We often associate the ubiquitous, albeit hyperbolic, feud between Neil Young and Lynyrd Skynyrd with their respective songs, โSouthern Manโ and โSweet Home Alabama,โ but this dichotomy excludes a third song by Warren Zevon, which also directly referenced this musical argument. Indeed, sometimes, the fastest way to break up a fight between two friends is for a third friend to act as a mediator and point out holes in either partyโs stance.
Such was the case for Zevonโs 1980 track, โPlay It All Night Long,โ released three years after the death of Lynyrd Skynyrdโs frontman, Ronnie Van Zant.
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The Neil Young v. Lynyrd Skynyrd โFeudโ
Even if youโre unaware of the intricacies of the musical fight between Neil Young and Lynyrd Skynyrd, youโve likely heard both sides of the argument. Young, for all intents and purposes, started it with his 1970 track โSouthern Man,โ which denounced the American Southโs legacy of racism.ย
Southern man, better keep your head. Donโt forget what your good book said, Young begins, referencing the regionโs strong Christian demographic. Southern change gonna come at last, now your crosses are burning fast.ย Four years later, proudly Southern band Lynyrd Skynyrd released their musical response, โSweet Home Alabama.โ Well, I heard Mr. Young sing about her. I heard olโ Neil put her down. Well, I hope Neil Young will remember a Southern man donโt need him around, anyhow.
In an interview with Glide Magazine, Lynyrd Skynyrd frontman Ronnie Van Zant condemned Youngโs generalizations about the southern United States, saying, โWe thought Neil was shooting all the ducks in order to kill one or two. Weโre southern rebels, but more than that, we know the difference between right and wrongโ (via Thrashers Wheat).
Despite the contentious musical back-and-forth, both Van Zant and Young were outspoken about their admiration for each other. Nevertheless, public intrigue around the catchy rock โnโ roll feud perpetuated the largely untrue story that the bands had bad blood.
Warren Zevon Added His Two Cents Six Years Later
Three years after Lynyrd Skynyrd released their Neil Young-name-dropping hit, โSweet Home Alabama,โ the band got in a plane crash that killed vocalist Ronnie Van Zant and guitarist Steve Gaines on impact. Young and the members of Lynyrd Skynyrd had resolved their conflict before the untimely tragedy, although the pervasiveness of both hit singles has allowed the idea of the two feuding musicians to continue.
In 1980, Warren Zevon contributed his own satirical commentary on the long-lasting โfeudโ between Neil Young and Lynyrd Skynyrd with his track โPlay It All Night Long.โ While it musically follows Lynyrd Skynyrdโs 1974 hit, Zevon diverges lyrically, poking fun at overt Southern pride as meaningless and shallow. Grandpa p***ed his pants again, he donโt give a damn, Zevon continues. Brother Billy has both guns drawn, he ainโt been right since Vietnam.
Leaving no room for interpretation, Zevon continues into the chorus: Sweet home Alabama, play that dead bandโs song. Turn those speakers up full blast. Play it all night long. The satirical use of Southern imagery and the pervasive theme of family infighting seems to be a direct call to Young and Van Zantโs musical fighting. Zevon argues that both Youngโs broad generalizations and Van Zantโs rose-colored, regional identity politics deserved a more skeptical gaze.
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