Flirtin' With Disaster

Rate It! Avg: 3.0 (43 ratings)
Flirtin' With Disaster album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 2   Total Length: 11:07

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NOT MOLLY HATCHET

Pissed

So far I haven't found many quality songs on this site.Most sound like bar band recordings. Going back to Napster. This site sucks!

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agreed, this ain't MH

Sequoyah

WTF is this? Sounds like some drunk trying to sound like DJB and not pulling it off.

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Bullshit

EMUSIC-0220264F

Noway that was molly hatchet singing Flirtin' with Disaster

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Bad, Bad, Bad!!!

TexasNative

This is NOT Molly Hatchet!!! From what I listened to, this is a terrible Molly Hatchet wannabe.

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The Worst!!!!

lalarson016

The worst cover singer! Both versions are horrific!

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THIS SITE IS ONE BIG CARD SCAM!!!

n.casto

I HOPE EVERYONE INTO MUSIC WILL SPREAD THE WORD ABOUT THIS HUSTLE eMUSIC IS DOING TO EVERYONE!!!!

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DO NOT DOWNLOAD NOT ORIGINAL SINGER!!!

1nvisiblePrison3r

I'm soooooo p!ssed. Don't get me wrong, it's not horrible, but it's like they replaced Molly Hatchet with a *really* good Molly hatchet tribute band

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Flirtin with Disaster1

aiwiron

That sounds like crap and that is not Danny.

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Sucks

Tmasnight

That can't be Molly I must have listen that song a MILL. And is the WORST!!!!!!!!!!!!

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Flirtin with Disaster

sauss

Non-live version is a disaster!

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They Say All Music Guide

By the time Flirtin’ with Disaster reached stores, the Hatchet were already bona fide forces to be reckoned with on the Southern rock circuit, with a fan base nearly on par with contemporaries like Skynyrd and the Allmans (who they covered on their eponymous debut LP). With a Frank Frazetta album cover that clearly sent a message that the band means business — the business of hard partying and equally as hard rocking — Flirtin’ with Disaster is a 40-minute tour de force spearheaded by a triple guitar attack and the raspy thrillbilly growl of Danny Joe Brown. The album slowly builds from “Whiskey Man” into the classic soul rocker “It’s All over All Now” and peaks with the brilliant title track — largely considered by many to be Hatchet’s finest moment committed to analog tape. It’s a hard driving rock record, plain and simple with no frills or lofty concepts. Just ten songs designed to keep rocking until the sun comes up over the Florida swamplands. And it does the job better than most of its contemporaries. [The 2001 'Expanded Edition' includes four bonus tracks of alternate and live takes.] – Rob Theakston

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