Product Description
The Stone Cold Classic Debut Lynyrd Skynyrd Album In Gatefold Cover & Pressed On 180 Gram Audiophile Vinyl! Includes Download Code.
Condition – Vinyl: NEAR MINT!
Condition – Cover: NEAR MINT!
The birth of a great band that spawned an entire genre. Released in 1973, ‘Pronounced ‘Lĕh-‘Nérd ‘Skin-‘Nérd’ is the debut album of legendary pioneers of Southern Rock Lynyrd Skynyrd. They brought together all the best elements of Southern culture ~ Blues, Country, Garage Rock, Southern poetry ~ and created a gumbo of Southern sounds and flavors as none had done before. There are few debut albums that sound as raw and determined as ‘Pronounced…’ does, and this is largely due to the hard, lean edge that Lynyrd Skynyrd bring to the music. The album features the songs “I Ain’t The One”, “Tuesday’s Gone”, “Simple Man”, “Gimme Three Steps” & “Free Bird”, which would become a worldwide rock anthem.
Side 1:
I Ain’t The One
Tuesday’s Gone
Gimme Three Steps
Simple Man
Side 2:
Things Goin’ On
Mississippi Kid
Poison Whiskey
Free Bird
AMG –
The genius of Skynyrd is that they un-self-consciously blended album-oriented hard rock, blues, country, and garage rock, turning it all into a distinctive sound... The Allman Brothers came first, but Lynyrd Skynyrd epitomized Southern rock. The Allmans were exceptionally gifted musicians, as much bluesmen as rockers. Skynyrd was nothing but rockers, and they were Southern rockers to the bone. This didn't just mean that they were rednecks, but that they brought it all together -- the blues, country, garage rock, Southern poetry -- in a way that sounded more like the South than even the Allmans. And a large portion of that derives from their hard, lean edge, which was nowhere more apparent than on their debut album, Pronounced Leh-Nerd Skin-Nerd. Produced by Al Kooper, there are few records that sound this raw and uncompromising, especially records by debut bands. Then again, few bands sound this confident and fully formed with their first record. Perhaps the record is stronger because it's only eight songs, so there isn't a wasted moment, but that doesn't discount the sheer strength of each song. Consider the opening juxtaposition of the rollicking "I Ain't the One" with the heartbreaking "Tuesday's Gone." Two songs couldn't be more opposed, yet Skynyrd sounds equally convincing on both. If that's all the record did, it would still be fondly regarded, but it wouldn't have been influential. The genius of Skynyrd is that they un-self-consciously blended album-oriented hard rock, blues, country, and garage rock, turning it all into a distinctive sound that sounds familiar but thoroughly unique. On top of that, there's the highly individual voice of Ronnie Van Zant, a songwriter who isn't afraid to be nakedly sentimental, spin tales of the South, or to twist macho conventions with humor. And, lest we forget, while he does this, the band rocks like a motherf*cker. It's the birth of a great band that birthed an entire genre with this album.