree Birdâ to Duane Allman, contrary to urban legend, it was not written for him.


