Thursday, October 2, 2008

Southern Rock's Finest at the State Theatre in St Petersburg



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SOUTHERN ROCK’S FINEST -will headline the State Theatre (dowtown St Pete) with special guests Rebel Pride, Sobriety X, Un4Givin, Down Jr., Brian Chris, and Lavafish. Also coming along with SRF will be author GENE ODOM, former head of security for Lynyrd Skynyrd ,body guard of Ronnie Van Zant, and Skynyrd plane crash survivor. Gene will be signing his highly acclaimed book "Remembering the Freebirds of Southern Rock", and selling great Skynyrd photos etc. from his personal collection.Don’t miss this Show!!

Friday, September 5, 2008

Security For Lynyrd Skynyrd

I traveled with the band off and on for a couple of years because I'd
get tired of the road and want to come back home to work. Then, in
late 1976, I decided to stay with the band full-time to try to stop their
drinking and fighting habits. I was the only person that could say jump
and they would say how high. This was because they knew I had
never smoked or drank in my life and never will and because of this
Ronnie Van Zant trusted me more than anyone in the world.

I told him that I could see what drinking before a gig was doing to
their performance, so I started taking the first limo to the auditorium.
I'd take one bottle of Jack Daniels, two bottles of champagne, and
give them away or pour them out, leaving one bottle of Jack Daniels
and one bottle of champagne for the band when they arrived. They
never knew what I was doing until it was too late and then they'd have
to go out and play, sober as judges.

I knew my help was appreciated when Ronnie, Allen, and Gary
came up to me one night and said, "We never thought we could play
in front of 15,000 people sober. We appreciate what you've done for
us."

I finally did away with all the whiskey and champagne. The only
alcohol left in the dressing room when they arrived was a six-pack of
beer and part of it was left when they went on stage.
It made me feel great to see Lynyrd Skynyrd play and perform the
way I knew they could. When the accident occurred, all of the
members of the band were sober and going to stay that way; I know
because I was there. The rough and rowdy band that everyone knew,
left when I came. The most expensive thing they broke while I was
with them was a lamp and it was broken by accident.

I probably cared for Lynyrd Skynyrd more than anyone. I didn't
work for the money. I did what I did for my friends because a friend is
worth more than money. He is worth a lifetime.

Thanks,
Gene Odom

http://lynyrdskynyrddixie.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=1538

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

Skynyrd Insider's Story

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Former bodyguard penning tale about
life after accident
By RYAN TRARES
DAilYJOURNAL STAFF WRITER


The death of a rock 'n' roll legend can define an era.
The death of a close friend can define a man.
No matter how many years pass, Gene Odom always will
remember the night of October 20, 1977.
Music fans will recognize the date.
Some where over Mississippi, the airplane carrying rock band Lynyrd
Skynyrd crashed, killing charismatic lead singer Ronnie Van Zant and
Four other people aboard. Odom was on that plane. As the band's security director and Van Zant's personal bodyguard, he helped pull his childhood friend into a plane seat and strapped in the sleeping Van Zant.
"That was probably three seconds beforethe crash," he said.
The rest is rock 'n' roll history.

For Odom, the crash ended the chapter of his life with Lynyrd Skynyrd.
But his story extends further than his association with the famed band.
With the help of Franklin resident Scott Coner,he's telling his own tale.
The two joined forces to write "Theirs Forever: The Ballad of Gene Odom,
"a retrospective of Odom's life,complete with an accompanying album of
original music Coner wrote. Odom and Coner came together through their musical interest and while Odom was doing a favor for one of Coner's friends. The friend, a Lynyrd Skynyrd fan who was suffering from cancer, wanted to see the band's old neighborhood. Coner contacted Odom, who escorted the man through their old haunts. The friendship built from there. Odom has published two books about his time with the band. The first, "Lynyrd Skynyrd I'll Never Forget You,"
was a self-published collection of memories he had growing up with Van Zant. The second, "Lynyrd Skynyrd, Remembering the Free Birds of Southern Rock," follows the same formula, focusing on Odom's time with the band. With this book, Coner felt it was time for Odom to tell his own story. "His life, the interesting portions, didn't stop in 1977.They really started then," he said.

For the past week, the two have been working at Coner's Franklin home and office as Odom tells his story. While not dwelling on it, Coner knows it would be difficult to write the book without starting with the close relationship between Odom and Van Zant. The two were childhood friends. They grew up in the same poor neighborhood in
Jacksonville, Fla., and spent time fishing and hanging out, often wreaking havoc. They stayed friends after Van Zant started playing music. When Lynyrd Skynyrd started its meteoric rise, Van Zant asked Odom to be his bodyguard. Despite all of the tales that come from living with a rock band, Coner was fascinated by the parts that came after the plane crash. He wanted to delve into Odom's rehabilitation from that wreck, which severely burned him and cost him his left eye. After two years spent recovering, Odom went to work as an ironworker. But a work accident in 1990,combined with the injuries sustained in the plane crash, made it too difficult to work. He has been living on disability since then. The book will touch on Odom's divorce in 1989,an event he calls horrendous. He also will write about his two daughters and grandchildren, who are referenced in the title "Theirs Forever." To go with the book, Coner, his musician friend Johnny Burbrink and Odom have been working on an album of original songs.

