Top 59 Quotes & Sayings by Gary Rossington

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American musician Gary Rossington.
Last updated on November 7, 2024.
Gary Rossington

Gary Robert Rossington is an American guitarist. He is the only remaining original member of southern rock band Lynyrd Skynyrd, in which he plays lead and rhythm guitar.

With life and grandkids and the whole thing, every day is busy, but I'm so thankful to God that I'm still here.
We used to travel through Alabama a lot and get onto back roads and just marvel at how pretty it was and how nice the people were.
All we lived for was playing and being out on the road. That was our dream, and it came true. — © Gary Rossington
All we lived for was playing and being out on the road. That was our dream, and it came true.
We want to challenge Marilyn Manson and the rap people with the bad lyrics to write some positive songs.
If we do not play 'Alabama,' our fans would kill us.
We're a rock n' roll band. We're more music and rock n' roll than politics.
There's only seven chords, so you got to use the same ones over and over. It's all in what you do with them.
Sometimes music isn't the way to talk politics, you know?
I'm feeling real good and trying to take care of myself and living healthy. As good as I can feel.
Man, I love Limp Bizkit, Johnny Lange, many people.
If Marilyn Manson would write a song that says, 'Do your damn homework,' it would make the world a better place, and it wouldn't hurt him at all. And if he doesn't like it, to hell with him. He can come fight us - by the bicycle racks.
To see fans singing our songs and loving them and dancing or crying to some of them, it feels like the first time you ever played it. It really gets to you, like day one.
Keith Moon was the funniest guy around. The stuff he did was insane. He was like somebody straight out of the movies. — © Gary Rossington
Keith Moon was the funniest guy around. The stuff he did was insane. He was like somebody straight out of the movies.
I've got two lives. Weekends, I go out and play rock star. Weekdays, I play granddad. You can't beat that.
We keep our music simple, no big gimmicks. We tell stories people can relate to, not hard to understand.
I don't know if anybody will ever be as good as Hendrix again.
We didn't have much money when I was younger, so I had to collect Coke bottles and cash them in and get a paper route to afford a guitar. That guitar from Sears came with a case and an amp and everything all in one. It was really cool.
I've always heard that the reason you fall is to get back up and keep going. So when that happens, or life throws you bad breaks or curves or deals you the wrong hand, all I've ever known is to keep going.
I love Eric Clapton and what he did with Cream; 'Spoonful' and 'Crossroads,' those are probably the coolest solos.
We started playing 'Free Bird' in clubs, and initially, it was just a slow ballad.
We loved Neil Young and all the music he's given the world.
I love being Southern because of the people and the fans we have. People down here are more friendly - really warm people.
We're not preachers, but we say, 'Let's try and change things.'
In Lynyrd Skynyrd, we always got our recognition.
I just take every day on faith.
Our redneck reputation back then was originally just because we had long hair. Back in the '60s and the early '70s, in the South that was kind of a no-no. At all the Army and Navy bases we'd play, we would get into fights with the soldiers over our hair. But I think our music overshadowed everything else.
Everybody's got a right to their own opinion, you know?
Through the years, people like the KKK and skinheads kinda kidnapped the Dixie or Southern flag from its tradition and the heritage of the soldiers.
The first time we ever used the Dixie flag for our backdrop was actually when we went over to Europe in 1970. It looked good, so we all liked it. We never meant any racial things by it.
We wanted to be America's Rolling Stones, to be the biggest band over here.
I sound like an old bullfrog when I sing.
We travel all over the world, and it seems like the South is the place where the people are nicest and they think of the fellow man more.
For one reason or another, the good God has left me on this planet; surely, I will not sit around and not do what I do naturally.
I could write a dozen different songs with the same three or four chords, but they'd all be entirely different.
You have to learn to live with the hard things in life and go on.
We wore blue jeans and T-shirts. Our music was our gimmick.
We were kinda rebels. From the wrong side of the tracks. Down where we were raised, it was a tough town.
The only reason we used the Confederate flag was just because we were from the South, and we were proud of that. — © Gary Rossington
The only reason we used the Confederate flag was just because we were from the South, and we were proud of that.
It's really weird when we're out of the country, whether we're in Brazil or Greece or some crazy place like France or Germany. When you hear your song on the radio or in a store, and you're in a different country, it's really freaky and surreal.
Our parents helped us, or we wouldn't be here. Lacy Van Zant and my mother used to sign for amps or loan us money to get to the gig or take us in their car. It's just like little sports guys - Little League and football players - whose parents help them. That's why they get good.
'Freebird' is an anthem, and 'Simple Man' is a very nice song.
We're not really for anything but a better America, a stronger country. And we do support our soldiers.
As long as the fans keep wanting to hear new records from us every few years, we'll keep making them.
If you can write a song that makes people have emotions and show their feelings, that's a powerful thing and a beautiful thing.
We know what the Dixie flag represents and its heritage; the Civil War was fought over States rights.
I think that 'God & Guns' turned out a little more 'country' than we wanted it to be.
God blessed us with talent.
I did get in a car wreck, but we got a good song out of it. — © Gary Rossington
I did get in a car wreck, but we got a good song out of it.
Jacksonville back in the 1960s was kind of a redneck town. There were only two or three places where you could play our kind of hard rock - or 'hippie music' as it was called back then. You had to go to Georgia or some place else.
The more wild experiences you have, the better songs you can write.
I've had some heart problems, and I'm on the straight and narrow.
I think people who really want to do something do it. No matter what. And they won't quit until they do it.
Old-school rock bands, and blues bands, too, are kind of a dying breed.
I've always used the Peavey Mace equipment. I've got a few of them. They're kind of like Marshalls. You know, we used to use Marshalls, but Peaveys just seem to last longer and push the sound better.
I think we're a working man's band.
You go through stuff, and you keep going.
Buffalo Springfield had three guitar players, and we thought they were so cool. So we started doing the three-guitar thing, and people started calling us the 'guitar army' and all this stuff.
Jimi Hendrix's 'Electric Ladyland' and 'All Along the Watchtower,' those solos are just so cool.
Nothing in the past is as important as the future.
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