Last Surviving Lynyrd Skynyrd Founder Dies

Gary Rossington survived a 1977 plane crash
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Mar 6, 2023 1:41 AM CST
Updated Mar 6, 2023 2:42 AM CST
Last Surviving Lynyrd Skynyrd Founding Member Dead at 71
Rickey Medlocke and Gary Rossington, right, guitarists for Lynyrd Skynyrd, during the band's performance at a Welcome Home Celebration for the 4th Infantry Division and Task Force Ironhorse on Thursday, April 22, 2004, at Fort Hood, Texas.   (Steve Traynor/The Killeen Daily Herald via AP)

Gary Rossington, Lynyrd Skynyrd’s last surviving original member who also helped to found the group, died Sunday at the age of 71. No cause of death was given, the AP reports. “It is with our deepest sympathy and sadness that we have to advise, that we lost our brother, friend, family member, songwriter and guitarist, Gary Rossington, today,” the band wrote on Facebook. “Gary is now with his Skynyrd brothers and family in heaven and playing it pretty, like he always does. Please keep Dale, Mary, Annie and the entire Rossington family in your prayers and respect the family’s privacy at this difficult time.”

Rossington cheated death more than once, Rolling Stone reported. He survived a car accident in 1976 in which he drove his Ford Torino into a tree, inspiring the band’s cautionary song “That Smell.” A year later, he emerged from the 1977 plane crash that killed singer Ronnie Van Zant, guitarist Steve Gaines, and backing vocalist Cassie Gaines, with two broken arms, a broken leg, and a punctured stomach and liver. “It was a devastating thing," he told Rolling Stone in 2006. "You can’t just talk about it real casual and not have feelings about it.” After the crash, which also killed the band's assistant manager as well as the captain and first officer of the plane, the band did not re-form for a decade.

In later years, Rossington underwent quintuple bypass surgery in 2003, suffered a heart attack in 2015, and had numerous subsequent heart surgeries, most recently leaving Lynyrd Skynyrd in July 2021 to recover from another procedure. At recent shows, Rossington would perform portions of the concert and sometimes sat out full gigs. Rossington told Rolling Stone that he never considered Skynyrd to be a tragic band, despite all the band's drama and death. “I don’t think of it as tragedy—I think of it as life,” he said upon the group’s Rock & Roll Hall of Fame induction in 2006. “I think the good outweighs the bad.”

(More Lynyrd Skynyrd stories.)

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