The lead track is "The Ballad of Gene Odom," a haunting song detailing the fateful plane crash and legal troubles that arose in the 1980s with the surviving band members. adorn still holds some resentment for the current version of the band, which he refers to as "second-class Skynyrd" and "that clown act." Their touring under the Lynyrd Skynyrd name and playing the old songs without Van Zant violates an agreement they all signed after the crash. But Odom tries not to dwell on that. He instead
wants to honor his friend while also saying something about his own life.
Coner hopes they appeal to Lynyrd Skynyrd fans while opening up new veins of music to their ears. The plan is to have the package ready to go by fall. Coner said they hope to have some music available on Odom's Website, www.LynyrdSkynyrdDixie.com as well as perhaps a sample chapter. "We're going to try and coerce them into taking a step out here in faith and saying maybe there's something outside of Freebird' and 'Sweet Home Alabama,'" he said.

http://lynyrdskynyrddixie.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=1534

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

"Street Survivors" Album Cover

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Street Survivors” Photo of Album Cover

I remember what a hard time the band had trying to get the picture
for the front cover of the "Street Survivors" album. The set'up at
Universal Studios was a metal trough in front of the band, one in each
of the windows located on both sides of the band, and an explosion
that would go off behind the band. The explosion would go off, setting
the troughs on fire, just as the picture was being taken, giving the
effect of Lynyrd Skynyrd coming into town and setting it on fire
-which was what they always did. The problem was that the flames in
the trough in front of them would rise up too high causing the band
members to jump back.

On a couple of occasions, the gas that was being used to start the
fires would burn too long causing the wood in the town setting to
catch on fire. The studio firemen would come in and put the fires out
and then they'd have to start all over.
Finally, after about a hundred fires and a half a day of shooting they
got it right. The picture was almost perfect except Gary was jumping
back a little.

After the plane crash and the death of Ronnie, Steve, and Cassie,
the survivors decided that the fire scene wasn't very appropriate and
they took the picture that was originally supposed to go on the back
cover of the album and put it on the front. The fire scene ended up on
the back cover.

Thanks,
Gene Odom

http://lynyrdskynyrddixie.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=1505

Friday, August 8, 2008

Hit Men On The High Seas

THE HITMEN ON THE HIGH SEAS Cruise - Valentines 2009
Wednesday, July 30, 2008
Gene Odom will be speaking onboard THE HITMEN ON THE HIGH SEAS cruise sharing his experience about his travels with the original band Lynyrd Skynyrd and the tragic airplane crash on October 20, 1977.
The Hitmen of Music Row are “hitting” the Caribbean for the HITMEN ON THE HIGH SEAS cruise event. The Hitmen of Music Row consists of master songwriters Bob DiPiero (George Strait’s “Blue Clear Sky,” Brooks & Dunn’s “Can’t Take the Honky Tonk Out Of the Girl”), Craig Wiseman (Kenny Chesney’s “The Good Stuff” and “Summertime,” Tim McGraw’s “Live Like You Were Dying”), Jeffrey Steele (Rascal Flatts’ “What Hurts The Most” and “My Wish”), and Tony Mullins (Kenny Chesney’s “How Forever Feels” and Rascal Flatts’ “Me & My Gang”). They have written 39 #1 songs, have over 300 charted singles, have over 800 recorded songs, and have songs on albums with over 150,000,000 combined sales. This cruise is departing from Miami, FL Sat 2/14/09 with stops at Grand Cayman, Cayman Islands and Ocho Rios, Jamaica, returning back to Miami, FL Thu 2/19/09. The Hitmen of Music Row will be filming onboard the ship for segments to use on their reality show which airs on GAC.

Every passenger will be able to enjoy Carnival Cruise Lines exceptional stateroom accommodations, dining options, a variety of facilities and activities, entertainment, fitness center, Camp Carnival children’s program, special shipboard events and fabulous destinations. Those passengers sailing with the HITMEN ON THE HIGH SEAS will be given a special access pass upon boarding which will enable them access to special concerts performed by The Hitmen of Music Row, songwriting workshop, autograph sessions, and a Q & A session.
The only way to book this cruise is by visiting http://lynyrdskynyrddixie.com/category/blog/fan-pages/ or by calling the reservation hotline at 352-422-2620.

Wednesday, August 6, 2008

JAWS!!!

I was flipping the channels last night and ran across the movie "Jaws". It reminded me of a good story. It was the same creek me and Ronnie fed the wasp larvae to the bream. You had to be careful because this creek had alligators that lived in it. They never bothered anything, but they sure would scare the hell out of you. There was a particular alligator that lived to the left of Ronnie's house. This alligator was about thirteen feet long. It was the biggest alligator Ronnie and I had ever seen, so he named him Jaws. Ronnie's brother-in-law, David Seymour, used to be a guide in the Okefenokee Swamp for eight years and had seen a lot of alligators, but he said that this alligator was the biggest one he had ever seen. Ronnie wouldn't get in the water if Jaws was around. Well, one day, Ronnie, David, and I were building a boat house. Ronnie and David were in the water holding up a twenty foot pole so I could jet it into the ground with a pump. I had started up the pump and suddenly got a wild idea to scare the hell out of Ronnie. I hollered, "There's Jaws." Ronnie screamed and splashed up the ladder. I laughed so hard, I think I wet my pants. Man, was he mad. He said, "Son, your time is coming." The next day, bright and early when we started to work, sure enough, there was Jaws, lying in his same old spot. We didn't go in the water until after Jaws had left and had been gone for about an hour. We just worked on top of the dock. We decided it was safe to go in the water and I said, "Okay, I'll start the pump." Ronnie, David, and Judy were all standing on the dock watching. I had to start the pump with a pull rope, so I wrapped the rope around the crank and gave it a good pull, but the rope broke. I was splashing around trying to figure out what had happened when Ronnie yelled, "Look out, there's Jaws." It scared me so bad that I ran into the dock, bumped my head, and got all scratched up. By the time I got up on the bank I realized what he had done because they were all laughing their guts out. After that, we finished the boat house with no more Jaws jokes.

