From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1979 studio album by Molly Hatchet
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.
The cover is a painting by Frank Frazetta titled "Dark Kingdom."
The Globe and Mail wrote that "Molly Hatchet is little more than just another in a too-long line of senseless and unimaginative southern boogie bands, rehashing party-boogie licks and singing the joys of cheap booze and even cheaper women."[ 5]
The Rolling Stone Album Guide deemed the title track "an obvious Skynyrd rip ... [that] possesses a certain rough charm."[ 4]
Title Writer(s) 1. "Whiskey Man" (Danny Joe Brown , Bruce Crump , Dave Hlubek , Steve Holland) 3:38 2. "It's All Over Now " (Bobby Womack , Shirley Jean Womack) 3:40 3. "One Man's Pleasure" (Brown, Hlubek, Duane Roland ) 3:24 4. "Jukin' City" (Brown, Hlubek, Holland) 3:46 5. "Boogie No More" (Brown, Crump, Hlubek, Holland, Roland, Banner Thomas) 6:08 6. "Flirtin' with Disaster " (Brown, Hlubek, Thomas) 5:00 7. "Good Rockin'" (Brown, Crump, Hlubek, Holland, Roland, Thomas) 3:17 8. "Gunsmoke" (Crump, Roland) 3:11 9. "Long Time" (Brown, Hlubek, Holland) 3:19 10. "Let the Good Times Roll" (Brown, Hlubek, Holland) 2:56 Total length: 38:17
Title Writer(s) 11. "Silver and Sorrow" (demo) (Brown, Crump, Hlubek, Holland, Roland, Thomas) 3:36 12. ""Flirtin' with Disaster" (live from Jacksonville, FL in 1980) 3:36 13. "One Man's Pleasure" (live from Jacksonville, FL in 1980) 3:16 14. "Cross Road Blues " (live from Jacksonville, FL in 1980) (Robert Johnson ) 4:13 Total length: 55:51
Molly Hatchet
Additional musicians
Production
Tom Werman – producer
Gary Ladinsky – engineer, mixing
Bill Vermillion, Cary Pritkin – assistant engineers
George Marino – mastering at Sterling Sound , New York
Pat Armstrong – executive producer, direction
Country
Organization
Year
Sales
USA
RIAA
1986
2× Platinum (+ 2,000,000)[ 9]
Canada
CRIA
1982
Gold (+ 50,000)[ 10]
^ Theakstone, Rob. "Molly Hatchet - Flirtin' with Disaster review" . AllMusic . Rovi Corporation . Retrieved July 2, 2011 .
^ Christgau, Robert (1981). "Consumer Guide '70s: M" . Christgau's Record Guide: Rock Albums of the Seventies . Ticknor & Fields . ISBN 089919026X . Retrieved March 8, 2019 – via robertchristgau.com.
^ Popoff, Martin (October 2003). The Collector's Guide to Heavy Metal: Volume 1: The Seventies . Burlington, Ontario , Canada : Collector's Guide Publishing . p. 186. ISBN 978-1894959025 .
^ a b The Rolling Stone Album Guide . Random House. 1992. p. 482.
^ Niester, Alan (27 Oct 1979). "Flirtin' with Disaster Molly Hatchet". The Globe and Mail . p. F5.
^ "Top Albums/CDs - Volume 32, No. 13, December 22, 1979" . Library and Archives Canada . December 22, 1979. Retrieved January 20, 2017 .
^ "Molly Hatchet Chart History (Billboard 200)" . Billboard . Retrieved October 27, 2021.
^ "Top Billboard 200 Albums – Year-End 1980" . Billboard . Retrieved October 27, 2021 .
^ "RIAA Database: Search for Molly Hatchet" . Recording Industry Association of America . Retrieved January 20, 2017 .
^ "Gold Platinum Database - Artist: Molly Hatchet" . Music Canada . Retrieved January 20, 2017 .
John Galvin
Bobby Ingram
Shawn Beamer
Tim Lindsey
Parker Lee
Dave Hlubek
Duane Roland
Steve Holland
Bruce Crump
Banner Thomas
Danny Joe Brown
Jimmy Farrar
Riff West
B.B. Borden
Rob Sweat
Rik Blanz
Eddie Rio
David Feagle
Rob Scavetto
Kevin Rian
Kenny Holton
Erik Lundgren
Mac Crawford
Mike Kach
Bryan Bassett
Andy Orth
Buzzy Meekins
Andy McKinney
Phil McCormack
Mike Owings
Sean Shannon
Russ Maxwell
Dale Rock
Jerry Scott
J.J. Strickland
Jake Rutter
Jimmy Elkins
Studio albums Cover albums Other albums Singles Related