ZZ Top & Lynyrd Skynyrd

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ZZ Top & Lynyrd Skynyrd
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ZZ TOP & LYNYRD SKYNYRD
SAT, 28 SEP 2024 at 06:30PM MDT
Ages: All Ages
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Legendary rock band Lynyrd Skynyrd returns with a fiery slice of Southern style guitar rock heaven in Last of a Dyin’ Breed, their newest release on Roadrunner/Loud & Proud Records due August 21, 2012.This is the kind of record guaranteed to feed the needs of the multi-generational Skynyrd Nation, and continue the renewed vigor the band exhibited with their last album, 2009’sGod & Guns. For the passionate, longtime fans of the band, this is Skynyrd at the top of their game, complete with instantly memorable songs, more hooks than a tackle box, and a blistering three-guitar attack at full power. From the raging guitars of the title track and the pounding, funky homage to local talent in “Home Grown” to the mind-blowing “Honey Hole,” Lynyrd Skynyrd sound like young bucks having one hell of a good time, which, regarding the latter, founding member Gary Rossington says is very much the case. “For me this is one of the happiest and most fun albums I’ve ever done,” says Rossington. “We didn’t have a lot of problems goin’ on;it was just fun goin’ to work every day.”Having survived enough tragedy and just plain hard miles for 10 bands, Skynyrd is, remarkably at this stage of their career, on a roll. God & Guns debuted at #18 on the Billboard Top 200, giving the band their highest debut since 1977.Last Of A Dyin’ Breedre-ignites the in-studio alchemy the band found with Gunsproducer Bob Marlette, and the sound is traditional Skynyrd blended to perfection with the edge of immediacy. In short, it’s rock ‘n roll for the times.Led by core members Gary Rossington(guitar), Johnny Van Zant(vocals) and Rickey Medlock(guitar), Skynyrd has recorded an album that continues to build on the legacy that began over 35 years ago in Jacksonville, Florida. Joining them in the studio and on the road are new bassist Johnny Colt(Black Crowes, Train) guitarist Mark “Sparky” Matejka(a “Nashville cat, just a pickin’ fool,” according to Rossington), and keyboardist Peter Keys, who replaced Powell on the God & Guns tour. In a tragic tale oft-told, the Skynyrd story could have ended in a Mississippi swamp with the 1977 plane crash that killed three band members, including Ronnie Van Zant and Steve Gaines. Since then, the band has lost vital players in Billy Powell, Ean Evans, AllenCollins, Leon Wilkeson and HughieThomasson, yet here they are again with a hard-rocking, stirring album that can sit proudly alongside any recording that bears the Skynyrd name. The breedmay be nearing extinction but Skynyrd is very much aliveand ready to throw down. Van Zant, now in his 25thyear standing where his brother once stoodagrees with Rossington about the making of Breed. “Weworked with Bob Marlette againwho’s a great guy we just love as a producer,” he says. “During the recording of the last album we were going through Billy and Ean passing away, and with this album we were able to laugh and joke a lot.”Medlocksays that after the hard touring behind God & Gunshe and the other primary writers Van Zant and Rossington took their time writing the songs. But the actual recording came together quickly, aided by
the band’s in-studio chemistry. “This time what we wanted to do was go back to doin’ stuff old school,” he says. “A lot of the album was done with all of us in the recording studio, playing all at one time, the way we used to do it when we’d go into the studio to make records.”With a catalog of over 60 albums, sales beyond 30 million worldwide and their beloved classic American rock anthem “Sweet Home Alabama” having sold over two million ringtones, Rock & Roll Hall of Famers Lynyrd Skynyrd remains a cultural icon that appeals to multiple generations. But far from resting on their laurels, any illusions that this may be a band at anything less than the height of its powers are quickly lost with the distorted fury of the fiery guitar licks that open the album’s title trackand further put to rest with the gritty triumphs that follow.They could easily continue cranking out old songs to rapturous audiences