The List

3 Southern Rock Songs From the 1970s That Sound Like a Bar Fight at Closing Time

Southern rock tunes, particularly songs from the 1970s, are usually hard-hitting, high-energy, and a bit aggressive. Thatโ€™s what makes the genre so fun. Personally, I think the following 1970s Southern rock songs would be perfect for a cinematic bar fight. Though, I donโ€™t recommend starting one for the sake of a playlist. Letโ€™s take a look at a few songs that would be perfect for a punch-throwing playlist, shall we?

โ€œUneasy Riderโ€ by Charlie Daniels from ‘Honey In The Rock’ (1973)

This entry on our list of Southern rock songs from the 1970s that are perfect for a bar fight is a real shoo-in. The narrator of โ€œUneasy Riderโ€ is your typical long-haired, p*t-smoking 70s hippie type who enters a โ€œredneckโ€ bar in Mississippi, where the unease of the locals comes close to starting a bar fight. The narrator hilariously spins a yarn and accuses one of the locals of being an FBI agent. Itโ€™s a very unique song, one with Charlie Danielsโ€™ unforgettable storytelling talents on full display. 

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โ€œUneasy Riderโ€ leans more toward talking blues and bluegrass than Southern rock, but I think this No. 9 Hot 100 hit still deserves a spot on this list.

โ€œLa Grangeโ€ by ZZ Top from โ€˜Tres Hombresโ€™ (1974)

This ZZ Top jam isnโ€™t exactly about a bar fight, but the overall sound of the song would be perfect for a scene in a movie in which a tumultuous bar fight takes place. That introduction, that explosive second half of the songโ€ฆ โ€œLa Grangeโ€ is a top-notch punch-throwing song if Iโ€™ve ever heard one. Itโ€™s definitely a Southern rock gem, one with a heavy dose of boogie blues, particularly in the songโ€™s rhythm. โ€œLa Grangeโ€ was surprisingly only a minor hit in 1974, peaking at No. 41 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart.

โ€œGimme Three Stepsโ€ by Lynyrd Skynyrd from โ€˜(Pronounced ‘Lฤ•h-‘nรฉrd ‘Skin-‘nรฉrd)โ€™ (1973)

โ€œGimme Three Stepsโ€ is another shoo-in for this list, considering itโ€™s an actual bar fight song about an actual bar fight that once involved songwriter Ronnie Van Zant.

The story goes that Van Zant went to a bar in Florida. There, a gun was pulled on him by an angry patron after Van Zant danced with the perpetratorโ€™s wife. In the song, the gun-wielding jealous husband gives the narrator a head start before he starts shooting, hence the title of the song. This classic Southern rock tune, surprisingly, didnโ€™t chart in 1973 or 1976 when its live version was released.

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