Molly Hatchet is an American Southern rock band from Jacksonville, Florida. Originally formed in 1971 by guitarist Dave Hlubek, the group's early years were characterized by regular personnel changes and sporadic performances, with no stable lineup in place. By 1976, the band Molly Hatchet had been officially reformed with a lineup of Hlubek, Steve Holland and Duane Roland on guitars, Danny Joe Brown on vocals, Banner Thomas on bass and Bruce Crump on drums. The current lineup of Molly Hatchet includes keyboardist John Galvin (who originally joined in 1983), guitarist Bobby Ingram (since 1987), drummer Shawn Beamer (since 2001), bassist Tim Lindsey (since 2003 but longtime friend and musical partner of founder Dave Hlubek since the 1970s) and vocalist Parker Lee (since 2023).
Molly Hatchet was originally founded by guitarist Dave Hlubek in 1971. [1] [2] During its early years, the band performed with various monikers and musicians in the Jacksonville area, not settling on an official lineup. [3] Early members that surrounded Hlubek included between others guitarist Steve Holland, vocalist Bobby Maddox, [4] guitarist Donald Hall, [5] keyboardist Melvin Powell, [6] bassist Tim Lindsey [7] and drummer Fred Bianco. [8] Hlubek also performed vocals during certain periods of the band's formation. [9] By the spring of 1976, the group had settled on a lineup including Hlubek and Holland, bassist Banner Thomas (who joined in 1973), drummer Bruce Crump (who joined in early 1976), third guitarist Duane Roland and vocalist Danny Joe Brown (both of whom joined in 1976). [3] Brown joined from Rum Creek, which featured future Danny Joe Brown Band and Molly Hatchet guitarist Bobby Ingram. [10]
After the release of Molly Hatchet and Flirtin' with Disaster , Brown left Molly Hatchet in 1980 due to problems with diabetes, with Jimmy Farrar taking his place. [11] Beatin' the Odds and Take No Prisoners followed, after which Thomas also left in November 1981 following an argument with Hlubek. [12] He was replaced by Ralph "Riff" West. [13] The following year, Crump moved to Los Angeles, California and was replaced by Barry "B.B." Borden. [14] In May, Brown returned to replace Farrar and the group released No Guts... No Glory in 1983. [15] By 1984, Crump had returned and keyboardist John Galvin – a former member of the Danny Joe Brown Band who contributed keyboard parts to No Guts... No Glory as a guest performer – had joined the band full-time, after Holland grew tired of touring and left the band. [16]
The new two-guitarist lineup released The Deed Is Done in 1984, followed by Double Trouble Live in 1985, before Hlubek left the band at the beginning of 1987 in order to address his ongoing problem with drug addiction. [17] He was replaced by Bobby Ingram, another alumnus of the Danny Joe Brown Band. [10] After releasing and touring in promotion of Lightning Strikes Twice , Molly Hatchet played its last show in July 1990 before the group disbanded. [10] At the time Duane Roland left as last in 1990, he was the owner of the Molly Hatchet name. The agreement in the band had always been that the last man standing got the brand.
