Free Bird

Lynyrd Skynyrd

From the album

(pronounced ’lĕh-’nérd ’skin-’nérd) (1973)

Written by

Allen Collins, Ronnie Van Zant

Key:G Major
Duration:9:09

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Summary

As the closing track of the band's debut album, 'Free Bird' became an enduring symbol of Southern rock and a staple of classic rock radio. Its unique two-part structure showcases poignant lyricism before erupting into one of the most famous extended guitar solos ever recorded.

Southern RockClassic RockGuitar Solo70s RockAnthem

Musical Analysis

Free Bird is distinctive for its structural and harmonic evolution. It begins as a sophisticated country-rock ballad in G Major, utilizing a descending bass line and modal borrowing (bVII). The harmonic tension is resolved through a classic IV-V cadence. The s…

Chords

verse:G - D/F# - Em - F - C - D
chorus:G - Bb - C
solo:G5 - Bb5 - C5

History

Allen Collins wrote the chord progression for the song in 1970, but lead singer Ronnie Van Zant initially found it too difficult to write a melody for. During a later rehearsal at the band's 'Hell House' cabin, Collins played the progression again, and Van Zan…

“The bird chirping sound at the beginning of the song was created by Gary Rossington using a slide on his guitar.”

Full Musical Analysis

Free Bird is distinctive for its structural and harmonic evolution. It begins as a sophisticated country-rock ballad in G Major, utilizing a descending bass line and modal borrowing (bVII). The harmonic tension is resolved through a classic IV-V cadence. The song's most famous characteristic is its radical shift in tempo and tonality; it abandons the major-key acoustic framework for a G Minor pentatonic/Dorian power chord loop (i-bIII-IV) during the solo. This transition from 'reflective major' to 'aggressive minor' mirrors the lyrical theme of gaining freedom and escaping constraints.

Allen Collins wrote the chord progression for the song in 1970, but lead singer Ronnie Van Zant initially found it too difficult to write a melody for. During a later rehearsal at the band's 'Hell House' cabin, Collins played the progression again, and Van Zant reportedly wrote the lyrics and melody in roughly 20 minutes. The song originally ended after the ballad section, but the band added the fast instrumental outro to give Van Zant a chance to rest his voice during live performances.

As the closing track of the band's debut album, 'Free Bird' became an enduring symbol of Southern rock and a staple of classic rock radio. Its unique two-part structure showcases poignant lyricism before erupting into one of the most famous extended guitar solos ever recorded.

Deep Analysis Available

Detailed analysis of this section is not yet available for this song.

Song DNA

Genre

Southern Rock

Era

70s

Mood

Triumphant

Tempo

Fast

Key

Major

Texture

Layered

Sound

Guitar-driven

Feel

Straight

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Listen & Learn

Statistics

13.1M

Plays

1.6M

Listeners

499K

Genius Views

11

Annotations

100%

Popularity

9:09

Duration

4/4

Time

Credits

Written by

Allen CollinsRonnie Van Zant

Produced by

Al Kooper

From the album (pronounced ’lĕh-’nérd ’skin-’nérd)