Can any song possibly be bigger than âSweet Home Alabama?â From the opening strains of the instantly recognizable riff (itâs a simple D-C-G progression with chicken-pickinâ hammer-ons and pull-offs) to the sing-along chorus, the legendary song is the unofficial anthem of the Deep South and a must-have arrow in any cover bandâs quiver.
And Gary Rossington never tired of playing it.
The legendary guitarist who died earlier this year traded Jacksonville for Jackson, Wyoming, more than three decades ago, but will forever be linked to the seminal Southern rock band Lynyrd Skynyrd.
Before his death March 5, 2023, he was the last surviving member of the group and author of some of the most influential guitar licks to ever scratch their way underneath a stylus at 33 1/3 revolutions per minute.
Thatâs him on the unforgettable slide guitar part in âFree Birdâ (he says he used a Zippo lighter). Thatâs Rossingtonâs Les Paul barking out the âTuesdayâs Goneâ solo. And the riff in âGimme Three Steps?â Yup, Rossington.
In an exclusive interview from his home in Jackson before his passing, Rossington recalled the glory years and a settling down time where he came to love Wyoming, his adopted home.
âIt blows our mind every time we play and people know the songs no matter where you go,â Rossington said just before a reunion tour brought him to Jackson years ago. âI watch the faces now of the people in the first few rows. They sing the words, they cry, they jump up and down. Itâs still a thrill to be able to make people feel like that after all these years.â

Sweet Home Alabama
Jackson became home sweet home for Rossington beginning in the early 1980s when he and his wife, Dale Krantz-Rossington, moved to the valley. They had never been here; not on tour, not as tourists, not ever.
Like a lot of modern-day settlers, it was snow that brought the Rossingtons to Jackson, but they werenât chasing it. They were trying to get away from it.
âWe didnât know Jackson Hole. We didnât really know about the Tetons. We maybe heard of Yellowstone,â Rossington admitted. âI was from Florida, you know? We toured everywhere in the country but never came to Jackson.
âWhen Dale and I quit the Rossington-Collins Band, we went to Yellowstone on a trip. There was a freak snowstorm that hit so we came to Jackson. It was 1982, and it was the weekend of Old West Days.
âWell, God must have put us there because the weather stopped and we had a great weekend. It was then we fell in love with Jackson. We bought land, built a house, and had two daughters here and raised them here.â
The Rossingtons soon began to split time between Atlanta and Jackson. They even learned to embrace the harsh Wyoming winters.
âWe just love Jackson. Who doesnât?â Rossington said. âOnce you find a place like this, it is instant love. Back in the â80s, it was less crowded. It was really beautiful. There was no McDonaldâs or any other [build up] there is now. It was so gorgeous and uncrowded. It still is, but not as much. The mountains are still the same.â
Where Are The Guitars?
Rossingtonâs grandkids, Morgan and Jackson, went to school in Jackson and, following in grandpaâs footsteps, played Little League baseball. Will they grow up ballplayers or musicians? Rossington didnât worry about that so much as the music they are exposed to today.
âJustin Bieber and Lady Gaga ... the popular music people are listening to now has changed so much,â Rossington said. âThere are all short songs. Itâs a different time and a different scene. Music has changed.â
Pop music today needs to sell sneakers and acne cream. Guitars are a forgotten instrument. A 90-second guitar solo is a relic of the free-spirited â60s and â70s. Radio stations tolerate a song clocking in at more than 9 minutes like a 4-year-old enjoys a Sunday sermon. Heck, âFree Birdâ was a long song in its own day.
âSome of the songs of our time are very long compared to today, but even âFree Birdâ in the early â70s was too long for the industry,â Rossington said. âPeople at the record company and people in radio said, âThis will never get any airplay; itâs too long.â But we wouldnât change it. We never cut anything. They ended up playing it anyway. Classic rock stations still play it.
âIt was a long song then and still is today. Now, today, itâs all about production. I feel sorry for the kids not having real music.â
In their younger years, Rossingtonâs grandkids recognized Skynyrd songs when they heard them on the radio.
âThey love to hear âAlabama,ââ Rossington said. âThey hear it and say, âThatâs grandma and grandpa.ââ