around the world but the fact isthey’ve got plenty left to saymusically, personally and as social commentary. “Every once in a while the record label will ask us if we want to put a new album out and we always say yes, because, althoughwe love playing all the classic stuff, it’s fun to do new stuff too,” says Rossington, “for our own heads, our own peace of mind.”Lynyrd Skynyrd is a band of today, carrying a steely mantle forged in the sweaty confines of the Hell House in Jacksonvilledecades earlier. And this is a bandalbum, to be even more specific, a guitar drivenband album. The triple guitar assault has never sounded more on point, with passionate musicality, expert harmonics andof course, plenty of attitude to burn. There’s a reason this is one of the most beloved bands of all time.“We tried to go back to the old sound, doin’ it as a band, goin’ in all together and layin’ it down,” says Rossington. “On the last album, we leaned a little more country, back to our roots, but this time we just tried to be our old selves and write some Southern rock. Just good ol’ songs, get in and get out, say what they say, do a little bit of pickin’ and tap your feet.”Those searching for traditional Skynyrd solos and fierce instrumental breakswill have plenty to love on Breed, with every song featuring ample fretwork from one, two or even all three guitarists. “We love to do the harmonies and stuff with lead guitars,” says Medlock. “That’s a Skynyrd staple, and we embellished on it quite a bitthis time around. We wanted to make a guitar driven record and have the vocals sit really good in the saddle there with all the guitars, just have it more rockin’ and a lot more powerful.”Mission accomplished, with plenty of fireworks and rock-solid rhythms from all players. “Sparky has just fit in great with Rickey and Gary, everybody knows their place now,” says Van Zant. “Sparky’s a strat guy, Gary’s a slide guy with the Les Paul sound and all those great fills, and Rickey’s the ‘all-around’ guy that does a little bit of everything.”But the guitars and other instruments—Keys’ organ, for example, playa vital role in the soundscape. Van Zant’s vocal chops and way with a lyric have never been in finer form, breathing life into these songs and taking onsome serious vocal challenges. “I quit smokin’ a year and a half ago, so that helped out quite a bit,” he says with a characteristic laugh. “Workin’ with Bob is greattoo. We cut the vocals right in the control room itself, which is real cool to me, because me and Bob go back and forth right there, so you’re not waiting for a button to be pushed. It’s just a real cool vibe. We’ve got a good thing goin’ here.”They’ve got a good thing going in terms of material, too. The primary Skynyrd writing team of Rossington, Medlockand Van Zant worked with some of their favorite songwriters to pen the songs that populate Breed, including Tom Hambridge, Blair Daly, John 5, Donnie Van Zant, and Marlette, along with contributions from the bands Matejka, as well as Marlon Young, Audley Freed, Shaun Morgan from Seether, Cadillac Black’s Jaren Johnston, and label matesBlack Stone Cherry’s Chris Robertson and Jon Lawhon. The blend of writers from within and outside the band concocts a hard-hitting cadre of songs that fitperfectly into the Skynyrd canon. These songs are of the 100-proof variety. “We like bringing in outside influences and I love feeding off other people,” says Van Zant. “I’ve had people ask me, ‘how could Gary
create another ‘Free Bird?’ We don’t even trythat. Those are legendary songs. We just write what we write. It’s more about us just hangin’ out and being together and enjoying life and writin’ songs. My theory is like Ricky Nelson’s, ‘you can’t please everyone, so you’ve got to please yourself.’ If you’re happy with it at the end of the day, so be it.”Not as overtly political as its predecessor God & Guns, Breedfocuses more on the struggles of the working class, though the band make their thoughts on the direction of this country crystal clear on songs like the reverb-drenched “Poor Man’s Dream” and the blue-collar powerhouse “One Day at a Time.” “When we go in to record, we don’t go in with one certain mindset,” says Medlock. “We just go in and write about stuff we believe in, our experiences.”The band is tuned in to the tough times many Americans are going through, and they sing songs that might well help on that journey, or at least help let off some steam. “Skynyrd really thinks about how people are struggling and what’s goin’ on out here,” says Medlock. “We see it a lot, because we’re a working man and working woman’s band. We’ve got three generations under our belts, we know people have a tough time out there, and we share in that.”Gary Rossington won’t typically volunteer for political talk but he is an astute observer, and what he sees sticks in his craw. “I don’t like to talk politics,” he admits “I just don’t trust a lot of politicians. I think the country’s way off track, but we’ll get it back on, it’s too good of a thing to lose. We travel all around the country, there’s too many good people and good Americans who all want the same thing, just to get back on track the way we used to be.”Like it or not, with a title like God & Guns, the previous album was bound to be a lightning rod out of the box. “I couldn’t believe how well God & Gunswas accepted when it came out, in Europe, Australia, South America, here in the States; everybody we talked to, 99% of it was positive feedback,” says Medlock. “My whole thing was, we’ve got to go in the studio this time and step up, we’ve got to do at least what God & Gunsdid, or one better. And, in my opinion, I think we accomplished that. I’m looking forward to going out and playing some of this record live, along with our classic material, and taking it to the people and letting the people make their decision.”Odds are, the “people,” specifically, the aforementioned Skynyrd Nation, will loveLast of a Dyin’ Breed, and anyone who hasn’t checked into what this band has been up to for a while will likely be blown away. As for their part, Skynyrd will, per usual, indeed be taking their music to the people, as fans in Europe and North America will have a chance to catch the band on tour through the end of 2012 and beyond.

Lynyrd Skynyrd is:Gary Rossington-GuitarJohnny Van Zant-VocalsRickey Medlock-GuitarMark "Sparky" Matejka-GuitarMichael Cartellone-DrumsJohnny Colt -BassPeter Keys -KeyboardsDale Krantz Rossington-Honkettes Backing VocalsCarol Chase-Honkettes Backing Vocals

Legendary rock band Lynyrd Skynyrd returns with a fiery slice of Southern style guitar rock heaven in
Last of a Dyin’ Breed
, their newest release on Roadrunner/Loud & Proud Records due
August 21, 2012.
This is the k
ind of record guaranteed to feed the needs of the multi
-
generational Skynyrd Nation, and
continue the renewed vigor the band exhibited with their last album, 2009’s
God & Guns
.
For the passionate, longtime fans of the band, this is Skynyrd at the top of
their game, complete with
instantly memorable songs, more hooks than a tackle box, and a blistering three
-
guitar attack at full
power. From the raging guitars of the title track and the pounding, funky homage to local talent in “Home
Grown” to the mind
-
blo
wing “Honey Hole,” Lynyrd Skynyrd sound like young bucks having one hell of a
good time, which, regarding the latter, founding member Gary Rossington says is very much the case.
“For me this is one of the happiest and most fun albums I’ve ever done,” say
s Rossington. “We didn’t
have a lot of problems goin’
on;
it was just fun goin’ to work every day.”
Having survived enough tragedy and just plain hard miles for 10 bands, Skynyrd is, remarkably at this
stage of their career, on a roll.
God & Guns
debuted
at #18 on the
Billboard
Top 200, giving the band their
highest debut since 1977.
Last Of A Dyin’ Breed
re
-
ignites the in
-
studio alchemy the band found with
Guns
producer Bob Marlette, and the sound is traditional Skynyrd blended to perfection with the ed
ge of
immediacy. In short, it’s rock ‘n roll for the times.
Led by core members
Gary Rossington
(guitar),
Johnny Van Zant
(vocals) and
Rickey Medlock
(guitar), Skynyrd has recorded an album that continues to build on the legacy that began over 35 years
ag
o in Jacksonville, Florida. Joining them in the studio and on the road are new bassist
Johnny Colt
(Black Crowes, Train) guitarist
Mark “Sparky” Matejka
(a “Nashville cat, just a pickin’ fool,” according to
Rossington), and keyboardist
Peter Keys
, who repl
aced Powell on the God & Guns tour.
