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Gimme Three Steps

"Gimme Three Steps"
Lynyrd Skynyrd - Gimme Three Steps.jpg
Single by Lynyrd Skynyrd
from the album (Pronounced 'Lĕh-'nérd 'Skin-'nérd)
B-side "Mr. Banker"
Released November 1973
Recorded March 29, 1973 at Studio One, Doraville, Georgia, U.S.
Genre Southern rock, hard rock
Length 3:17 (Single version)
4:26 (Album version)
Label MCA Records
Writer(s) Ronnie Van Zant
Allen Collins
Producer(s) Al Kooper
Lynyrd Skynyrd singles chronology
"I've Been Your Fool"
(1971)
"Gimme Three Steps"
(1973)
"Don't Ask Me No Questions" (remix)
(1974)

"Gimme Three Steps" is a song by southern rock band Lynyrd Skynyrd released on its 1973 debut album. The song can often be heard on many classic rock radio stations today. It was written by Allen Collins and Ronnie Van Zant.

The album became the band's first hit, driven by the success of the single "Free Bird", but "Gimme Three Steps" never charted.

The song is memorable for its opening riff and story of how the speaker was dancing with a girl named Linda Lou at a bar called The Jug when a man, probably the girl's boyfriend or husband, enters with a gun (described as a .44) and catches them, angrily believing her to be cheating. The song's title refers to the chorus: "Won't you give me three steps / Gimme three steps mister / Gimme three steps towards the door? / Gimme three steps / Gimme three steps mister / And you'll never see me no more." essentially asking for three steps head start to flee. The song is based on a real-life experience Ronnie Van Zant had at a biker bar in Jacksonville known as The Pastime, including having a gun pulled on him, and thus inspiring him to write the lyrics on his way home.

In some later live versions after the plane crash and the band reformed with Ronnie's brother, Johnny, Johnny would often change the line "Wait a minute, mister, I didn't even kiss her!" to "Wait a minute, mister, I didn't stick her!", emphasizing on the word "stick" and proclaiming the narrator's innocence. Ronnie would also sometimes comment in concert, most famously at the Knebworth Festival in 1976 (and on One More From The Road), that he (the narrator) did not want to "fight him over that cunt anyway"; Johnny would also later on make the same statement in some live versions or say to the audience that they knew why the narrator would not fight the man.

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