Down South Jukinâ
Rossington remembered well the time he and his bandmates first heard one of their songs played on the radio. It was âI Ainât the One,â the first single off their debut album and a song co-written by Rossington and Ronnie Van Zant. They were overcome with glee.
âThat was an exciting time â the first time we ever heard our song on the radio,â Rossington said. âIt was in the â70s and we were driving down the street and we heard it come on. We pulled over and just listened. We were like little kids, jumping all around.â
It was a dream come true for Rossington, but not his original dream. Rossington wanted to play baseball for the New York Yankees. He was a huge Mickey Mantle fan growing up. As he worked his way through Little League in Jacksonville, Florida, Rossington was sure a career on the diamond was in his future.
Then he heard The Beatles. Game over.
âWay back when, we were just playing baseball in Little League,â Rossington said. âAnd after we heard The Beatles, that was it. We decided to start up a band like millions of people did.â
Rossington, and a few teenage friends including eventual Skynyrd singer Van Zant, formed The Noble Five. After a few iterations including The Pretty Ones and The One Percent, the name Lynyrd Skynyrd stuck.
Crafted in jest for a high school gym teacher named Leonard Skinner, who badgered the musicians about their long hair, band members subbed in the âYâ vowels to avoid a lawsuit and created, unintentionally, the hardest rock band name for most people to spell correctly.
Rossington checked off âfirstsâ systematically.
- First guitar: A Sears & Roebuck acoustic he bought by collecting Coke bottles and saving change from a paper route. He later upgraded to a 1959 Gibson Les Paul he named Bernice for his mother.
- First big gig: A church dance at Good Shepherdâs in Jacksonville.
- First time he partied like a rock star: A 1973 tour in support of âPronounced âleh-ânĂ©rd âskin-ânĂ©rd,â when they opened for The Who and traveled by air to shows.
Tuesdayâs Gone
Other momentous events shaped Rossingtonâs life, even as they took the lives of everyone around him. Hopped up on pills and booze, Rossington crashed his brand-new 1976 Ford Torino into an oak tree, delaying an upcoming tour and inspiring Van Zant to write âThat Smell.â Further tragedy was right around the next bend.
On Oct. 20, 1977, a plane crash in the swamps of Mississippi took the lives of Steve Gaines, Van Zant and others. It was just days after the release of âStreet Survivors,â an album poised to put the band back on top of the charts after a couple of duds. It would instead signal the end of the noble five. A day the music died.
Rossington vowed then to never resurrect Skynyrd. He battled serious drug addiction attempting to recover from injuries suffered in the crash â breaks in both arms, wrists, legs, ankles and a shattered pelvis. In 1980, he was ready to play Skynyrd songs again and formed Rossington-Collins with Skynyrd co-member Allen Collins. One thing the two agreed on: They wanted a woman to front the band.
âAfter the plane crash, we didnât want to come with a male,â Rossington said. âHe would always be compared to Ronnie. We decided on a female vocalist to avoid comparison.â
Rossington didnât have to look far. Their new lead singer was singing backup with .38 Special. Van Zantâs younger brother Donnie was playing in the band and they had already opened for Skynyrd on tour in the spring of 1977.
âA Wailing Bitchâ
Dale Krantz was a brash, throaty blowtorch of a singer. She blew the boys away on audition. Collins affectionately called her âa wailing bitchâ during a 1991 interview with Tony Beazley.
They didnât know how well a female would go over with the diehard Skynyrd Nation, but if anyone could stand in Van Zantâs shadow without hogging the spotlight, it was Krantz.
Rossington got more than a new crooner. He fell in love with the Detroit diva, but it took her to propose marriage.
âShe was a great singer and songwriter. We fell in love. We got married,â Rossington said.
But are the rumors true? Who asked whom?
âYeah, she asked me. Thatâs how the story goes, anyway. I donât remember to tell the truth,â Rossington admitted. âBut we were seeing each other, going together and living together for a year. We were joined at the hip, so to speak.â
The couple married in Indiana, later renewing their vows in 2012 for TLCâs âSay Yes to the Dress.â That took place on an annual Lynyrd Skynyrd cruise.
âWe redid our vows years back on the âSimple Manâ cruise with a bunch of people witnessing. The whole boat was the audience. It was a big party,â Rossington remembered. âWe were going to do it in Jackson but it was too hard to get everyone out there, and finding a place, and the weather.â

Cominâ Home
When not on tour, Rossington said he plunked a little every day to keep sharp.
âI donât play much when Iâm off. Just a little bit every day, a few minutes to keep my fingers warmed up,â he said. âIf you donât, you get rusty and sloppy and donât hit the notes quite the same. You donât forget, but you are not quite as good.â
Over the years in Jackson, Rossington would drop in at clubs around the valley and jammed with whoever was on stage.
âIn the â80s, especially, I used to go to bars around town â the [Mangy] Moose, Dornanâs, Snow King â and jam with a band here and there,â Rossington said. âWe played a couple of big shows at Snow King at the ice rink.â
Rossington still gets a kick out of hearing old Skynyrd songs played on the radio or by cover bands in bars. And he will never get tired of playing them.
âI guess the strangest place Iâve ever heard our music played was in Russia,â Rossington said. âThe Russian Symphony Orchestra plays âAlabama,â singing it in Russian. It was crazy.â
Lynyrd Skynyrd will forever be remembered for the power anthem âFree Bird.â The song clocks in at more than 14 minutes when played live, augmented by the ferocious twin-guitar soloing that is the balladâs signature.
That six-string rampage, along with the songâs introduction into American lexicon as a random concert audience request, no matter the performer, has cemented the tune into most every Top 10 list of greatest ever.
âThat song is just real special,â Rossington said. âAt the time, we didnât know it would be a hit and get the airplay it did. The solo at the end was a jam when we first wrote it, but it was all patterned out and we had been playing it for a few weeks before recording it.
âOf course, you hear it back and think you could have done this or that better. But the song is the song, it doesnât matter.â
It may not have been perfect, but until the end Rossington still played the solo nearly note for note.
âActually, we try to play it the same because itâs what the people want. They want to hear the song they remember from the radio,â Rossington said. âItâs stood up to time and it still goes over great every night. The older people grew up hearing these songs and they are part of their lives, the soundtrack to their lives.â
Free As A Bird
In his later years, Rossington was plagued with health issues. His legs bothered him. He had open-heart surgery in 2003.
âIâve had a lot of health issues, but Iâm hanging in there,â Rossington said in 2014. âThe great doctors in Jackson Hole take good care of me. I thank God every day we are still around, and we can keep the music going and keep the dream alive.â
Rossington died March 5, 2023, in Milton, Georgia. He was 71. The cause of his death was not revealed.
A band spokesperson wrote on the official Lynyrd Skynyrd Facebook page: âGary is now with his Skynyrd brothers and family in heaven and playing it pretty, like he always does.â
Jake Nichols can be reached at jake@cowboystatedaily.com.





