
Whiskey Bottles and Brand-New Cars
The Fast Life and Sudden Death of Lynyrd Skynyrd
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Narrado por:
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Jeremy Arthur
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De:
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Mark Ribowsky
This intimate story of Lynyrd Skynyrd tells how a band of lost souls and self-destructive misfits, with uncertain artistic objectives, clawed their way to the top of the rock 'n' roll world. Based on interviews with surviving band members, Whiskey Bottles and Brand-New Cars shares how lead singer and front man Ronnie Van Zant guided the band's hugely successful five-year run and, in the process, created not only a new country rock idiom, but a new Confederacy in constant conflict with old Southern totems and prejudices.
Placing the music and personae of Skynyrd into a broad cultural context, this book gives a new perspective to a history of stage fights, motel room destructions, cunning business deals, and brilliant studio productions. It also offers a greater appreciation for a band whose legacy, in the aftermath of their last plane ride, has since descended into self-caricature.
©2015 Mark Ribowsky (P)2015 ListenUp Production, LLCListeners also enjoyed...




















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Would you try another book from Mark Ribowsky and/or Jeremy Arthur?
doubtfullyWould you be willing to try another book from Mark Ribowsky? Why or why not?
not reallyWhich character – as performed by Jeremy Arthur – was your favorite?
naIf this book were a movie would you go see it?
probablyAny additional comments?
For this guy to not know that Zakk Wylde was NOT the guitarist for Black Sabbath in the 70's (or ever for that matter) is a literal sin. Zakk was maybe 8 or 9 years old when the author had him with a quote about a Skynyrd gig. Amazingly bad info in this one. So many more things, though to much to list here. AT least the narrator was fair.This author has NO clue on MANY things...
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Wow great book
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Any additional comments?
A quite moving account of Lynyrd Skynyrd, the trials and tribulations, the mercurial rise to fame from obscurity and the subsequent tragedies of the group that sang the music of a generation. Jeremy Arthur is a compelling storyteller (one of my favorites!) and is masterful at bringing the listener into the story...I would often forget I was listening to an audiobook so immersed was I. For any Skynyrd fans, or fans of music in general, I would highly recommend a listen to Whiskey Bottles & Brand New Cars.Moving Story of the Group that Gave Us Free Bird
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Great book.
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great book so full of information
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about what you would expect
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Frynds of Skynyrd
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Wow, what a great ride it was listening to this audiobook! It was made all the better by the wonderful narration by Jeremy Arthur, who, with his authentic rough hewn southern accent, made you feel like he was a Roadie for the band, sitting back and taking in all of the crazy antics that they went through. There are lots of great tid-bits about the band that you will discover. Like how they got their name, and also Ronnie Van Zant’s friendship with Neil Young. Upon the journey of garnering their fame, you get to hear how the band really reacted to MCA’s manipulations of their presentation and how Ronnie never bought into any of the pretensions thrust upon them and how he actually fought them. I’ll listen to this audiobook over and over again! You won’t be disappointed in this audiobook because it’s a fun way to pass the time.Wow! What a Ride!! Great Audiobook!!
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Other members of the band are covered, but make no mistake, this is Ronnie's book.
Listening to the songs of Lynyrd Skynyrd growing up in the 70's, even then I could recognize that this was not the typical perspective of southerners I'd known. Not that it could be called progressive or (heaven forbid) liberal, but it evoked a more nuanced view of the South, southerners and the issues of race, history and heritage. Whether Ronnie was truly uncomfortable with the Confederate flag as a symbol of the band may never be known. But I'd *like* to think he had a broader view of what it meant to be proud and from the South, more than the feeble claims of "heritage, not hate" from future generations. Perhaps it was a shallow deference to commercial pressure, who knows? But the death of Ronnie Van Zant may have left in tatters any possibility of progressivism in the Southern psyche, at least in any mass appeal way.
The book presents a flawed man, certainly. He's a man with family demons and problems with substance abuse. But one that seems (perhaps too romantically presented) to have had his sights on being a 2nd Southern Renaissance Man, post-racial, post-redneck, as it were. It's all the more poignant considering how 40 years later, we've regressed so much as to have the 21st century iteration of the band, as referenced in the summary, as a self-caricature, seemingly unaware of the potentiality of inclusion, with no-talent buffoons like Kid Rock presuming to carry their banner. It always seemed that the biggest albatross around the band's neck, and which allowed for it to often be left in the shadow of other southern artists, was the boorishness (and flat-out racism, to be honest) of the hardcore fan base. A fan base which took to the rebel symbolism, oversimplified it, and ignored the deeper cultural resonance of the band and its music. More's the pity.
The book, is has to be said, has some questionable citations, people and times don't always seem to match up. But it does present a tragic story of squandered potential. If Ronnie (assuming he was truly as dedicated to social justice as is claimed) had been assertive in his role as a rock star and opinion-maker, might the popular impression of Lynyrd Skynyrd been more than merely the southern rock band with the rebel flag? Had he lived longer, might the course of Southern rock taken a more pro-active role in race relations and unity? All pie-in-the-sky supposition, to be sure, but it allows for a bittersweet feeling of what might have been.
Life and Loss of a Renaissance Rebel
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A well read story of a classic American band
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