Please make sure you purchase the $5 insurance at checkout which covers your purchase from postal damage and harm. This provides further protection from damage. When your vinyl arrives it will arrive shipped outside the the jacket. We also place the outer record jacket in a new 3 mil poly sleeve which protects the jacket cover and spine, providing durability and longevity. If nothing is listed it is not included.Ĭomes Professionally Cleaned with a Poly SleeveĪll of our pre-owned records are professionally cleaned and placed in a premium rice paper, anti-static master inner-sleeve, not one of those cheap white paper sleeves. We will also let you know if it contains a printed inner-sleeve and or other inserts such as lyric sheet and describe those as well. We describe both the record jacket and the vinyl record. Please read over the condition carefully. If we only have 1 copy available, you will see it described here in more detail. On occasion there may be drop down selection for different versions, variation or conditions. We make every effort to describe vinyl accurately. View this record grading chart for a better understanding of what VG, VG+, NM stand for. It was replaced by an alternate shot of the group standing in front of a black background. The album's original cover featured the band's seven members engulfed in flames and was quickly pulled and most of the members died in a plane crash just days after this album was released. It still packs quite a punch four decades later, which is cause for celebration in spite of the mourning that lingers for what might have been.Famous cover and super rare known as the fire cover. Of the five studio albums released by the original incarnation of Lynyrd Skynyrd, I think Street Survivors is their most consistent and pointed the way toward a bright future that was cruelly taken from the band & its fans. They enter swinging jump-blues territory on “I Know A Little,” a hidden gem that deserved a wider audience, and there’s even a faithful rendition of Merle Haggard’s “Honky Tonk Night Time Man” which was tailor made for Skynyrd. “One More Time” is a lovely waltz-tempo ballad that features one of Van Zant’s most tender vocal performances. The highlight of Street Survivors for me has always been “That Smell,” an anti-drink-and-drugs anthem that’s also one of my favorite driving-down-the-road songs, with an insistent rhythm and several blistering guitar solos. Not only does he deliver a searing guitar solo on this slow blues tune, but he also wrote it & sang lead. Officially issued on October 17, 1977, Street Survivors immediately moved major numbers, as the LP rode the success of the bands raunch n rollin live set. Van Zant once remarked of Gaines that he & the band would “all be in his shadow one day,” and album closer “Ain’t No Good Life” is evidence of his enormous talents. Gaines & Van Zant co-wrote, and share lead vocals on, the pulsating, funky “You Got That Right,” which has become a classic rock radio staple and sounds like a cross between The Doobie Brothers & Little Feat. Sadly, that all came to an end when Van Zant & Gaines (the super-talented new guy) perished in that crash along with Gaines’ sister Cassie, but they left us with arguably the high-water mark of their career.Īlbum opener “What’s Your Name” was a Top 20 single and one of their best-known songs an only-in-the-‘70s “rock band & groupies on the road” tale that includes a true incident about one of their roadies getting into a scuffle (“Back at the hotel, Lord we got such a mess, It seems that one of the crew had a go with one of the guests, oh yes”). Mix in Powell’s under-appreciated fleet-fingered keyboard work & a rhythm section to rival most of their contemporaries, and it’s not far-fetched to consider them one of the premier American musical acts of all time. Van Zant, with his muscular yet nuanced vocals & thought-provoking lyrics, was the instantly recognizable voice of the band (as well as its heart), while the triple-guitar attack set them apart from other groups with “only” two guitarists. Often described as merely a “Southern Rock” band, Skynyrd had so much more to offer while still being the definitive example of that genre. ![]() Following up the previous year’s multi-platinum Top 10 double-live album, One More From The Road, the septet of lead singer/band leader Ronnie Van Zant, guitarists Gary Rossington, Allen Collins & Steve Gaines, bassist Leon Wilkeson, keyboardist Billy Powell and drummer Artimus Pyle was at peak of its powers, creatively & commercially. On the cusp of being one of the biggest rock bands in the world, Lynyrd Skynyrd’s magnificent fifth studio album, Street Survivors, cemented their reputation but unfortunately will always be associated with the plane crash that killed two band members, a backing vocalist, their assistant tour manager, the pilot & co-pilot just three days after it was released. Forty Year Friday – LYNYRD SKYNYRD “STREET SURVIVORS”
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