In a tragic tale oft
-
told, the Skynyrd story could have ended in a Mississippi swamp with the 1977 plane
crash that killed three band members, including Ronnie Van Zant and Steve Gaines. Since then, the band
has lost v
ital players in Billy Powell, Ean Evans, Allen
Collins, Leon Wilkeson and Hughie
Thomasson, yet
here they are again with a hard
-
rocking, stirring album that can sit proudly alongside any recording that
bears the Skynyrd name. The
breed
may be nearing extin
ction but Skynyrd is very much alive
and ready
to throw down.
Van Zant, now in his 25
th
year standi
ng where his brother once stood
agrees with Rossington about the
making of
Breed
. “We
worked with Bob Marlette again
who’s a great guy we just love as a pr
oducer,” he
says. “During t
he recording of the last album
we were going through Billy and Ean passing away, and
with
this album we were able to laugh and joke a lot.”
Medlock
says that
after the hard touring behind
God & Guns
he and the other primary wri
ters Van Zant
and Rossington took their time writing the songs. But the actual recording came together quickly, aided by







the band’s in
-
studio chemistry. “This time what we wanted to do was go back to doin’ stuff old school,” he
says. “A lot of the album wa
s done with all of us in the recording studio, playing all at one time, the way
we used to do it when we’d go into the studio to make records.”
With a catalog of over 60 albums, sales beyond 30 million worldwide and their beloved classic American
rock ant
hem “Sweet Home Alabama” having sold over two million ringtones, Rock & Roll Hall of Famers
Lynyrd Skynyrd remains a cultural icon that appeals to multiple generations. But far from resting on their
laurels, any illusions that this may be a band at anythin
g less than the height of its powers are quickly lost
with the distorted fury of the fiery guitar licks th
at open the album’s title track
and further put to rest with
the gritty triumphs that follow.
They could easily continue cranking out old songs to ra
ptur
ous audiences around the world
but the fact is
they’ve got plenty left to say
musically, personally and as social commentary. “Every once in a while the
record label will ask us if we want to put a new album out and we always
say yes,
because, although
we
love playing all the classic stuff, it’s fun to do new stuff too,” says Rossington, “for our own heads, our
own peace of mind.”
Lynyrd Skynyrd is a band of today, carrying a steely mantle forged in the sweaty confines of the Hell
House in Jacksonville
decades earlier. And this is a
band
album, to be even more specific, a
guitar driven
band album. The triple guitar assault has never sounded more on point, with passiona
te musicality,
expert harmonics and
of course, plenty of attitude to burn. There’s a r
eason this is one of the most
beloved bands of all time.
“We tried to go back to the old sound, doin’ it as a band, goin’ in all together and layin’ it down,” says
Rossington. “On the last album, we leaned a little more country, back to our roots, but thi
s time we just
tried to be our old selves and write some Southern rock. Just good ol’ songs, get in and get out, say what
they say, do a little bit of pickin’ and tap your feet.”
Those searching for traditional Skynyrd solos and fierce instrumental breaks
will have plenty to love on
Breed
, with every song featuring ample fretwork from one, two or even all three guitarists. “We love to do
the harmonies and stuff with lead guitars,” says
Medlock
. “That’s a Skynyrd staple, and we embellished
on it quite a bit
this time around. We wanted to make a guitar driven record and have the vocals sit really
good in the saddle there with all the guitars, just have it more rockin’ and a lot more powerful.”
Mission accomplished, with plenty of fireworks and rock
-
solid rhy
thms from all players. “Sparky has just fit
in great with Rickey and Gary, everybody knows their place now,” says Van Zant. “Sparky’s a strat guy,
Gary’s a slide guy with the Les Paul sound and all those great fills, and Rickey’s the ‘all
-
around’ guy that
does a little bit of everything.”
But the guitars and other instruments

Keys’ organ, for example, play
a vital role in the soundscape
. Van
Zant’s vocal chops and way with a lyric have never been in finer form, breathing life into these songs and
taking on
some serious vocal challenges. “I quit smokin’ a year and a half ago, so that helped out quite a
bit,” he says with a characteristic lau
gh. “Workin’ with Bob is great
too. We cut the vocals right in the
control room itself, which is real cool to me, beca
use me and Bob go back and forth right there, so you’re
not waiting for a button to be pushed. It’s just a real cool vibe. We’ve got a good thing goin’ here.”
