Lynyrd Skynyrd – Call Me The Breeze

I’ve been in a J.J. Cale mood for a while so here is another one of his songs made popular by someone else and he was happy about it.

Like Eric Clapton… Lynyrd Skynyrd helped Cale finance his lifestyle, allowing him to release albums in a leisurely fashion. Cale didn’t like fame and tried to avoid it. On his first seven albums, he didn’t include a picture of himself.

Of Skynyrd’s rendition of “Call Me the Breeze,” Cale said that it afforded him the money to have more freedom in how and when he made his music and was always honored when other artists covered his songs. This was a popular song by the band but never was released as a single. It has become a staple of classic rock radio though since the format started. It appeared on Second Helping released in 1974.

Instead of following Cale’s more stripped-back lead on the track, Skynyrd amped the song up with a more rock style. With Van Zant’s vocals and King, Collins, and Rossington’s guitars it became a concert favorite. Throughout the years, “Call Me the Breeze” has been covered by Johnny Cash with his son John Carter Cash, Shooter Jennings, Bobby Bare, Peter Frampton, John Mayer, and more.

When Cale died in 2013 from a heart attack, Clapton paid tribute to his friend by including a rendition of “Call Me the Breeze” and other tracks for a Cale tribute album in 2014, The Breeze: An Appreciation of JJ Cale, which also features Willie Nelson, Tom Petty, Mark Knopfler, and John Mayer.

Lynyrd Skynyrd thought a lot of J.J. Cale. They didn’t record covers very often but they covered Cale twice with this one and a song called Same Old Blues off of the 1976 album Gimme Back My Bullets.

Call Me The Breeze

Call me the breeze
I keep blowin’ down the road
Well now they call me the breeze
I keep blowin’ down the road
I ain’t got me nobody
I don’t carry me no load

Ain’t no change in the weather
Ain’t no changes in me
Well there ain’t no change in the weather
Ain’t no changes in me
And I ain’t hidin’ from nobody
Nobody’s hidin’ from me
Oh, that’s the way it’s supposed to be

Well I got that green light baby
I got to keep movin’ on
Well I got that green light baby
I got to keep movin’ on
Well I might go out to California
Might go down to Georgia
I don’t know

Well I dig you Georgia peaches
Makes me feel right at home
Well now I dig you Georgia peaches
Makes me feel right at home
But I don’t love me no one woman
So I can’t stay in Georgia long

Well now they call me the breeze
I keep blowin’ down the road
Well now they call me the breeze
I keep blowin’ down the road
I ain’t got me nobody
I don’t carry me no load
Oooh Mr Breeze

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Author: Badfinger (Max)

Power Pop fan, Baseball, Beatles, Alternative music, old movies, and tv show fan. Also anything to do with pop culture in the 60s and 70s... I'm also a songwriter, bass and guitar player. Not the slightest bit interested in politics at all.

25 thoughts on “Lynyrd Skynyrd – Call Me The Breeze”

  1. Great to read that the cash went into the pocket of Cale. This is a good track with a cool vibe to it. Ronnie made this tune even though it was a cover his own.

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  2. JJ Cale was amazing. Never got a whole lot of attention for himself, but wrote so many great songs that everyone else covered. His “Travel-Log” album was on heavy rotation in my car for a couple of months…

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  3. I’ve always loved J.J. Cale. I have that album with the raccoon. Lynyrd Skinner make it a totally different song. Nothing against that, but I prefer Cale’s sound – like sitting on the back porch or around the campfire trading licks with friends, not putting on a show for thousands.

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    1. I do like his version as well. I liked his attitude about it because it freed him to do what he wanted because of the covers…this one and After Midnight by Clapton.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. They sounded pretty good with Johnny. At least he is “family.” Rossington’s wife, Dale is still with them. And, technically speaking, Rickey Medlocke could be considered a founding member, as Bob Burns came and went, pretty frequently. Just sayin’…

        Liked by 1 person

      2. Oh yea…I forgot about that…not putting it down…they sound really good.
        Yes Medlocke joined them briefly around 69 so yea he could.

        Liked by 1 person

  4. Skynyrd were on top form with Second Helping – every track on it is excellent. The fact they were at the top of their game at the time helped make this a great version of the JJ Cale song.

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