Thanks,
Gene Odom

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Blow Out

http://lynyrdskynyrddixie.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=1450

In 1968 and 1969, Ronnie and I worked for his brother-in-law, who owned an auto parts business. Ronnie was the manager and I delivered parts. Ronnie had all the parts numbers memorized and could tell me the number of a part without even looking in the parts book. He had a mind like a computer. He could tell you all there was to know about a baseball player, a football player, or any game. We worked there until I was drafted into the Army in 1969. The delivery truck I used for delivering the parts was supposed to have bucket seats, but the right seat had been taken out so it would hold more parts. I used to drive the truck home at night and I would pick Ronnie up in the morning. One particular morning after I had picked Ronnie up for work, the left rear tire blew out. We were on the expressway and almost to our exit. Ronnie was asleep as usual. He used to practice all night and would get some sleep whenever he could. Well, anyway, the tire blew out and the truck went over on two wheels. Ronnie woke up in shock. I ran onto the median and the truck was spinning around and knocking over reflector poles. We came down on all four wheels and then slid down the side of the expressway. We pulled into a gas station and Ronnie was still in shock. I was laughing at the time because I was too scared to say anything and I was shaking all over from fright. Finally, Ronnie said, "That's the best driving I've ever seen. Leroy Yarborough couldn't have done any better."