Brown and Ingram obtained the name from Roland and management and subsequently rebuilt the group later in the year, touring for another five years with various personnel. [10] In April 1995, Danny Joe Brown was forced to leave Molly Hatchet again due to ongoing health problems. He was replaced by Phil McCormack, who had earlier substituted for Brown during a tour in 1992. [18] The group's new lineup – which also included guitarist Bryan Bassett, bassist Andy McKinney, drummer Mac Crawford and former keyboardist John Galvin – returned to the studio and released Devil's Canyon in 1996. [19] This was followed in 1998 by Silent Reign of Heroes , which also featured contributions from keyboardist Tim Donovan, who had filled in for Galvin during several recent touring cycles. [19] Sean Shannon replaced Crawford in 1999. With the live addition of guitarist Mike Owings in the tour that followed, that was the last line-up of Molly Hatchet to feature three guitars. [20]
After the release of Kingdom of XII in 2000, guitarist Bryan Bassett was replaced by Russ Maxwell. [10] The band recorded the double live album Locked and Loaded before the end of the year, although it was not released until 2003. [21] Further lineup changes followed during the band's touring the following year, as Shannon was replaced in September 2001 by Dale Rock, who then made way for Shawn Beamer the next month. [21] McKinney also left in February 2002 and was replaced by Jerry Scott, shortly before Ingram took a short break from touring after suffering a heart attack, and the band continued with only Maxwell on guitar. [21] Scott was then replaced by Tim Lindsey (a veteran of the scene in Mynd Garden with long time friend Dave Hlubek, Rossington Band, Lynyrd Skynyrd) . [22] Maxwell left the next month, with Jake Rutter taking his place. [22]
In January 2005 founding member Dave Hlubek returned to Molly Hatchet for the first time in 18 years.The guitarist's touring appearances were limited due to his ongoing health issues. During the 2000s and 2010s, many former members of the band died – vocalist Danny Joe Brown on March 10, 2005, due to kidney failure and pneumonia caused by his diabetes, [23] guitarist Duane Roland on June 19, 2006, due to natural causes, [24] bassist Riff West on November 19, 2014, due to health complications caused by a car accident several months earlier, [25] drummer Bruce Crump on March 16, 2015, after a lengthy battle with throat cancer, [14] and bassist Banner Thomas on April 10, 2017, due to a heart attack following a bout of pneumonia. [26]
On September 2, 2017, guitarist Dave Hlubek died of a heart attack. [27] The group continued to perform with just one guitarist, as Ingram stated that he "could never" replace Hlubek. [28] On October 29, 2018, former vocalist Jimmy Farrar died due to complications from congestive heart failure, kidney failure and liver failure. [29] Molly Hatchet continued to tour until Phil McCormack died on April 25, 2019. [30] Jimmy Elkins took his place and was officially announced as the band's new vocalist in October 2019. [31] Steve Holland, the last original member of the group, died on August 2, 2020.
Despite having no original members left, Molly Hatchet continues to perform live as of 2023 and their current lineup features half of the Lightning Strikes Twice –era lineup (keyboardist John Galvin and guitarist Bobby Ingram) plus twenty and more years members drummer Shawn Beamer and bassist Tim Lindsey. Young vocalist Parker Lee replaced Jimmy Elkins earlier in 2023. [32]
Image | Name | Years active | Instruments | Release contributions |
---|---|---|---|---|
John Galvin |
|
| all Molly Hatchet releases from No Guts... No Glory (1983) onwards (except retrospective live releases) | |
Bobby Ingram | 1987–present |
| all Molly Hatchet releases from Lightning Strikes Twice (1989) onwards (except retrospective live releases) | |
Shawn Beamer | 2001–present |
| all Molly Hatchet releases from 25th Anniversary: Best of Re-Recorded (2004) onwards (except Live at Rockpalast 1996) | |
