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“I wrote this song to tell of the misunderstood friendship between Ronnie Van Zant and Neil Young, who were widely believed to be bitter adversaries, but were in truth very good friends and mutual admirers… I also used it as a personal way of writing for the first time about my hometown’s musical an...
Church blew up in Birmingham
Four little Black girls killed for no goddamn good reason
All this hate and violence can't come to no good end
A stain on the good name
A whole lot of good people
Dragged through the blood and glass
Blood stains on their good names, and all of us take the blame
Meanwhile in North Alabama, Wilson Pickett comes to town
To record that sweet soul music, to get that Muscle Shoals sound
Meanwhile in North Alabama, Aretha Franklin comes to town
To record that sweet soul music, to get that Muscle Shoals sound
And out in California, a rock star from Canada wrote a couple of great songs
About the bad shit that went down
"Southern Man" and "Alabama" certainly told some truth
But there's a lot of good folks down here, and Neil Young wasn't around
Meanwhile in North Alabama, Lynyrd Skynyrd comes to town
To record with Jimmy Johnson at Muscle Shoals Sound
And they met some real fine people, not no racist pieces of shit
And they wrote a song about it, and that song became a hit
Ronnie and Neil, Ronnie and Neil
Rock stars today ain't half as real
Speaking their minds on how they feel
Let them guitars blast for Ronnie and Neil
Ronnie and Neil became good friends, their feud was just in song
Skynyrd was a bunch of Neil Young fans, and Neil he loved that song
So he wrote "Powderfinger" for Skynyrd to record
But Ronnie ended up singing "Sweet Home Alabama" to the Lord
And Neil honored Ronnie, in his casket to the ground
And to my way of thinking, us southern men need both of them around
Ronnie and Neil, Ronnie and Neil
Rock stars today ain't half as real
Speaking their minds on how they feel
Let them guitars blast for Ronnie and Neil
Ronnie and Neil, Ronnie and Neil
Rock stars today ain't half as real
Speaking their minds on how they feel
Let them guitars blast for Ronnie and Neil
Let them guitars blast for Ronnie and Neil
Let them guitars blast for Ronnie and Neil
Ronnie and Neil was written by Patterson Hood.
Ronnie and Neil was produced by Drive-By Truckers & Dick Cooper & David Barbe.
Drive-By Truckers released Ronnie and Neil on Tue Sep 25 2001.