Gene Odom

Sunday, July 20, 2008

Remembering The Free Birds Of Southern Rock- Lynyrd Skynyrd

http://lynyrdskynyrddixie.com/lynyrd-skynyrd-products/ The first complete, unvarnished history of Southern rock?s legendary and most popular band, from its members? hardscrabble boyhoods in Jacksonville, Florida and their rise to worldwide fame to the tragic plane crash that killed the founder and the band?s rise again from the ashes. In the summer of 1964 Jacksonville, Florida teenager Ronnie Van Zant and some of his friends hatched the idea of forming a band to play covers of the Rolling Stones, Beatles, Yardbirds and the country and blues-rock music they had grown to love. Naming their band after Leonard Skinner, the gym teacher at Robert E. Lee Senior High School who constantly badgered the long-haired aspiring musicians to get haircuts, they were soon playing gigs at parties, and bars throughout the South. During the next decade Lynyrd Skynyrd grew into the most critically acclaimed and commercially successful of the rock bands to emerge from the South since the Allman Brothers. Their hits ?Free Bird? and ?Sweet Home Alabama? became classics. Then, at the height of its popularlity in 1977, the band was struck with tragedy --a plane crash that killed Ronnie Van Zant and two other band members. Lynyrd Skynyrd: Remembering the Free Birds of Southern Rock is an intimate chronicle of the band from its earliest days through the plane crash and its aftermath, to its rebirth and current status as an enduring cult favorite. From his behind-the-scenes perspective as Ronnie Van Zant?s lifelong friend and frequent member of the band?s entourage who was also aboard the plane on that fateful flight, Gene Odom reveals the unique synthesis of blues/country rock and songwriting talent, relentless drive, rebellious Southern swagger and down-to-earth sensibility that brought the band together and made it a defining and hugely popular Southern rock band -- as well as the destructive forces that tore it apart. Illustrated throughout with rare photos, Odom traces the band?s rise to fame and shares personal stories that bring to life the band?s journey. For the fans who have purchased a cumulative 35 million copies of Lynyrd Skynyrd?s albums and continue to pack concerts today, Lynyrd Skynyrd is a celebration of an immortal American band. From the Hardcover edition. Excerpt Chapter 1 Redneck Early in the fall of 1976, the world's top rock and roll artists gathered in Hollywood to celebrate their success. The occasion was Don Kirschner's Annual Rock Awards, a nationally televised show to honor the best of the artists who had appeared on Kirschner's weekly television show, Rock Concert. Practically everyone who was anyone in the rock music business had come to the grand old, flamingo pink Beverly Hills Hotel that evening, along with a smattering of TV and movie stars whose presence seemed almost obligatory in a town that once had been ruled by film. Among the musical set were Rod Stewart, flanked by a feedback of beautiful women, Peter Frampton, whose Frampton Comes Alive album would sell eight million copies that year, and the rising songstress Patti LaBelle. Few and barely distinguishable by comparison, the stars of film and television included twelve-year-old Tatum O'Neal, an Oscar winner for her role in the movie Paper Moon; and sixteen-year-old Mackenzie Phillips, who had appeared in American Graffiti. In the 1970s, the billboards that towered above Sunset Boulevard promoted record albums, not movies, and the biggest cinema star in the building that day wasn't even there for the show; she was having dinner. Hoping to see the luminaries of rock step from their limos and stroll through the entrance of the world-famous hotel, a large group of spectators was surprised to see her emerge from the lobby. Walking slowly but proudly on the arm of a younger man, this living fossil from Hollywood's golden age was the once glamorous Mae West, whose eighty-four zestful years had so distorted her face that no one would have recognized her if hotel staff hadn't announced her name. Minutes later, in the starkest of contrasts came the arrival of one of the greatest divas of the day, the dazzling, ever-radiant Diana Ross, who held the crowd's gaze as if she were actual royalty. Aglow in the warmth from a score of popping flashbulbs, she responded through bright, beaming eyes and her famous, self-conscious smile, seemingly confident that everyone had come just to see her. Inside the hotel auditorium, where admission was by invitation only, hundreds of formally attired guests settled into their seats to hear some of the year's top performing acts. The emcee was Alice Cooper, who started things off with a well-rehearsed temper tantrum that segued into a strange, wonderfully choreographed number in which dancers dressed as spiders moved across the stage while Cooper's band played. It was big-time show business at its creative best. The aristocracy of the recording industry were being entertained, having come to honor the year's top performers, the creme de la creme, the ones who had sold the most records. Only in Technicolor dreams could you conceive of a Cinderella setting more unlikely than was set that night for a good ol' boy from Jacksonville, Florida. Wearing a smile as wide as a Southern drawl as he walked toward center stage, Leon Wilkeson, bass guitar player for the Lynyrd Skynyrd band, accepted the Golden Achievement award for what truly was a remarkable level of accomplishment for a bunch of musical misfits. It was a moment filled with irony. Leon always enjoyed wearing odd hats, but for this gala affair he'd chosen an entire ensemble, and I'm sure that Hollywood's smart set wondered how he'd managed to get past the hotel doorman in the godawful get-up he wore. It was a tuxedo, but it wasn't the traditional James Bond look. The pants and jacket were the customary flat black, but cut with a western flair. The shot was appropriately white but ruffled from neck to navel. And if that weren't enough of a fashion faux pas in this discerning crowd of sophisticates, all dressed to the nines, Leon added his own fanciful touch, a white cowboy hat and boots, and a wide leather belt with a pair of pearl-handled pistols in cream-colored holsters. These were unexpected accessories for a musician from a band that didn't perform Western tunes, especially when one of their top hits, "Saturday Night Special," is still the most strongly worded anti-handgun pop song ever written. But regardless of how anyone may have felt about Leon's attire that evening, it was decidedly more fitting than his usual garb; besides, show business people can wear whatever they want, and he was just having fun. In fact, after the show he danced with Mae West. Leon's outfit simply affirmed the Southern maxim: you can take the boy out of the country, but you can't take the country out of the boy. That's a nice way to say what is often expressed in a single word, a word someone uttered quietly in the back of the auditorium when Leon rose to claim the award. "Redneck." For anyone who doesn't understand what a redneck is, I should explain. The term originated before the turn of the last century, when most Americans worked on farms and got sunburned necks from being outdoors all day. City dwellers tended to look down on uncultured country folks, and the label was custom-made. If you call a man a redneck today, you're also calling him ignorant, but that "ain't no big thing" if you're a redneck, too. In that case, you're both just good ol' boys wherever you live in this country, although a Southern drawl will usually leave no doubt. Jacksonville, Florida, was where the original Lynyrd Skynyrd band members grew up, and most of its residents' forebears had moved there from the rural areas of Northeast Florida and Southeast Georgia. And for Jacksonville, you didn't get any more country than the Westside. Despite the magic of the moment when he stood on that stage in Hollywood, Leon was still just a redneck from the Westside of Jacksonville, Florida, and he never pretended to be otherwise. I'm the same way, and so was my best friend, Ronnie Van Zant, the founding father, chief songwriter and singer, and undisputed leader of Lynyrd Skynyrd. Ronnie had asked Leon to accept the award that night at the Beverly Hills Hotel because Ronnie avoided the limelight when he wasn't on stage, and besides, getting dressed up wasn't his style, not even for a prestigious award. For Ronnie, it was jeans