The Real Reason Lynyrd Skynyrd's 'Free Bird' Is So Long
Matthew Perez
Updated on March 18, 2026
People always ask for "Free Bird," so this article is unapologetically giving you the bird for free. On a broadcast of the Ultimate Classic Rock Nights radio show Lynyrd Skynyrd's Gary Rossington recounted how "Free Bird" came to be so long. "[Guitarist] Allen Collins had the chords all written, and he had planned a lot and he was trying to get [vocalist Ronnie Van Zant] to write lyrics to it," Rossington recalled. Van Zant took issue with the number of chord changes, so the musicians spent a few weeks trying to achieve creative harmony. "
Initially, "Free Bird" was meant to be "a real simple love song about leaving you." The book Whiskey Bottles and Brand-New Cars explains that the opening line, "If I leave here tomorrow, would you still remember me?" was actually something that Collins' then-girlfriend, Kathy, had asked him. But during the band's jam sessions, "it got longer and longer," and according to Rossington, "At first it didn't have the end, the long guitar end; it was just the slow love song. Then we came up with the end, and as we practiced every day, it came along."
So there you have it: "Free Bird" is long because the band made it long. Maybe not the most exciting reason, but after hearing Chuck Berry sing about playing with his ding-a-ling, everything else sounds like an anticlimax anyway.