Tim Lindsey | 2003–present |
| all Molly Hatchet releases from Warriors of the Rainbow Bridge (2005) onwards (except Live at Rockpalast 1996) | |
Parker Lee | 2023–present | lead vocals | none |
Image | Name | Years active | Instruments | Release contributions |
---|---|---|---|---|
Dave Hlubek |
|
|
| |
Steve Holland | 1971–1984 (died 2020) | lead and rhythm guitars |
| |
Banner Thomas |
|
|
| |
Bruce Crump |
|
|
| |
Duane Roland | 1976–1990 (died 2006) |
|
| |
Danny Joe Brown |
|
|
| |
Jimmy Farrar |
| lead vocals |
| |
Ralph "Riff" West | 1981–1990 (died 2014) |
| all Molly Hatchet releases from No Guts... No Glory (1983) to Greatest Hits (1990) – two previously unreleased tracks | |
Barry "B.B." Borden | 1982–1984 | drums | No Guts... No Glory (1983) | |
Phil McCormack |
|
| all Molly Hatchet releases from Devil's Canyon (1996) to Live at Rockpalast 1996 (2013) (except retrospective live releases) | |
Bryan Bassett | 1994–2000 |
|
| |
Mac Crawford | 1993–1999 |
|
| |
Andy McKinney | 1995–2000 |
|
| |
Sean Shannon | 1999–2001 |
| Kingdom Of XII (2000) | |
Russ Maxwell | 2000–2004 | lead and rhythm guitars |
| |
Jerry Scott | 2002–2003 |
|
| |
J.J. Strickland | 2003–2004 | bass | 25th Anniversary: Best of Re-Recorded (2004) | |
Jake Rutter | 2004 | lead and rhythm guitars | Live in Hamburg (2005 DVD+CD) | |
Jimmy Elkins | 2019–2023 | lead vocals | Battleground (2019) |
Image | Name | Years active | Instruments | Details |
---|---|---|---|---|
Jai Winding | 1978–1984 (session) | keyboards | Winding performed keyboards on the band's first five studio albums, prior to the arrival of John Galvin. [33] | |
Ricky Medlocke | 1983 (touring substitute) | vocals | Lynyrd Skynyrd and Blackfoot musician filled in exceptionally for Brown after his sudden departure together with Holland and Roland in 1983. | |
Charlie Hargrett | guitars | Also Blackfoot guitarist filled in for one and only performance after the sudden departure of Holland, Roland and Brown in 1983. | ||
Rik Blanz | 1990–1993 | lead and rhythm guitars | ||
Rob Scavetto | 1990–1992 | keyboards | ||
David Feagle | 1990–1991 | drums | ||
Eddie Rio | bass | |||
Rob Sweat | 1991 | |||
Kevin "Sav" Rian | 1991–1993 | |||
Kenny Holton | drums | |||
Erik Lundgren | 1993–1994 | lead and rhythm guitars | ||
Mike Kach | keyboards | |||
Andy Orth | 1994–1995 | |||
Buzzy Meekins | 1995 (died 2015) | bass | ||
Leslie Hawkins | 1996 (touring) | backing vocals | Hawkins and McCoy appear on the record Live At Rockpalast 1996 as female backing vocalists [34] | |
Therisa McCoy | ||||
Tim Donovan | 1997–2002 (session/touring) |
| Donovan regularly filled in for Galvin on tour, and guested on Silent Reign of Heroes and Kingdom of XII . [35] | |
Mike Owings | 1999-2000 (session/touring) | lead and rhythm guitars | Owings was additional live member for the restored "three guitar attack" at the end of the Nineties. | |
Dale Rock | 2001 (touring substitute) | drums | Rock briefly took over from Sean Shannon on drums. | |
Scott Woods | 2002–2003 (touring) |
| Woods carried the torch from Donovan on keyboards duties until 2003 | |
Jeff Ravenscraft | 2003–2004 (touring) | Ravenscraft took over from Woods as touring keyboardist in September 2003, remaining until early 2004. [22] | ||
Gary Corbett | 2004 (touring) | Corbett replaced Ravenscraft in 2004 and left around the same time as guitarist Jake Rutter in September. [22] | ||
Richie "DelFalvo" Del Favero | 2004–2005 (session/touring) |
| Del Favero took over from Corbett in September 2004 and guested on Warriors of the Rainbow Bridge . [36] | |
Jimbo Manion | 2005 (touring substitute) | lead and rhythm guitars | Jimbo Manion was an additional guitarist in 2005, following the impossibility to tour of Dave Hlubek. | |
David "Dino" Ramsey | 2006 (touring substitute) | vocals | David "Dino" Ramsey briefly filled in for singer McCormack who was sick to perform live in 2006. | |