and a T-shot and maybe a hat, unless it was cold, and that's all it would ever be. To understand Lynyrd Skynyrd, you have to understand Ronnie Van Zant, who, at the peak of his success, was still the same person he was when he started out. Except for his extraordinary talent and the musical skills of the boys in the band, all of us and the people we grew up with were average rednecks. Like the rest of the folks who lived in our part of town, it was manual labor that put bread on the table, just as it had for every other generation before us. Ronnie's father, Lacy Van Zant, made his living hauling goods up and down the East Coast in a big rig truck, and his mother, Marion Virginia "Sister" Hicks Van Zant, worked nights in a donut shop. Her grandfather had called her "Sister" as a child, and the nickname stuck. Lacy and Sister met near the end of the Second World War when he was home on leave from the U.S. Navy and she was just fifteen. They started dating when he left the service two years later, and one of their favorite outings was sitting in a car listening to the radio and singing along with the music. After a year-long courtship, Lacy and Marion began a marriage that would last fifty-three years, and together they would raise six children: the oldest was Jo Anne, Lacy's daughter from a previous marriage, followed by Ronnie, Donnie, Marlene, Darlene, and Johnny. Lacy was always a good provider, but Sister was the glue that held the family together, especially with Lacy out on the road so much as a truck driver. Sister was a friendly person, generous with everyone she met, but she had a firm side, too, and she was never shy about standing up for what she felt was right, especially if it involved her family. Their house was always open to everybody in the neighborhood, and anyone who ever visited the Van Zants never failed to notice the genuine respect the children had for their parents, and the politeness their kids always showed for each other and for other people. Lacy and Sister made their home a happy place for their children to grow up in. It was a close, loving family in which the kids were encouraged to enjoy life, to be happy about themselves as individuals, to be proud of who they were in spite of their humble station in life, and to live the American dream without being afraid to fail. It was in this nurturing environment that Ronnie developed his one great dream and all of the confidence he would ever need. The boy loved both of his parents, and as the oldest son of a man who let him be himself, he revered his father. Lacy stressed the value of education, and Ronnie tried hard to be a good student, serving on the school safety patrol in the sixth grade, and sometimes making the honor roll in his upper grades. But just a few credits shot of finishing, he withdrew from school toward the end of his senior year. Leaving high school was a decision Ronnie always regretted, and later in life he confessed that, despite his success, he felt he had failed to live up to his father's expectations. This wasn't true, of course, because Lacy's love for his son was boundless, and yet this feeling followed Ronnie for the rest of his life. It drove him to succeed, and even after he'd done that, it drove him to excel. Many years later, Ronnie told a reporter, "All I can preach is school. That's where power lies, . . . If I can come out of [Shantytown], you can do it. I made a bad mistake. You gotta have education." He'd put platinum record albums on his father's wall, "but never a diploma," he said. Ronald Wayne Van Zant was born January 15, 1948, in Jacksonville, Florida, and he lived near the outskirts of town on the city's Westside. The Van Zants' home was at the corner of Mull Street and Woodcrest Road. I lived on Mull Street just a few houses away, in a rough, blue-collar area that Ronnie called "Shantytown." He'd heard it called that by the mother of one of his friends, Jim Daniel, who lived in a different neighborhood. Ronnie found it amusing at the time, but the truth was clear to see. The houses were simple structures built mostly of concrete block or wood. Some had missing windows and doors, and some had no electricity. Most streets were paved, but there were dirt roads, too, and one of them distinguished our neighborhood in a way that only a redneck could appreciate. Not really a road, it was a racetrack; and if there is one sport that rednecks enjoy more than all the rest it's stock car racing. Every Saturday night and on many a Sunday afternoon this oval-shaped circle of sand became redneck heaven, and in our neighborhood, if you weren't at the races you felt them anyway, their thunderous roar so loud it rattled windows and smothered conversation in every house. Just three blocks from where Ronnie and I lived, at the corner of Ellis Road and Plymouth Street, Jacksonville's Speedway Park was a metaphor for where our lives would lead: most of us would ride in a circle going nowhere while one of us rode to glory. For the biggest races at Speedway Park, more than six thousand people would pack the place to capacity, filling the wooden grandstands, the pits, and the infield. Everyone who sat in the bleachers knew they'd be showered with dirt when the cars went past, even in the top rows. But the dirt hardly ever reached Ronnie, our friends, and me, because whatever the admission price was, we couldn't afford it. We watched the races from just outside the fence, perched in the tops of the trees that circled the track. Some races we didn't watch, but we often went there anyway, hoping for a chance to make a little money. Every once in a while a tire would come flying over the fence, and whoever grabbed it first would try to hide it, scheming to sell it later to one of the race car owners, but not to the one who'd lost it. Few people know it, but Ronnie wasn't the first major recording artist from Jacksonville to watch the races from outside the fence at Speedway Park. Charles Eugene "Pat" Boone, whose parents had hoped to name their first child "Patricia," was born in Jacksonville in 1934 and went on to sell more records during the 1960s than everyone but Elvis Presley. A descendant of Daniel Boone, he appeared in a number of hit movies, including State Fair and Journey to the Center of the Earth; he had fifteen hits in the Top 10, including "April Love" and "Love Letters in the Sand," which stayed on the charts for thirty-four weeks; and he still holds Billboard magazine's all-time record of two hundred consecutive weeks on the charts with more than one song. Pat Boone was two years old when his family moved from his mother's hometown to Nashville, Tennessee, but on numerous occasions over a period of many years, while visiting relatives in Florida the Boones enjoyed going to Speedway Park. Although they could have purchased tickets (Boone's father was an architect/builder; his mother was a registered nurse), like so many others they preferred viewing the action close-up where they could feel the ground shake as the cars roared past, so they sat in custom-made "bleachers" set up in the beds of pickup trucks at the start of the back straightaway. Speedway Park was the fastest half-mile dirt track in the nation because it was a "big half-mile." Measured on the inside, it was five-eighths of a mile around, which meant that drivers could reach higher speeds than they could manage on a standard half-mile course. Drawing thousands of fans from all over northeast Florida and southeast Georgia, Speedway Park was part of the National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing's (NASCAR) Grand National circuit, which later became the Winston Cup series. All of the famous drivers raced there. Richard Petty, Tiny Lund, Junior Johnson, Fireball Roberts, Bobby and Donnie Allison, David Ezell, Cale Yarborough, Lee Roy Yarbrough, and Wendell Scott. One of the nation's top drivers, Lee Roy Yarbrough had his best year in 1969 by winning the Daytona 500 and two other major events. Yarbrough lived in our neighborhood, one block from the track, and starting in the early '60s Ronnie and I used to hang around while he worked on his car in the yard beside his house. We were probably ten years younger than Lee Roy, but he seemed to enjoy our company. Lee Roy was a real-life local sports hero for us, and as Ronnie got older and he began to think about his future, he used to say that he was going to be the most famous person to come out of Jacksonville since Lee Roy Yarbrough. http://dixietuneup.com/racing-photos.php

