THIS IS AN EXCELLENT LYNYRD SKYNYRD ALBUM CD. IN MY OPINION THIS IS ONE OF SKYNYRD'S BEST ALBUM CD'S. THIS ONE WAS RECORDED BACK IN THE EARLY 90'S WHEN YOU HAD THE TRANSITIONAL LINE-UP WHICH INCLUDED CUSTER ON DRUMS, ED KING ON GUITAR, AND RANDALL HALL ON GUITAR. IT ALSO INCLUDES THE MEMEBERS WHO ARE STILL IN THE LINE-UP - JOHNNY VAN ZANT, GARY ROSSINGTON, THE LATE LEON WILKESON, AND BILLY POWELL.
IT CONSISTS OF 10 GREAT SONGS, SOME HIGHLIGHTS INCLUDE: "GOOD LOVIN'S HARE TO FIND", "ONE THING", "CAN'T TAKE THAT AWAY", "THE LAST REBEL" (THIS ONE IS ABOUT - A CONFERATE SOLDER, AND GARY ROSSINGTON), "OUTTA HELL IN MY DODGE", "KISS YOUR FREEDOM GOODBYE", "SOUTH OF HEAVEN", "LOVE DON'T ALWAYS COME EASY", AND "BORN TO RUN" (THIS IS NOT THE BRUCE SPRINGSTEN SONG - THIS ONE IS MUCH BETTER AND IS VERY UPBEAT - JOHNNY DOES AN EXCELLENT JOB ON LEAD VOCALS ON THIS ONE ("BORN TO RUN, CAN'T YOU SEE WHAT THE GOOD LORD HAS DONE FOR ME...").
WELL AS I DESCRIBED ABOVE, EVERY SONG IS A HIGHLIGHT, THAT'S WHAT MAKES THIS ONE GREAT ALBUM CD.
THIS IS A GREAT ONE AND I HIGHLY RECOMMEND IT!!!
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The Last Rebel
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Track Listings
| 1 | Good Lovin's Hard to Find |
| 2 | One Thing |
| 3 | Can't Take That Away |
| 4 | Best Things in Life |
| 5 | The Last Rebel |
| 6 | Outta Hell in My Dodge |
| 7 | Kiss Your Freedom Goodbye |
| 8 | South of Heaven |
| 9 | Love Don't Always Come Easy |
| 10 | Born to Run |
Editorial Reviews
Lynyrd Skynyrd - Last Rebel - CD
Product details
- Is Discontinued By Manufacturer : No
- Language : English
- Product Dimensions : 5.59 x 4.88 x 0.43 inches; 3.53 Ounces
- Manufacturer : Atlantic
- Original Release Date : 1993
- Date First Available : July 27, 2006
- Label : Atlantic
- ASIN : B000002IUS
- Number of discs : 1
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,664 in CDs & Vinyl (See Top 100 in CDs & Vinyl)
- #22 in Classic Southern Rock
- #55 in Arena Rock (CDs & Vinyl)
- #66 in Blues Rock (CDs & Vinyl)
- Customer Reviews:
Customer reviews
4.6 out of 5 stars
4.6 out of 5
254 global ratings
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Top reviews from the United States
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Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on January 12, 2009
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Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on March 20, 2013
Uplifting in the traditional SKYNYRD style. "Can't Take That Away" is a Southern Man's Anthem about holding on to our values.In fact that's the general theme of the whole album."Best Things In Life" a good song in that vein. Then there are the inevitable "Rebel" songs "Outta Hell In My Dodge" and the title song "The Last Rebel" the latter a soulful tune suitable for late night highway driving, the former an urge to move on when things get to be too much of a drag.These are good if not captivating. "Kiss Your Freedom Goodbye" is a refreshing `state of the world' song that points out the negatives of modern times without bringing the listener down."Love Don't Always Come Easy" could be summed up with virtually the same wording by just exchanging {state of the world} with {state of a marriage}and that's no complaint."Born To Run" another good one with some bounce to it. OVERALL, WELL WORTH HAVING FOR ANY FAN.