Scott Craig | 2011–2013 (touring substitute) | drums | Craig substituted for Shawn Beamer between 2011 and 2013 after the regular drummer suffered a heart attack. [37] | |
Tony Mikus | 2022 (touring substitute) | vocals | Mikus, from Big Engine, filled in for Jimmy Elkins in 2022. [38] | |
Greg Talley | 2024 (touring substitute) | drums | Talley filled in for Beamer in 2024 US gigs. [39] | |
Morgan Evans | 2024 (touring substitute) | drums | Evans also filled in for Beamer in the 2024 gigs. [40] |
Period | Members | Releases |
---|---|---|
Spring 1976 – May 1980 |
|
|
May 1980 – November 1981 |
|
|
November 1981 – May 1982 |
| none |
May 1982 – 1984 |
| |
1984 – late 1987 |
|
|
Late 1987 – July 1990 |
|
|
Late 1990 – 1991 |
| none |
1991 |
| |
1991–1993 |
| |
1993–1994 |
| |
1994 |
| |
1994–1995 |
| |
1995 |
| |
April 1995 – early 1999 |
|
|
June 1999– late 2000 |
|
|
Late 2000 – September 2001 |
|
|
September – October 2001 |
| none |
October 2001 – February 2002 |
| |
February 2002 – May 2003 |
| |
May 2003 – February 2004 |
|
|
February – March 2004 |
| none |
March – September 2004 |
|
|
September 2004 – January 2005 |
| none |
January 2005 – September 2017 |
|
|
September 2017 – April 2019 |
| none |
April 2019 – April 2023 |
|
|
April 2023 – present |
| none |
Molly Hatchet is the debut studio album by American rock band Molly Hatchet. It was released on September 1, 1978, by Epic Records. The cover is a painting by Frank Frazetta entitled Death Dealer. Starting off both the album itself and the recording career of the band, the first song famously begins with lead singer Danny Joe Brown growling "Hell yeah!"
Flirtin' with Disaster is the second studio album by American rock band Molly Hatchet, released in 1979 by Epic Records. The album was re-issued in 2001 with four bonus tracks. It is their best-selling album.
Beatin' the Odds is the third studio album by American rock band Molly Hatchet, released in 1980 by Epic Records. The album is the first to feature singer Jimmy Farrar, who replaced original singer Danny Joe Brown. A remastered edition of the album was issued in 2008 by Rock Candy Records, with four live bonus tracks and extensive liner notes. The remastering was directed by British producer Jon Astley. The album was also reissued under the SPV/Steamhammer label in 2013 and only included the original tracks.
Molly Hatchet is an American rock band formed by guitarist Dave Hlubek in Jacksonville, Florida, in 1971. They experienced popularity and commercial success during the late 1970s and early to mid-1980s amongst southern rock and hard rock communities and listeners. The band released six studio albums on Epic Records between 1978 and 1984, including the platinum-selling hit records Molly Hatchet (1978), Flirtin' with Disaster (1979), and Beatin' the Odds (1980). They also had charting singles on the US Billboard charts, including "Flirtin' with Disaster", "The Rambler", "Bloody Reunion" and "Satisfied Man". Molly Hatchet has released many more studio albums since their split with Epic Records in 1985, although none have been as successful as their early albums, nor have charted in the United States.
Warriors of the Rainbow Bridge is the eleventh album by American Southern rock band Molly Hatchet, released on May 24, 2005, two months after former singer Danny Joe Brown died from complications of pneumonia. In January 2005, guitarist Bobby Ingram invited Dave Hlubek, one of the original three guitarists, to rejoin Molly Hatchet and in doing so became the only current member who was a part of the original band, and appears on this album.
David Lawrence Hlubek was an American guitarist who was the lead guitarist and founding member of the southern rock band Molly Hatchet.
The Southern Rock Allstars are a band that got its name from the history/lineage of its former members all of whom were connected with Southern rock. Its current lineup consists of former members of The Rossington Band and sidemen of Lynyrd Skynyrd, Marshall Tucker and Jimmy Farrar.
