
Molly Hatchet don’t get no respect, and to the extent that most people remember them at all, it’s for “Flirtin’ with Disaster,” a mad and power-chord crazy gallop towards self-destruction that deservedly stands as a classic of post-Skynyrd Southern rock. And that post-Skynyrd tells you everything you need to know. Southern rock was rapidly un-Southerning itself, and “Flirtin’ with Disaster” is the proof. (By 1981, Molly Hatchet were playing straight-ahead hard rock.) Not that it saved Molly Hatchet from being branded as a second-rate Lynyrd Skynyrd, Jacksonville late-comers aping their hometown betters.
But this is unfair, and Molly Hatchet’s eponymous 1978 debut is the proof. It’s an unapologetic Southern Rock album, and no wonder. Danny Joe Brown may sound too much like Ronnie Van Zant for his own good, but that “Hell yeah!” he opens the album with is almost as iconic (to fans anyway) as Van Zant’s “Turn it up!” And just like Jacksonville’s Finest, Molly Hatchet had themselves a three-guitar army, even if nobody is going to say they were capable of the heights of Rossington, Collins, King, or later Gaines. Still, they had their moments—check out “Boogie No More” on 1979’s Flirtin’ with Disaster. It’s deja vu all over again, a chicken-fried guitar rave-up by three guys you’ll need to consult the liner notes to name.
Molly Hatchet is an essential Southern Rock album for a couple of reasons, but the main one is that the band can do a variety of things and do them well. I’ve never heard any stories about them cutting their bones in a suffocatingly hot shack by an alligator-infested swamp with Danny Joe putting a gun to the drummer’s head as a kindly request to play a song for the twentieth time, but at their best they’re tight as Van Zant on a whisky tear, and sound just as inclined to break said whisky bottle over your head. At their best, these unreconstituted rednecks sound like a bar brawl in progress.


Nashville, TN | Ernest Tubb Record Shop Prepares for a Comeback: Revived Lower Broadway landmark to celebrate grand reopening. After a few years dormant, Lower Broadway institution Ernest Tubb Record Shop is set to make a grand return on Thursday, Nov. 13. The shop founded by the late country star opened at a different site downtown in 1947, moved to 417 Broadway in 1951 and closed in 2022 after the building changed hands a couple of times in successive years. It also historically served as the broadcast site for live performances on the Midnite Jamboree radio show (which eventually moved out to the Music Valley area near the Grand Ole Opry House). …The ground floor aims to be much like other honky-tonks on Broadway, with live music on two stages. On the second floor is the record store, intended to re-create
Ludlow, MA | Raspberries Records Taps into a Vinyl Revival: As he was explaining why vinyl has been staging a dramatic comeback over the past decade, Bob Roccanti stopped, reached into a box, and pulled out a Stevie Wonder album, circa 1972. “Look at this … you buy this, you’ve got some artwork,” he said as he showed the cover. “And there’s lyrics, inside you’ve got some more things …a lot of these record albums tell a story. “It’s a lot warmer than this,” he went on, holding up his cell phone and opining that this is just one reason why some Baby Boomers are rebuilding the record collections that filled their dorm rooms in the ’60s, ’70s, and ’80s and also why their children and even grandchildren are embracing vinyl—although Taylor Swift is probably the biggest reason there. All this also explains Raspberries Records, 



The band, with some major financial backing from Casablanca Records mogul Neil Bogart, had developed one of the most elaborate stage shows in rock, a fantasia of smoke, magic, and mirrors that led one wag to suggest that the band might be better off staying home and sending its props on the road. One gimmick involved the band appearing magically on stage one by one in puffs of smoke, to be introduced by the face on the giant Angel logo—which none other than Ian MacKaye pointed out to me is ambigrammatic, meaning it reads the same when turned upside down as when viewed normally—that served as the band’s backdrop.


The purported scarcity of the originals corralled here, everything initially issued on 45s from ’64-’75 either by Atlantic and its subsidiaries Atco and Cotillion or Warner Brothers and its sub-label Loma, offers a fine angle of presentation. However, the secret to any various-artist comp, and especially one devoted to a genre so deeply tied to the emotional, is not rarity but listenablity, though the opportunity to hear these selections on vinyl is an unequivocal plus.
Chicago, IL | Chicago’s Miyagi Records broken into again: ‘Can’t catch a break.’ Hundreds of records were stolen from the Washington Park store. Miyagi Records has been broken into for a second time. The Chicago record shop shared the news on Instagram Stories last Thursday, November 6th, revealing that “a few hundred 45s and 100-plus albums” were stolen. Owners have asked for anyone with information to come forward. “If you are, or are friends with any shops in the city, we’d appreciate any help in spreading the word,” the post read. “Can’t catch a break.” It’s the second time Miyagi Records has been broken into this year. In May, thieves stole five boxes of records and the cash register during a break-in. However, the Washington Park store confirmed that the records were later returned. Read
New Orleans, LA | Record Raid Expands with Louisiana Vintage Festival: Music and vintage clothing enthusiasts will converge at the House of Blues on Nov. 15 for the Louisiana Vintage Festival Record Raid, a large-scale marketplace 





Bridport, UK | Clocktower Records helping Jamaica after hurricane Melissa: A reggae enthusiast in Bridport is selling records to support those affected by hurricane Melissa in Jamaica. Music lover Roy Gregory, who runs Clocktower Records on St Michael’s Trading Estate, has been quick to support people who have recently had their homes, businesses and livelihoods completely destroyed. The island was battered by the category five hurricane, one of the worst to hit the island ever, which swept the region on October 28. The disaster killed at least 28 people in Jamaica and more in Haiti and other affected regions. To give back, staff have set up a display of reggae records, with half of the proceeds of the sales being donated to the Jamaican government’s official relief fund, to help them start to
Midlands, UK | ‘Nostalgic’ West Midlands music shop aims to bring the ‘cool’ factor back: The vinyl-only store will be paradise for anyone wanting to scratch that musical itch. A new record store has opened on the Knowle High Street. He said his first memory was of his dad buying a Queen album when he was the age of two. And now former radio DJ John Ellis, who also booked festivals and managed labels, is continuing his life of music. Slow Century Records opens today, (Saturday, November 8) a physical place to ‘hang out’ after starting online over the pandemic. Vinyl-only to begin with, the shop in Knowle will be musical paradise for anyone who shares John’s passion. A mental health nurse for 25 years, John, from Shirley, wants people to leave happy and aims to bring the cool factor back to record shops. Speaking to BirminghamLive, he said: “This is a great place to hang out and talk to people who know what they’re talking about. “Record shops used to be cool and 










