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Hunting with Ronnie Van Zant, Allen Collins, and Gary Rossington

http://lynyrdskynyrddixie.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=1434

Hollyjx4 was asking if Allen ever went fishing. Here is a hunting story. On one of our hunting trips, Gary and Allen went with us to a place out in Middleburg. We were hunting for squirrels and weren't having much luck so we all got back in the car to rest and get something to eat. We went back into the woods a couple of hours later. Ronnie, Gary, and Allen stayed together; I went another way. I was about fifty feet away from them when Ronnie fired a shot over my head into the trees and scared me to death. I said, "I'll get you for that." After about an hour or so I heard them hollering through the woods saying, "Let's go home Gene. We're ready to go. We'll be at the car." They didn't know I wasn't far away. I gave them about five minutes and then I started out. I saw them walking down the road side by side, so I crept up to them like an indian. When I got within about fifty feet of them, I hid in the bushes so they couldn't see me. They were laughing, having a good time, and not expecting anything. I had twelve bullets in my automatic rifle and I started shooting the bushes and trees all around them. Ronnie and Gary hit the ground and Allen started running. It didn't take long before my gun was empty and I came out laughing my guts out because they were screaming and hollering, "Hey, there's people out here, stop shooting." I said, "Get up from there and let's go home. Ya'lI just made my day." Allen was still running and Ronnie and Gary were so mad I thought they were going to shot me. They were scared and shaking like limbs in a hurricane. Every time I think about that I can't help laughing. Those kind of days will be with me until Iam dead and gone. Remembering days like that makes my life more livable today.

Thanks, Gene
http://lynyrdskynyrddixie.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=1434

Wednesday, July 9, 2008

LYNYRD SKYNYRD ( A little history )

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rOnoQoTYjwA

Susan Hughey interviewing Coach Leonard Skinner & Gene Odom for Red Sun Music & Television. Hear about Lynyrd Skynyrd when they started in high school from their original namesake. Gene Odom gives a few details of October 20, 1977 plane crash.Gene was Ronnie Van Zant's lifelong friend and bodyguard and security for Lynyrd Skynyrd. He was on the plane that fateful day Ocotber 20, 1977. Hear some of the details he shares about that experience.

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Lynyrd Skynyrd Remembering The Free Birds Of Southern Rock