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Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on March 24, 2015
The sophomore studio album by the Reformed Skynyrd Band, and the first to feature Johnny Van Zant's now familiar growl in his voice. 'The Last Rebel', by their own admission, is Gary Rossington, the lone survivor of the groups original nucleus, as Allen Collins had recently died. The album has a country music feel to it, if you gave country music a kick in the @$$. All in all, a fine follow up to '1991', and both are worthy of the Skynyrd legacy. Try to judge this on its own merits because the original band is gone, and they're not trying to copy them. They're doing their own thing, and they're doing it well.
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Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on March 9, 2005
Ah, the second Skynyrd album since the crash. This album to me is just as good as Skynyrd:1991, and maybe a little better. To me, this album does not qualify as southern rock, though. This album is probably the most country-influenced album Skynyrd has done. It has a few hard-rockers, but for the most part, this is a country album (which is fine with me).
Some of the main hilights on this one are: "One Thing", "Outta Hell In My Dodge", & "Born To Run". There aren't really any songs on this album that I don't like. About half of the songs I would give 4-5/5, and the other half no lower than 3/5. If you liked 1991, buy this album.
Some of the main hilights on this one are: "One Thing", "Outta Hell In My Dodge", & "Born To Run". There aren't really any songs on this album that I don't like. About half of the songs I would give 4-5/5, and the other half no lower than 3/5. If you liked 1991, buy this album.
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Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on September 29, 2020
Not like the original Lynyrd Skynyrd but good listening just the same if you like southern rock/ country/ outlaw music.--
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on April 6, 2021
These guys are my favorite band. They're great.
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on September 14, 2017
Not trying to spoil the party, but maybe my review will make people listen harder to the snippets before snatching this up. You would think this album would be a sure fire winner with Ed King on board and having had some time to coalesce with Gary snd Johnny in cranking some great tunes. However, as Ed King answered an interviewer's question of how writing songs with the post crash band compared to writing with Ronnie Van Zant, basically his answer was that with Ronnie it was very easy and natural, and with Johnny et al, a lot of work. To me, that says that the magic just wasn't quite there with the post crash band, and there is no question that Ronnie Van Zant was a magician with writing songs. And sure enough, the songs on the Last Rebel are range from blah to pretty good--on maybe 2-3 songs. Johnny is coming into his own as a Skynyrd lead singer on this CD...his vocal style here would mature a little more after this and reach its full potential on Twenty a few years later, where he did a fantastic job. As a lyricist, well, he can write, but not like Ronnie (very few can, of course).
Another glaring omission on this CD is the Skynyrd trademark emphasis on three lead guitar interplay. It is almost nonexistent on this CD. It does make a brief appearance on the album's Freebird-esque closer "Born To Run", but that's about it. The guitar interplay on Street Survivors took the band to a new level of guitar ensemble artistry, and even if the songs themselves on this CD aren't as good as the pre-crash band's material, then at least they could have utilized the considerable talents of Randall Hall, King and Rossington much more here, not to mention spotlighting Billy more too! Again, on the 1997 Twenty CD, the interplay of Gary, Hughie Thomasson and Rickey Medlocke is featured on several tracks old Skynyrd style...like the old days!
That brings me to the point that I'm not a blanket hater of the post crash band...the Twenty CD sits alongside the pre crash albums, IMO. Johnny was graced with some of his brother's magic and with those two new guitarists and Gary, they penned some great tunes. So if you're interested in trying out a post crash Skynyrd album, I highly recommend Twenty, but not this one unless you're a hardcore completist and want them all, which is fine. :-) Also, I was disappointed with the subsequent releases after Twenty, so for me, it's all the pre-crash albums, Twenty, and the Lyve At Steel Towne CD/DVD, which was recorded during their Twenty tour. Flawless performance! For all those who give The Last Rebel five stars, congrats...glad you liked it. I myself was pretty disappointed...this is just my candid assessment.
Another glaring omission on this CD is the Skynyrd trademark emphasis on three lead guitar interplay. It is almost nonexistent on this CD. It does make a brief appearance on the album's Freebird-esque closer "Born To Run", but that's about it. The guitar interplay on Street Survivors took the band to a new level of guitar ensemble artistry, and even if the songs themselves on this CD aren't as good as the pre-crash band's material, then at least they could have utilized the considerable talents of Randall Hall, King and Rossington much more here, not to mention spotlighting Billy more too! Again, on the 1997 Twenty CD, the interplay of Gary, Hughie Thomasson and Rickey Medlocke is featured on several tracks old Skynyrd style...like the old days!