Not be confused with the book of the same name by Rebecca Renner
The Danny Joe Brown Band (DJBB) was founded by lead singer Danny Joe Brown in 1980. Danny Joe Brown had just left the southern rock band Molly Hatchet, which had followed in the footsteps of Lynyrd Skynyrd and Outlaws to achieve wide national success with two multi-platinum albums and international recognition with intensive world tours.
No Guts...No Glory is the fifth studio album by American southern rock band Molly Hatchet, released in 1983. Original vocalist Danny Joe Brown returned for this recording, with a new rhythm section composed of bassist Riff West and drummer Barry Borden. It is Molly Hatchet's only album not to feature an epic, fantasy themed cover. The cover photo for the album was reportedly shot at Six Gun Territory, a now defunct theme park in Silver Springs, Florida.
The Deed Is Done is the sixth studio album by American rock band Molly Hatchet. It was released in 1984 through Epic Records. This is the first Molly Hatchet album with only two guitarists, after Steve Holland had been replaced by ex-Danny Joe Brown Band keyboard player John Galvin and the return of drummer Bruce Crump. It was also the band's last album for 21 years to feature longtime guitarist Dave Hlubek. The sound of the album is quite different from the southern rock of the band's earlier offerings, completing the transition towards more commercial and FM-friendly hard rock. The Deed Is Done is also Molly Hatchet's last studio album released on Epic Records, and their last one to date to enter the Billboard charts. It was reissued in 2013 under the German label SPV/SteamHammer.
Lightning Strikes Twice is the seventh studio album by American southern rock band Molly Hatchet, released in 1989. This was the band's first album not released on Epic Records, and their first one with guitarist Bobby Ingram, replacing founding member Dave Hlubek. Although the album did not enter the Billboard charts, it included their last charting single to date "There Goes the Neighborhood". Lightning Strikes Twice would also be the band's last album before their temporary breakup in 1990 and the last one to feature vocalist Danny Joe Brown, guitarist Duane Roland, bassist Riff West and drummer Bruce Crump.
"Flirtin' with Disaster" is a song by American Southern rock band Molly Hatchet, released in 1979 by Epic Records. Written by three members of the band, it is their most popular song and remained on the US Billboard Hot 100 for 10 weeks, peaking at number 42 in March 1980. It was released on the band's second studio album, Flirtin' with Disaster and is the only single released from the album.
Duane Roland was an American guitarist for the Southern hard rock band Molly Hatchet. He was a member of the band from its founding in the mid-1970s until his departure in 1990. After leaving the band he played with the Southern Rock Allstars and Gator Country, which included many of the founding members of Molly Hatchet.
Double Trouble Live is a double LP live album by American rock group Molly Hatchet, released in 1985. Two previously unreleased songs, "Walk on the Side of the Angels" and "Walk with You" were omitted in the CD edition to fit all the music on a single compact disc. The cover of "Freebird" and "Edge of Sundown" were songs usually performed by lead singer Danny Joe Brown and The Danny Joe Brown Band during his period of absence from Molly Hatchet.
Greatest Hits is a compilation of songs by the American southern rock band Molly Hatchet. The collection was released in 1990. It was their last album released by Epic Records and features guitarist Bobby Ingram on the two newly recorded tracks after the departure of Dave Hlubek in 1987. The album also does not include anything from their latest album at the time Lightning Strikes Twice, which was released in 1989 on Capitol Records. In 2001 Sony Music re-issued the album in an expanded edition with three tracks that were not on the original 12-track collection, along with liner notes from Martin Popoff.
Bryan Bassett is an American guitarist who has played with several notable bands, but is best known as a member of Wild Cherry in the 1970s who had a hit with "Play That Funky Music".
Skinny Molly is an American southern rock band from Nashville, Tennessee, United States.
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