
When
Lynyrd Skynyrd's bassist, Leon Wilkeson, quit the band I was invited to
join by Ronnie Van Zant. I was playing in a band in
Greenville, N.C. and Van Zant and Gary Rossington drove up there to
pick me up.
During a week-long stint at
Funochio's in Atlanta (before I had joined), Skynyrd was
discovered by Al Kooper. After signing a record deal with
Kooper's MCA subsidiary Sounds of the South, we went into Studio
One in Doraville, Georgia to record our first album "Pronounced
Leh-nerd Skin-nerd".
Immediately after
finishing the record, Van Zant took me aside and told me that
I was the worst bass player he'd ever played with! I thought
I was out of a job but he suggested I switch to guitar so that the band
could recreate the sound of our first album. With Van Zant's
persuasion, Leon came back to the band. Even though Leon's
picture is on that first album cover, I played bass guitar on that
record.
The song "Sweet Home Alabama" was
written during our first rehearsal with me on guitar. Our first
album had not yet been released. Inspired by something Gary
Rossington was playing one day at rehearsals (the arpeggiated part that
you hear behind the verse), I came up with the opening riff and
proceeded to write the balance of the music once I heard where Van Zant
was taking it. We went up to Atlanta 4 days later to
record it. It was very fresh and Van Zant commented to me
that day "Well...THAT's our 'Ramblin' Man." Al Kooper loved
the song and wanted to put it on the first album...but thought saving
it was a better idea.
Following MCA's debut of
the band, Skynyrd received the nod as the opening act for the Who's
1973 American Tour. Three shows into the tour in L.A. Pete
Townsend came into the dressing room to say hey and give us his
blessing. A few days later, in Boston, we (Skynyrd) got into
a brawl in our dressing room and tore the place up. Someone threw
an open container of beer in the direction of the entrance just as
Roger Daltrey walked in wearing
his infamous leather-fringe vest. He got TOTALLY
SOAKED!! Daltrey, amazingly, didn't lose his cool.
Even though we only played a 30 minute set, that tour with The Who
really set the Skynyrd wheels in motion.
After
the first single from "Second Helping" ("Don't Ask Me No Questions")
failed to generate any airplay, MCA bowed to radio pressure and
released "...Alabama" as a single. It was getting tremendous
airplay anyway and, by October, was sitting at #8 on the national
charts. That hit record earned the band our first
gold record and along with it pulled our first album back up the
charts making that one gold as well.
In
January 1975, having just completed a grueling European Tour that saw
the departure of drummer Bob Burns, Skynyrd entered the studio to begin
work on our third album. Due to our heavy touring schedule,
we had no other material prepared except for "Saturday Night Special"
that had been recorded the previous Summer for the movie "The
Longest Yard". We worked solid 16 hour days for 3
weeks to get seven songs. The result was the album "Nuthin'
Fancy".
To make a long story short, I wasn't
enjoying my life with the band and in June, 1975 I quit. Kooper,
Rossington, and Collins all called asking if I was coming back. I
didn't want to...but if Van Zant had called, I probably would
have. As it stands, I'm glad the way things have worked
out. Divine Providence, I call it.

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