That brings me to the point that I'm not a blanket hater of the post crash band...the Twenty CD sits alongside the pre crash albums, IMO. Johnny was graced with some of his brother's magic and with those two new guitarists and Gary, they penned some great tunes. So if you're interested in trying out a post crash Skynyrd album, I highly recommend Twenty, but not this one unless you're a hardcore completist and want them all, which is fine. :-) Also, I was disappointed with the subsequent releases after Twenty, so for me, it's all the pre-crash albums, Twenty, and the Lyve At Steel Towne CD/DVD, which was recorded during their Twenty tour. Flawless performance! For all those who give The Last Rebel five stars, congrats...glad you liked it. I myself was pretty disappointed...this is just my candid assessment.
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S. Lornie
5.0 out of 5 stars
Still going strong!
Reviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on November 20, 2018
After releasing the highly enjoyable 1991, southern rock legends Lynyrd Skynyrd decide to keep on rocking. In 1993 they released their second post reunion album titled, The Last Rebel. It features the band pushing their then current sound in what results in a criminally underrated record.
The Last Rebel is not an album that is going to surprise anyone, especially not fans of Lynyrd Skynyrd or fans of southern rock n roll in general. It utilises the same tricks that was all over the previous album. The band sound extremely tight, energetic and very professional through out the albums fifty minute running time. The guitars are still heavier than their heyday and definitely sounds like a record of the time.
But where The Last Rebel properly shines is in how memorable it is. 1991 is a very good record but the songs on the follow up are considerably more interesting. To me, it sounds like Lynyrd Skynyrd got their confidence back and in doing so, they managed to write more interesting hooks and choruses. The opening track Good Lovin's Hard To Find, the album title track and Outta Hell In My Dodge are fine examples. I wouldn't say they were as memorable as the bands greatest hits but they're good enough to warrant a listen.
Much like the previous release, The Last Rebel is very well produced. It is a very clean sounding album and has a sense of professionalism about the whole thing. It may have been better to capture the raw tone that makes this kind of rock music so good, but it still sounds really good for all it is.
The Last Rebel is definitely an album I recommend picking up. The album is the last record featuring members Kurt Cluster and Randall Hall, a change that eventually leads into the Lynyrd Skynyrd we have today. You can hear a tighter more focused group emerging and which keeps the consistent quality going as the band push through the miserable generation that was the '90s.
The Last Rebel is not an album that is going to surprise anyone, especially not fans of Lynyrd Skynyrd or fans of southern rock n roll in general. It utilises the same tricks that was all over the previous album. The band sound extremely tight, energetic and very professional through out the albums fifty minute running time. The guitars are still heavier than their heyday and definitely sounds like a record of the time.
But where The Last Rebel properly shines is in how memorable it is. 1991 is a very good record but the songs on the follow up are considerably more interesting. To me, it sounds like Lynyrd Skynyrd got their confidence back and in doing so, they managed to write more interesting hooks and choruses. The opening track Good Lovin's Hard To Find, the album title track and Outta Hell In My Dodge are fine examples. I wouldn't say they were as memorable as the bands greatest hits but they're good enough to warrant a listen.
Much like the previous release, The Last Rebel is very well produced. It is a very clean sounding album and has a sense of professionalism about the whole thing. It may have been better to capture the raw tone that makes this kind of rock music so good, but it still sounds really good for all it is.
The Last Rebel is definitely an album I recommend picking up. The album is the last record featuring members Kurt Cluster and Randall Hall, a change that eventually leads into the Lynyrd Skynyrd we have today. You can hear a tighter more focused group emerging and which keeps the consistent quality going as the band push through the miserable generation that was the '90s.
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David S.
4.0 out of 5 stars
Lynyrd Skynyrd - The Last Rebel (1993)
Reviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on July 26, 2012
I'm a big fan of (pre-accident) Lynyrd Skynyrd so I approached this the 7th studio (the 2nd from the new line-up) with caution but due to the bargain price (£2.99) it was being offered at I thought I would take the plunge.