http://lynyrdskynyrddixie.com/lynyrd-skynyrd-products/ Book Description The first complete, unvarnished history of Southern rock?s legendary and most popular band, from its members? hardscrabble boyhoods in Jacksonville, Florida and their rise to worldwide fame to the tragic plane crash that killed the founder and the band?s rise again from the ashes. In the summer of 1964 Jacksonville, Florida teenager Ronnie Van Zant and some of his friends hatched the idea of forming a band to play covers of the Rolling Stones, Beatles, Yardbirds and the country and blues-rock music they had grown to love. Naming their band after Leonard Skinner, the gym teacher at Robert E. Lee Senior High School who constantly badgered the long-haired aspiring musicians to get haircuts, they were soon playing gigs at parties, and bars throughout the South. During the next decade Lynyrd Skynyrd grew into the most critically acclaimed and commercially successful of the rock bands to emerge from the South since the Allman Brothers. Their hits ?Free Bird? and ?Sweet Home Alabama? became classics. Then, at the height of its popularlity in 1977, the band was struck with tragedy --a plane crash that killed Ronnie Van Zant and two other band members. Lynyrd Skynyrd: Remembering the Free Birds of Southern Rock is an intimate chronicle of the band from its earliest days through the plane crash and its aftermath, to its rebirth and current status as an enduring cult favorite. From his behind-the-scenes perspective as Ronnie Van Zant?s lifelong friend and frequent member of the band?s entourage who was also aboard the plane on that fateful flight, Gene Odom reveals the unique synthesis of blues/country rock and songwriting talent, relentless drive, rebellious Southern swagger and down-to-earth sensibility that brought the band together and made it a defining and hugely popular Southern rock band -- as well as the destructive forces that tore it apart. Illustrated throughout with rare photos, Odom traces the band?s rise to fame and shares personal stories that bring to life the band?s journey. For the fans who have purchased a cumulative 35 million copies of Lynyrd Skynyrd?s albums and continue to pack concerts today, Lynyrd Skynyrd is a celebration of an immortal American band. Inside Flap Copy The first complete, unvarnished history of Southern rock?s legendary and most popular band, from its members? hardscrabble boyhoods in Jacksonville, Florida and their rise to worldwide fame to the tragic plane crash that killed the founder and the band?s rise again from the ashes. In the summer of 1964 Jacksonville, Florida teenager Ronnie Van Zant and some of his friends hatched the idea of forming a band to play covers of the Rolling Stones, Beatles, Yardbirds and the country and blues-rock music they had grown to love. Naming their band after Leonard Skinner, the gym teacher at Robert E. Lee Senior High School who constantly badgered the long-haired aspiring musicians to get haircuts, they were soon playing gigs at parties, and bars throughout the South. During the next decade Lynyrd Skynyrd grew into the most critically acclaimed and commercially successful of the rock bands to emerge from the South since the Allman Brothers. Their hits ?Free Bird? and ?Sweet Home Alabama? became classics. Then, at the height of its popularlity in 1977, the band was struck with tragedy --a plane crash that killed Ronnie Van Zant and two other band members. Lynyrd Skynyrd: Remembering the Free Birds of Southern Rock is an intimate chronicle of the band from its earliest days through the plane crash and its aftermath, to its rebirth and current status as an enduring cult favorite. From his behind-the-scenes perspective as Ronnie Van Zant?s lifelong friend and frequent member of the band?s entourage who was also aboard the plane on that fateful flight, Gene Odom reveals the unique synthesis of blues/country rock and songwriting talent, relentless drive, rebellious Southern swagger and down-to-earth sensibility that brought the band together and made it a defining and hugely popular Southern rock band -- as well as the destructive forces that tore it apart. Illustrated throughout with rare photos, Odom traces the band?s rise to fame and shares personal stories that bring to life the band?s journey. For the fans who have purchased a cumulative 35 million copies of Lynyrd Skynyrd?s albums and continue to pack concerts today, Lynyrd Skynyrd is a celebration of an immortal American band. From the Back Cover ?This book [is] a guilty pleasure . . . If you ever wore your hair long and marveled at Steve Gaines?s lightnin? guitar fingers on tunes such as ?I Know a Little,? you?ll need to read this one. Just don?t let your mother see it.??The Kansas City Star "Van Zant dominates the book, and the authors effectively show both his hard-drinking, brawling side, and his softer touches."?Publishers Weekly "An admiring biography . . . disturbing and electrifying."?Kirkus Reviews --This text refers to the Paperback edition. About the Author Gene Odom grew up with the original members of the Lynyrd Skynyrd band, later serving as their security manager. He now lives in Inverness, Florida. Gene continues to make personal appearances. When possible he travels with "Coach" Leonard Skinner. They have become close friends over the years. Gene is active in maintaining his popular website http://www.lynyrdskynyrddixie.com/ Journalist Frank Dorman lives in Richmond, Virginia. Excerpt. ? Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter 1 Redneck Early in the fall of 1976, the world's top rock and roll artists gathered in Hollywood to celebrate their success. The occasion was Don Kirschner's Annual Rock Awards, a nationally televised show to honor the best of the artists who had appeared on Kirschner's weekly television show, Rock Concert. Practically everyone who was anyone in the rock music business had come to the grand old, flamingo pink Beverly Hills Hotel that evening, along with a smattering of TV and movie stars whose presence seemed almost obligatory in a town that once had been ruled by film. Among the musical set were Rod Stewart, flanked by a feedback of beautiful women, Peter Frampton, whose Frampton Comes Alive album would sell eight million copies that year, and the rising songstress Patti LaBelle. Few and barely distinguishable by comparison, the stars of film and television included twelve-year-old Tatum O'Neal, an Oscar winner for her role in the movie Paper Moon; and sixteen-year-old Mackenzie Phillips, who had appeared in American Graffiti. In the 1970s, the billboards that towered above Sunset Boulevard promoted record albums, not movies, and the biggest cinema star in the building that day wasn't even there for the show; she was having dinner. Hoping to see the luminaries of rock step from their limos and stroll through the entrance of the world-famous hotel, a large group of spectators was surprised to see her emerge from the lobby. Walking slowly but proudly on the arm of a younger man, this living fossil from Hollywood's golden age was the once glamorous Mae West, whose eighty-four zestful years had so distorted her face that no one would have recognized her if hotel staff hadn't announced her name. Minutes later, in the starkest of contrasts came the arrival of one of the greatest divas of the day, the dazzling, ever-radiant Diana Ross, who held the crowd's gaze as if she were actual royalty. Aglow in the warmth from a score of popping flashbulbs, she responded through bright, beaming eyes and her famous, self-conscious smile, seemingly confident that everyone had come just to see her. Inside the hotel auditorium, where admission was by invitation only, hundreds of formally attired guests settled into their seats to hear some of the year's top performing acts. The emcee was Alice Cooper, who started things off with a well-rehearsed temper tantrum that segued into a strange, wonderfully choreographed number in which dancers dressed as spiders moved across the stage while Cooper's band played. It was big-time show business at its creative best. The aristocracy of the recording industry were being entertained, having come to honor the year's top performers, the creme de la creme, the ones who had sold the most records. Only in Technicolor dreams could you conceive of a Cinderella setting more unlikely than was set that night for a good ol' boy from Jacksonville, Florida. Wearing a smile as wide as a Southern drawl as he walked toward center stage, Leon Wilkeson, bass guitar player for the Lynyrd Skynyrd band, accepted the Golden Achievement award for what truly was a remarkable level of accomplishment for a bunch of musical misfits. It was a moment filled with irony. Leon always enjoyed wearing odd hats, but for this gala affair he'd chosen an entire ensemble, and I'm sure that Hollywood's smart set wondered how he'd managed to get past the hotel doorman in the godawful get-up he wore. It was a tuxedo, but it wasn't the traditional James Bond look. The pants and jacket were the customary flat black, but cut with a western flair. The shirt was appropriately white but ruffled from neck to navel. And if that weren't enough of a fashion faux pas in this discerning crowd of sophisticates, all dressed to the nines, Leon added his own fanciful touch, a white cowboy hat and boots, and a wide leather belt with a pair of pearl-handled pistols in cream-colored holsters. These were unexpected accessories for a musician from a band that didn't perform Western tunes, especially when one of their top hits, "Saturday Night Special," is still the most strongly worded anti-handgun pop song ever written. But regardless of how anyone may have felt about Leon's attire that evening, it was decidedly more fitting than his usual garb; besides, show business people can wear whatever they want, and he was just having fun. In fact, after the show he danced with Mae West. Leon's outfit simply affirmed the Southern maxim: you can take the boy out of the country, but you can't take the country out of the boy. That's a nice way to say what is often expressed in a single word, a word someone uttered quietly in the back of the auditorium when Leon rose to claim the award. "Redneck." For anyone who doesn't understand what a redneck is, I should explain. The term originated before the turn of the last century, when most Americans worked on farms and got sunburned necks from being outdoors all day. City dwellers tended to look down on uncultured country folks, and the label was custom-made. If you call a man a redneck today, you're also calling him ignorant, but that "ain't no big thing" if you're a redneck, too. In that case, you're both just good ol' boys wherever you live in this country, although a Southern drawl will usually leave no doubt. Jacksonville, Florida, was where the original Lynyrd Skynyrd band members grew up, and most of its residents' forebears had moved there from the rural areas of Northeast Florida and Southeast Georgia. And for Jacksonville, you didn't get any more country than the Westside. Despite the magic of the moment when he stood on that stage in Hollywood, Leon was still just a redneck from the Westside of Jacksonville, Florida, and he never pretended to be otherwise. I'm the same way, and so was my best friend, Ronnie Van Zant, the founding father, chief songwriter and singer, and undisputed leader of Lynyrd Skynyrd. Ronnie had asked Leon to accept the award that night at the Beverly Hills Hotel because Ronnie avoided the limelight when he wasn't on stage, and besides, getting dressed up wasn't his style, not even for a prestigious award. For Ronnie, it was jeans and a T-shirt and maybe a hat, unless it was cold, and that's all it would ever be. To understand Lynyrd Skynyrd, you have to understand Ronnie Van Zant, who, at the peak of his success, was still the same person he was when he started out. Except for his extraordinary talent and the musical skills of the boys in the band, all of us and the people we grew up with were average rednecks. Like the rest of the folks who lived in our part of town, it was manual labor that put bread on the table, just as it had for every other generation before us. Ronnie's father, Lacy Van Zant, made his living hauling goods up and down the East Coast in a big rig truck, and his mother, Marion Virginia "Sister" Hicks Van Zant, worked nights in a donut shop. Her grandfather had called her "Sister" as a child, and the nickname stuck. Lacy and Sister met near the end of the Second World War when he was home on leave from the U.S. Navy and she was just fifteen. They started dating when he left the service two years later, and one of their favorite outings was sitting in a car listening to the radio and singing along with the music. After a year-long courtship, Lacy and Marion began a marriage that would last fifty-three years, and together they would raise six children: the oldest was Jo Anne, Lacy's daughter from a previous marriage, followed by Ronnie, Donnie, Marlene, Darlene, and Johnny. Lacy was always a good provider, but Sister was the glue that held the family together, especially with Lacy out on the road so much as a truck driver. Sister was a friendly person, generous with everyone she met, but she had a firm side, too, and she was never shy about standing up for what she felt was right, especially if it involved her family. Their house was always open to everybody in the neighborhood, and anyone who ever visited the Van Zants never failed to notice the genuine respect the children had for their parents, and the politeness their kids always showed for each other and for other people. Lacy and Sister made their home a happy place for their children to grow up in. It was a close, loving family in which the kids were encouraged to enjoy life, to be happy about themselves as individuals, to be proud of who they were in spite of their humble station in life, and to live the American dream without being afraid to fail. It was in this nurturing environment that Ronnie developed his one great dream and all of the confidence he would ever need. The boy loved both of his parents, and as the oldest son of a man who let him be himself, he revered his father. Lacy stressed the value of education, and Ronnie tried hard to be a good student, serving on the school safety patrol in the sixth grade, and sometimes making the honor roll in his upper grades. But just a few credits short of finishing, he withdrew from school toward the end of his senior year. Leaving high school was a decision Ronnie always regretted, and later in life he confessed that, despite his success, he felt he had failed to live up to his father's expectations. This wasn't true, of course, because Lacy's love for his son was boundless, and yet this feeling followed Ronnie for the rest of his life. It drove him to succeed, and even after he'd done that, it drove him to excel. Many years later, Ronnie told a reporter, "All I can preach is school. That's where power lies, . . . If I can come out of [Shantytown], you can do it. I made a bad mistake. You gotta have education." He'd put platinum record albums on his father's wall, "but never a diploma," he said. Ronald Wayne Van Zant was born January 15, 1948, in Jacksonville, Florida, and he lived near the outskirts of town on the city's Westside. The Van Zants' home was at the corner of Mull Street and Woodcrest Road. I lived on Mull Street just a few houses away, in a rough, blue-collar area that Ronnie called "Shantytown." http://lynyrdskynyrddixie.com/lynyrd-skynyrd-products/