They’ve got a good thing going in terms of material, too. The primary Skynyrd writing team of Ro
ssington,
Medlock
and Van Zant worked with some of their favorite songwriters to pen the songs that populate
Breed
, including Tom Hambridge, Blair Daly, John 5, Donnie Van Zant, and Marlette, along with
contributions from the bands Matejka, as well as Marl
on Young, Audley Freed, Shaun Morgan from
Seether, Cadillac Black’s Jaren Johnston, and
label mates
Black Stone Cherry’s Chris Robertson and Jon
Lawhon.
The blend of writers from within and outside the band concocts a hard
-
hitting cadre of songs that fit
perfectly into the Skynyrd ca
non. These songs are of the 100
-
proof variety. “We like bringing in outside
influences and I love feeding off other people,” says Van Zant. “I’ve had people ask me, ‘how could Gary







create another ‘Free Bird?’ We don’t even try
that. Those are legendary songs. We just write what we
write. It’s more about us just hangin’ out and being together and enjoying life and writin’ songs. My theory
is like Ricky Nelson’s, ‘you can’t please everyone, so you’ve got to please yourself.’ If
you’re happy with it
at the end of the day, so be it.”
Not as overtly political as its predecessor
God & Guns, Breed
focuses more on the struggles of the
working class, though the band make their thoughts on the direction of this country crystal clear on
songs
like the reverb
-
drenched “Poor Man’s Dream” and the blue
-
collar powerhouse “One Day at a Time.”
“When we go in to record, we don’t go in with one certain mindset,” says
Medlock
. “We just go in and
write about stuff we believe in, our experiences.”
T
he band is tuned in to the tough times many Americans are going through, and they sing songs that
might well help on that journey, or at least help let off some steam. “Skynyrd really thinks about how
people are struggling and what’s goin’ on out here,” sa
ys
Medlock
. “We see it a lot, because we’re a
working man and working woman’s band. We’ve got three generations under our belts, we know people
have a tough time out there, and we share in that.”
Gary Rossington won’t typically volunteer for political
tal
k
but he is an astute observer, and what he sees
sticks in his craw. “I don’t like to talk politics,” he admits “I just don’t trust a lot of politicians. I think the
country’s way off track, but we’ll get it back on, it’s too good of a thing to lose. We tr
avel all around the
country, there’s too many good people and good Americans who all want the same thing, just to get back
on track the way we used to be.”
Like it or not, with a title like
God & Guns
, the previous album was bound to be a lightning rod ou
t of the
box. “I couldn’t believe how well
God & Guns
was accepted when it came out, in Europe, Australia, South
America, here in the States; everybody we talked to, 99% of it was positive feedback,” says
Medlock
. “My
whole thing was, we’ve got to go in th
e studio this time and step up, we’ve got to do at least what
God &
Guns
did, or one better. And, in my opinion, I think we accomplished that. I’m looking forward to going out
and playing some of this record live, along with our classic material, and takin
g it to the people and letting
the people make their decision.”
Odds are, the “people,” specifically, the aforementioned Skynyrd Nation, will love
Last of a Dyin’ Breed
,
and anyone who hasn’t checked into what this band has been up to for a while will lik
ely be blown away.
As for their part, Skynyrd will, per usual, indeed be taking their music to the people, as fans in Europe and
North America will have a chance to catch the band on tour
through the end of 2012 and beyond
.
Lynyrd Skynyrd is:
Gary Rossin
gton
-
Guitar
Johnny Van Zant
-
Vocals
Rickey
Medlock
-
Guitar
Mark "Sparky" Matejka
-
Guitar
Michael Cartellone
-
Drums
Johnny Colt
-
Bass
Peter Keys
-
Keyboards
Dale Krantz Rossington
-
Honkettes Backing Vocals
Carol Chase
-
Honkettes Backing Vocals
www.lynyrdskynyrd.com
Facebook
Twitter
www.roadrunnerrec
ords.com


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