Well I'm glad to say that I'm pleased to have taken that plunge as "The Last Rebel" is a good album by a very good band!
Ok so it's not a patch on the classic Lynyrd Skynyrd albums but that said it does represent a nice slice of "Southern Rock" and lesser bands would kill to have it on their CV!
Track listing
"Good Lovin's Hard to Find" - (Johnny Van Zant, Gary Rossington, Ed King, Robert White Johnson)
"One Thing" - (Johnny Van Zant, Gary Rossington, Ed King, Dale Krantz-Rossington, Kurt Custer)
"Can't Take That Away" - (Michael Gerald Lunn, Robert White Johnson, Johnny Van Zant)
"Best Things in Life" - (Gary Rossington, Keifer, Johnny Van Zant)
"The Last Rebel" - (Gary Rossington, Robert White Johnson, Johnny Van Zant, Michael Gerald Lunn)
"Outta Hell In My Dodge" - (Johnny Van Zant, Randall Hall, Ed King, Robert White Johnson)
"Kiss Your Freedom Goodbye" - (Ed King, Johnny Van Zant)
"South Of Heaven" - (Michael Gerald Lunn, Robert White Johnson, Gary Rossington, Johnny Van Zant)
"Love Don't Always Come Easy" - (Ed King, Johnny Van Zant)
"Born to Run" - (Johnny Van Zant, Gary Rossington, Ed King, Donnie Van Zant)
BG's Verdict : 3.5 out of a possible 5.0 (Rounded up to 4 stars for Amazon)
Well I'm glad to say that I'm pleased to have taken that plunge as "The Last Rebel" is a good album by a very good band!
Ok so it's not a patch on the classic Lynyrd Skynyrd albums but that said it does represent a nice slice of "Southern Rock" and lesser bands would kill to have it on their CV!
Track listing
"Good Lovin's Hard to Find" - (Johnny Van Zant, Gary Rossington, Ed King, Robert White Johnson)
"One Thing" - (Johnny Van Zant, Gary Rossington, Ed King, Dale Krantz-Rossington, Kurt Custer)
"Can't Take That Away" - (Michael Gerald Lunn, Robert White Johnson, Johnny Van Zant)
"Best Things in Life" - (Gary Rossington, Keifer, Johnny Van Zant)
"The Last Rebel" - (Gary Rossington, Robert White Johnson, Johnny Van Zant, Michael Gerald Lunn)
"Outta Hell In My Dodge" - (Johnny Van Zant, Randall Hall, Ed King, Robert White Johnson)
"Kiss Your Freedom Goodbye" - (Ed King, Johnny Van Zant)
"South Of Heaven" - (Michael Gerald Lunn, Robert White Johnson, Gary Rossington, Johnny Van Zant)
"Love Don't Always Come Easy" - (Ed King, Johnny Van Zant)
"Born to Run" - (Johnny Van Zant, Gary Rossington, Ed King, Donnie Van Zant)
BG's Verdict : 3.5 out of a possible 5.0 (Rounded up to 4 stars for Amazon)
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Brian C
5.0 out of 5 stars
Good, workmanlike southern rock album
Reviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on September 7, 2013
You always know what you're getting with Skynyrd - their songs have a bit more depth to the lyrics than most bands in the same genre and there's always that killer guitar work to keep you interested. I only started building up my collection of LS albums recently (known 'em for years, never got round to buying them) and I've never been disappointed with any of their work.
If you've liked any of their other stuff, buy this as well: if you didn't like what you've already heard, then they're probably not the bad for you.
If you've liked any of their other stuff, buy this as well: if you didn't like what you've already heard, then they're probably not the bad for you.
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Ms Jennifer Francesca Layne.
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Last Rebel.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on February 17, 2018
A really good album by the Rock Legends Lynyrd Skynyrd.
This album is more mellow than their usual driving Southern Rock, a good album to chill out to, or to listen to when driving.
It is something a bit different from them.
This album is more mellow than their usual driving Southern Rock, a good album to chill out to, or to listen to when driving.
It is something a bit different from them.
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Michael Lennon
5.0 out of 5 stars
Absolutely brilliant.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on October 4, 2022
Now this is what you would expect from a band of this quality.
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