LYNYRD SKYNYRD : THYRTY - 30TH ANNIVERSARY COLLECTION

 

Disc One (77:24)

  1. Sweet Home Alabama
  2. Need All My Friends
  3. Blues Medley
  4. Down South Jukin'
  5. Was I Right Or Wrong
  6. I Ain't The One
  7. Tuesday's Gone
  8. Gimme Three Steps
  9. Workin' for MCA
  10. The Ballad Of Curtis Loew
  11. Call Me the Breeze
  12. Saturday Night Special
  13. All I Can Do Is Write About It
  14. Free Bird

Disc Two (74:24)

  1. Whiskey Rock-A-Roller
  2. Simple Man
  3. What's Your Name
  4. That Smell
  5. I Know A Little
  6. You Got That Right
  7. Comin' Home
  8. Swamp Music
  9. Gimme Back My Bullets
  10. Smokestack Lightnin'
  11. The Last Rebel
  12. Things Goin' On
  13. Talked Myself Right Into It
  14. We Ain't Much Different
  15. Workin'
  16. Mad Hatter

Label : UTV Records

Release Year : 2003

Review (AllMusic) : This one's a tough call in many respects. First, there is the notion of 30 years. Of that time period, only a very short chunk of it produced the tracks listeners consider Lynyrd Skynyrd classics today - the earliest period when the band was fronted by the late Ronnie Van Zant. Lynyrd Skynyrd may have been influenced by the Allman Brothers with their guitar attack (three and sometimes four guitars would stalk a Skynyrd stage), but rather than try to imitate the Allmans (a blues band that was such a singular entity anyway and can hardly be termed "Southern rock"), they created their own identity as a rock & roll band. It was Skynyrd who invented the Deep South's redneck rock genre, and they spawned so many imitators it became a parody. However, these cats could play and write. Of these two discs, the lion's share of the material is devoted to the original band, whose string of hits is dizzying to consider even today. All of the expected material is here - from "Free Bird" and "Tuesday's Gone" to "Gimme Back My Bullets," "That Smell," and "Sweet Home Alabama." Also included, for better or worse, is the Lynyrd Skynyrd that carried on some years after Van Zant's death and have been carrying on with Johnny Van Zant fronting the band, looking like a carbon copy of his older brother. This may piss off a lot of purists, but it needn't - as this material is solid, rocking, and drenched in blues, if lacking originality a bit in the writing department. Fans of the band already have what they need and this is no prize on that level in any way. Newcomers may be tempted by the price point, but would do better with All Time Greatest Hits as a proper introduction.