Lynyrd Skynyrd Bus Tours 2008

LYNYRD SKYNYRD BUS TOURS OCTOBER 17,18, & 19 2008
I would again like to thank each and everyone who attended last year’s Lynyrd Skynyrd Bus Tour. Due to the amazing response I am going to add something extra special this year. We will be at “The Jug” on Friday October 17 for some good entertainment I will share some behind the scenes history of the real Lynyrd Skynyrd band never before told!
On Saturday October 18, 2008 we will be touring all of the places made famous by Ronnie Van Zant and company. We will visit (more)

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SOUTHERN ROCK'S FINEST

SOUTHERN ROCK’S FINEST With Special Guests The Ghost Riders A Night of Sizzlin’ Southern Rock July 26, 2008 7pm SOUTHERN ROCK’S FINEST returns to the MUSIC RANCH. They really rocked the house at their last show and fans demanded their return. The group features former contributing members of the greatest Southern Rock bands including: DAN TOLER of the Allman Brothers, and Dickey Betts STEVE GRISHAM of The Outlaws, Ghost Riders Plus members of Molly Hatchet, Pure Prairie League and Marshall Tucker. Special Guest is the Music Ranch favorite GHOST RIDERS. Plus meet the original LYNYRD SKYNYRD crew member Gene Odom. Be there early for a night of Sizzlin’ Southern Rock. The show starts at 7pm with the RENEGADE band. Admission is $20 at the gate The Music Ranch is located at 1920 Banana Rd., Lakeland, Florida, just off North US 98. Go 1 mile down Banana Road and look for the sign on the left. For more information, call Phil Stevens at 863-815-2293

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