Published on May 12, 2004
Lineup changes in any band are funny things, no matter what the
circumstances are. Sometimes, the change is so organic that the
listener would be hard-pressed to know the difference. Other times,
the change is so obvious that one has to wonder whether they’re
listening to the same band.
Molly Hatchet’s first documented line-up change couldn’t have
happened at a worse time. They were riding high on the successes of
their first two albums when singer Danny Joe Brown left for a solo
career. In came Jimmy Farrar, who added a touch of blue-eyed soul
to the Southern rock core of Molly Hatchet.
It was a daring experiment, admittedly, but their third album,
Beatin’ The Odds, is a definite step backwards. With many
solid moments to its credit, a good portion of the Southern twang
is removed, leaving Molly Hatchet as a band searching for a
genre.
Admittedly, long-time fans will argue that Molly Hatchet was
unfairly pigeon-holed as a Southern rock band a la Lynyrd Skynyrd,
and that they really were a rock band at heart. This may be true,
as tracks such as “The Rambler” and “Sailor” suggest. Also, one has
to admit that Farrar is not the sole reason that this album is
different. True, his vocal style is different than the
rough-and-tumble style of Brown’s, and that Farrar seemed to almost
add a layer of gloss to his vocals at times.
Yet the combination of a new vocalist and a shift in musical
styles from the previous albums does leave
Beatin’ The Odds pretty much without a musical road map, and
the results turn out to be spotty (though the high points are
definitely worth the effort). The overall sound is a cross between
Street Survivors-era Skynyrd and Johnny Van Zant-era
Skynyrd.
Tracks like “Few And Far Between” do suggest that this new
partnership in Molly Hatchet could work well. The guitar interplay
of Duane Roland, Dave Hlubek and Steve Holland was still quite
tasty, and there was enough Southern funk in this one to keep
things very interesting. Likewise, the ballad style of “The
Rambler” is both charming and intriguing, making one wonder exactly
where the song is headed and keeping you locked in throughout the
journey.
Yet one can’t ignore the missteps on this disc. The title track
is overly simplistic, and sounds like it was thrown on the disc to
try and pad it out a bit. This is most definitely a song which
needed a couple more coats of paint before it would have been ready
for prime-time. Likewise, “Poison Pen” doesn’t develop into
anything special like it seemed it would at the start, and if any
track called for the use of harmony vocals, this would have been
the one. Let’s not even get into the half-hearted blues of
“Penthouse Pauper.”
Possibly the highlight of this disc, aside from “The Rambler,”
would be “Dead And Gone,” a track which does successfully merge the
band’s Southern roots with a more contemporary rock sound and
creates both a powerful rock track and a poignant anti-drug
song.
Beatin’ The Odds is undoubtedly a transition album, and some
lenience does have to be granted to Molly Hatchet as they tried to
right their ship after losing Brown’s talents. But while this one
has its moments, it does leave open the question of what could have
been.