Skynard Memeber Dies

-

68383GTS

Well-Known Member
Joined
Nov 15, 2007
Messages
7,510
Reaction score
964
Location
East Peoria,IL
I just saw this on MSNBC.
Founding member of Lynard Skynard Billy Powell Dies.For you guys that are not sure who he was in the band he played the piano.And man could he play I saw Skynard 3 times over the years.He passed away Jan 27th at night not sure what happened.Very sad another founding member gone...
Jim
 
That's not good but we all have to go sometime I guess. That was one heck of a band. Why is it all the good musicians die? Now days we don't have great musicians like we did back then.
 

Favorites- Simple man and Tuesdays Gone .I dont think there is a Skynard sond I didn't like.The last I saw them there was three or four original members still. Jim
 
I have been a Skynyrd fan since the 70's and I have seen them a bunch of times. Billy Powell was a great musician and he will be greatly missed.
 
I think there is only one founding member left now. Cant remember his name...?

actually i think billy was a roadie till bout 1972, were van zant discovered his keyboard skills and asked him to join but the band was formed sometime in 1964 with his schoolmates Gary Rossington being one of them but they didint make it big till 1973 with there deput album
 
OK Very early memeber but considerd a original member instead of a founding member.I believe Billy was on the first album and tour.I found out he was 56 and had a heart attack. Jim
 
OK Very early memeber but considerd a original member instead of a founding member.I believe Billy was on the first album and tour.I found out he was 56 and had a heart attack. Jim

yea i was just giving u a hard time but ur right he was there b4 they released the 1st album
 
They die young so we dont have to deal with them getting bad. Now he's up there with Jon Bonnum, Johnney Cash, and Joey Ramone Jammin! May he rest in peace and his music be heard forever!
 
Big Skynyrd fan here. I will miss Billy greatly. :(

A little more info.

ORANGE PARK, Fla. – Lynyrd Skynyrd keyboard player Billy Powell, who played on such hits as "Sweet Home Alabama" and survived the 1977 plane crash that killed three band members, died Wednesday. He was 56.

Powell called 911 in this Jacksonville suburb saying he was having trouble breathing. Rescue crews performed CPR, but he was pronounced dead about an hour later, Orange Park Police Lt. Mark Cornett said.

Powell, who had a history of heart problems, missed a Tuesday appointment with his doctor for a cardiac evaluation, and a heart attack is suspected as the cause of death.

The Jacksonville-based band was formed in 1966 by a group of high school students — famously, it took its name from a physical education teacher they disliked, Leonard Skinner. Powell joined the group in 1970 and became its keyboardist in 1972, the year before they released their first album, "Pronounced leh-nerd skin-nerd."

It became one of the South's most popular rock groups, and gained national fame with such hits as "Free Bird," "What's Your Name" and especially "Sweet Home Alabama," which reached the top 10 on the charts in 1974. The band was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2006.

The band was decimated on Oct. 20, 1977, when their chartered plane crashed in a swamp near McComb, Miss.

Six people were killed — lead singer Ronnie Van Zant; guitarist Steve Gaines; Gaines' sister, vocalist Cassie Gaines; as well as an assistant road manager, the pilot and co-pilot.

Powell received facial injuries in the crash, but eventually recovered. He was the only band member well enough to attend the funerals of those killed in the crash.

Two years after the accident, Powell and fellow members Allen Collins, Gary Rossington and Leon Wilkeson formed the Rossington-Collins Band. It broke up in 1982.

In 1987 Johnny Van Zant — Ronnie's brother — and a new Lynyrd Skynyrd Band went on a tribute tour, and Powell was on hand again in 1991 when the revived version of the band put out a new album, "Lynyrd Skynyrd 1991" and started a tour in Baton Rouge, La., where the band was headed in 1977 when the plane crashed.

Fans who kept their tickets from the canceled 1977 concert were admitted free.

The band's last album, "Vicious Cycle," was released in 2003.

Johnny Van Zant was devastated by Powell's death. Hearkening back to the deaths of other members of the band, he said: "Maybe it is just the destiny of Lynyrd Skynyrd. We've played before millions and millions of people and it's been a wonderful ride and a bumpy one too."

Van Zant said Powell had been a roadie for the band when his brother heard him playing the keyboard.

"Nobody knew he could play the keyboard," Van Zant said.

Earlier this year, Powell and the band took a four-day cruise on a ship out of Miami with "4,000 crazy Skynyrd fans," said Van Zant.

The band had recorded several songs for a new album and had upcoming gigs, which will be canceled, Van Zant said.

Howard Kramer, curatorial director at the Rock and Roll Hall, said Powell "was a phenomenal piano player. The band may be able to get another piano player, but they will never replace Billy Powell."

"He was one of the best piano keyboardists, rock 'n' roll keyboardists, of our lifetime," said Ross Schilling, the band's manager.

Hank Williams Jr. said: "I will truly miss Billy. We have all lost one of our best rowdy friends."
 
wow....kind of ironic me and my buddy were up drinking tonight and i was showing him a bunch of skynyrd songs he never heard. One of the greatest bands ever, i could listen to skynyrd all day long
 
My Wife is 10 yrs older than me, went to the first concert after Ronnie died in the crash. Took her camera, they did Freebird as a instrumental with a spotlight on the vacant mic. she said there wasnt a dry eye in the house.
 
I remember seeing The Who in Charlotte. Roger D. is introducing the band and says, "And whos the greatest rockNroll piano man in the world ?" Atleast a dozen fans shouted, "Billy Powell !" I laughed and agreed.
His style was a defining part of early Skynard. I'll definately hear the Pronounced album today. R.I.P. Billy Powell
 
There was a lot of sorrow here in Jacksonville when he passed. Some of the people here at work knew him and they said that with all the fame, he was just an all around good guy.
 
For what its worth... The name Lynard Skynard was takin from a teacher named Skinner with a middle initial of L. Leonard was a comical guess but the L was actually Lewis.
 
Isn't/wasn't Gary Rossington part of the Rossington Collins band?

Yes, as were fellow Skynyrd members, Allen Collins, Leon Wilkeson, and Billie Powell. I think Artimus Pyle was with them too but not sure on that one.
 
Yes, as were fellow Skynyrd members, Allen Collins, Leon Wilkeson, and Billie Powell. I think Artimus Pyle was with them too but not sure on that one.
Artimus Pyle Gang was a spin off too. Pyle wasn't taken into the reformed / post crash Skynyrd. This caused a lot of hard feelings and some bad press.
 
"Call Me The Breeze was" a different song but had some great Billy Powell work in it. This was also one of the few songs with both Van Zant and Gaines sharing the mic. Some of the later songs went a little too mainstream for me though. I would have to say the earlier stuff was more to my liking. Powell will be missed as well as the rest of the band. Truly a band before its time and gone too soon.
Chas.
 
-
Back
Top Bottom