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TAP was very sad to learn of the passing of Billy Powell.
Billy was the Keyboard/Piano player for Lynyrd Skynyrd and
the Rossington/Collins band. He will be deeply missed.
RIP
Billy Powell, a longtime keyboard player for Lynyrd Skynyrd who survived the band's 1977 plane crash, died at his Orange
Park condo early this morning, according to police. Orange Park Police Chief James Boivin said Powell called 911 from his
condo in Club Continental and was pronounced dead at 1:52 a.m. after rescue crews performed CPR on him. Boivin said he was
told Powell had an appointment with his heart specialist Tuesday but never made it to the appointment. Current Lynyrnd Skynyrd
singer Johnny Van Zant spent 22 years with Powell in the band. He said the band took the news of Powell's death hard. "You
know, they say they've got one hell of a band up in heaven. My brother Ronnie up in heaven is probably saying, 'Billy, what
took you so long?' I'm sure they're catching up on things in heaven." Powell, who went to Bishop Kenny High School, joined
Skynyrd in 1972 after working for the Jacksonville band for a couple of years as a roadie. He was seriously injured in the
Oct. 20, 1977 plane crash that killed singer Ronnie Van Zant and five other people. Johnny Van Zant said his brother invited
Powell to join the band after he heard him playing piano during a rehearsal of "Free Bird." "Ronnie said, 'What's that?' and
Billy said, 'That's the introduction to 'Free Bird.' Ronnie said, 'I like that. You're in the band.'" The piano introduction
to the song became a highly anticipated part of the band's live show, though Johnny Van Zant said Powell was sometimes relucant
to jump into the spotlight with it. "He'd say, 'I don't want to do that, I'm embarrassed to do that,'" said Van Zant. "I'd
make him do it: I'd say, 'Come on, it'll make their night.' It made mine." Earlier this month, Powell and the band took a
four-day cruise, called the Simple Man Cruise, on a ship out of Miami with "4,000 crazy Skynyrd fans," said Van Zant. The
band had recorded several songs for a new album and had upcoming gigs in Lousiana, Mississippi and Orlando. They will be canceled,
said Van Zant. "We've got to lay our brother to rest," said Van Zant. "That old saying, the show must go on, always counts.
Unless you die." Guitarist Gary Rossington and Powell were the only members of the pre-crash incarnation of Skynyrd who were
still playing with the band. As for the future of the band,Van Zant said, "That's really the last thought in my head. I've
given 22 years to the band and hope to do it for another 22." Van Zant he spoke with Rossington, who lives in the Atlanta
area, this morning. "He's hurting," he said. "You know, he was very sad and wondering why all us brothers are leaving him,
why he's still here." Rossington's wife, Dale, reached by telephone this afternoon, said her husband was too distraught to
come to the phone. "We're just lost," she said, fighting back tears. She said band members had long been worried about Powell's
health. "But he had such a big huge heart of gold, such a huge abiding faith in God and his savior Jesus," she said. Powell
was married to Ellen Vera Powell and had four children. "For me," said Van Zant, "if anybody reading your article wants to
do something, say a prayer for Billy and his family. That would be greatly appreciated."
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