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Former Lynyrd Skynyrd guitarist Ed King dead at 68

According to a post on his Facebook page, Ed King died at his Nashville home on Wednesday.Nashville Tennessean
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According to a post on his Facebook page, Ed King died at his Nashville home on Wednesday.
King, 68, played guitar for Lynyrd Skynyrd from 1972-75 and 1987-1996. He co-wrote the Southern rock band's 1974 classic (and only Top 10 single) "Sweet Home Alabama," and that's his voice counting off the "One, two, three..." before going into the instantly recognizable guitar riff that starts the song.  
"I don’t know anyone who doesn’t know the intro lick to 'Sweet Home Alabama,' " said guitarist Andrew Michael Sovine. "If that was all (King) was known for I think that would be worth remembering, but all of his work with Skynyrd was just amazing...as a guitarist I don’t think he ever got the credit he was due. The music he wrote really was the soundtrack of a generation or two."
"Ronnie (Van Zant) wrote the lyrics and Ed (King) and I wrote the music," Skynyrd band member Gary Rossington told "Garden and Gun" in 2015 when discussing the story behind "Sweet Home Alabama."   
"Well, when I came to rehearsal that day Gary was playing this riff that you can hear in the verses," King told Gibson.com. "It's not the main riff that I play; it's a part that he plays. And as soon as I picked up the guitar I immediately bounced off his riff. And that's when Ronnie looked at me and he gave me this whirling sign with his finger, like keep going, keep playing that over and over. And so I mean if it hadn't been for Gary writing his part, I never would have written my part. And once I heard what Ronnie had, I just wrote the rest of the song in like a half hour, it just came so fast." 
"I’ve just found out about Ed’s passing and I’m shocked and saddened," said Rossington in a statement on Thursday morning. "Ed was our brother, and a great songwriter and guitar player.  I know he will be reunited with the rest of the boys in Rock and Roll Heaven. Our thoughts and prayers are with his family."

Born in California on Sept. 14, 1949, King was a founding member of the Los Angeles-based rock band Strawberry Alarm Clock, known for their 1967 psychedelic chart-topper "Incense and Peppermints."
In the early 1970s, Lynyrd Skynyrd opened several shows for Strawberry Alarm Clock, which is how he got to know Van Zant. 
"One day Ronnie invited me down to this club in Jacksonville where they were rehearsing," King told music historian Scott Bomar in 2012. "I pulled up a chair right in front of the stage and they played me this new tune they’d written and chills just went up and down my back.  I said, 'Man, I’d travel across the country to play with you guys.' "   
In 1972, King joined the Southern rock outfit as a bass player, then switched to guitar. 
He was an integral part of the band's three-guitar sound and first three albums: 1973's "Pronounced 'Lĕh-'nérd 'Skin-'nérd," "Second Helping" (released in 1974) and "Nuthin' Fancy" (1975), and is credited with co-writing songs like "Saturday Night Special," "Workin' for MCA" and "Whiskey Rock-a-Roller"
King stayed with Lynyrd Skynyrd until 1975, when he abruptly left during the notorious "Torture Tour." He reunited with the band in 1987 and remained with them for nearly a decade until he retired in 1996 following a diagnosis of congestive heart failure. He received a heart transplant in 2011.
King was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame as a member of Lynyrd Skynyrd in 2006.
Funeral arrangements are unknown at this time.
This story is in progress and will be updated. 

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