Artist's albums
Super Hits
1998 · compilation
Greatest Hits
1990 · compilation
Lightning Strikes Twice
1989 · album
The Deed Is Done
1985 · album
Double Trouble-Live
1985 · album
Setlist: The Very Best Of Molly Hatchet LIVE
1985 · compilation
No Guts, No Glory
1983 · album
Take No Prisoners
1981 · album
Beatin' The Odds
1980 · album
Louisville 79 (live)
1979 · album
Flirtin' With Disaster
1979 · album
Molly Hatchet
1978 · album
Layla (Instrumental)
2023 · single
Battleground (Live)
2019 · album
Devil's Canyon (Live)
2019 · single
Whiskey Man (Live)
2019 · single
Live At Rockpalast 1996 (Live)
2013 · album
Greatest Hits
2010 · compilation
Fly On Wings of Angels - Somer's Song - Instrumental
2010 · single
Southern Rock Masters (Deluxe Digital Version)
2008 · album
Flirtin' With Disaster - Live
2007 · album
Flirtin' With Disaster
2007 · single
Free Bird
2007 · single
The Essential Molly Hatchet
2003 · compilation
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Biography
Named after a legendary Southern prostitute who allegedly beheaded and mutilated her clients, Jacksonville's Molly Hatchet melded loud, hard-rock boogie with guitar jam-oriented Southern rock. Formed in 1971, the group's original lineup featured three guitarists -- Dave Hlubek, Steve Holland, and Duane Roland -- plus vocalist Danny Joe Brown, bassist Banner Thomas, and drummer Bruce Crump. They recorded a self-titled debut album in 1978, which quickly went platinum; the follow-up, Flirtin' with Disaster, was even more successful, selling over two million copies. Brown left the group in 1980 after the constant touring became too tiresome; he was replaced by Jimmy Farrar for Beatin' the Odds, but Farrar's voice was less immediately identifiable, and Molly Hatchet's commercial appeal began a slow decline. The band experimented with horns on Take No Prisoners, but Farrar left for a solo career soon afterward. Brown rejoined the band in 1982, but the ensuing album, No Guts...No Glory, flopped, and guitarist Hlubek insisted on revamping Molly Hatchet's sound. After The Deed Is Done, a straightforward pop/rock album, the group took some time off in 1985 while its Double Trouble Live album, a collection of some of its best-known songs, was released. Molly Hatchet returned in 1989 without Hlubek for an album of straight, polished AOR, Lightning Strikes Twice. Not even the group's fans bought the record, and Molly Hatchet disbanded shortly afterward. They reunited in the mid-'90s as an active touring outfit, releasing Devil's Canyon, their first record since Lightning Strikes Twice, in 1996. Continuing to recapture the style of their glory days, Silent Reign of Heroes followed in 1998, and Kingdom of XII appeared in early 2001, the year after guitarist Bobby Ingram -- who had joined the group in 1987 -- assumed legal ownership of the "Molly Hatchet" trade name. A slew of live recordings from a group now undergoing significant changes from its original lineup appeared during the next few years, and the studio recording Warriors of the Rainbow Bridge was released in 2005, the same year that guitarist Hlubek rejoined the outfit after nearly two decades. Their 13th album, Justice, appeared in 2010. However, these post-millennial years also saw many of Molly Hatchet's early members pass away: Danny Joe Brown in 2005, Duane Roland in 2006, Bruce Crump in 2015, and Banner Thomas in 2017, the same year that also saw the passing of band co-founder Dave Hlubek. Steve Holland, the final surviving member of the original lineup, passed on August 2, 2020 at the age of 66. ~ Steve Huey, Rovi