I saw another pretty fun concert.
Molly Hatchet and
Quiet Riot at Express Live in Columbus, Ohio.
Quiet Riot technically only has one classic member: bassist Chuck Wright, who is actually leaving the band soon in which another classic Quiet Riot bassist Rudy Sarzo will be returning.
And unfortunately classic singer Kevin Dubrow has been dead since 2007 and drummer Frankie Banali passed away last year.
Having said that, the band still sounds great.
Rounding out the band are singer Jizzy Pearl, who also sang for Love/Hate, LA Guns and RATT, and has sung for Quiet Riot a few times since Kevin’s passing.
Also, guitarist Alex Grossi has been in the band since the early 2000s and drummer Johnny Kelly, who has played with Type O Negative and Danzig, and who was chosen by Frankie to fill in for him when he couldn’t play due to his cancer treatments.
It was Frankie’s wish that Quiet Riot carry on and they are.
For what it’s worth, even with all the lineup changes, they sound great. Truly.
Even though he is leaving soon, Chuck is a beast on the bass and can play circles around most bassists.
Jizzy can sing these songs very well.
Alex is a very good guitarist and Johnny is a great drummer.
I’ll certainly go see them again once Rudy returns.
Later, Molly Hatchet came on and rocked.
They’re another band like Quiet Riot who have had MANY lineup changes over the decades.
Aside from the singer, most of this lineup has been there quite awhile though.
Unfortunately all the original members are dead.
The guitarist, Bobby Ingram, who has been in the band since 1987, bought the name many years ago and continues to carry it on.
Rounding out the band is singer Jimmy Elkins, who joined two years ago (Edit: Jimmy exited in 2023 and Parker Lee became the new singer), keyboardist John Galvin, who has been in the band from 1984-1990 and then from 1995-now, bassist Tim Lindsey who has been there since 2003, and drummer Shawn Beamer, who has been there since 2001.
Again for what it is, it’s a very good band and they sing and play great.
One fan who was able to get onstage and hold the American Flag with the singer has seen Molly Hatchet 392 times.
Normally I would knock stuff like this because of all the changes, but in this instance, I’m ok with it.
And frankly, this is probably the future for music.
The band name and the songs will sell the tickets, not the members.
That sounds disrespectful and I don’t mean it that way.
But again, this was a fun show.
I enjoyed both bands thoroughly and I would go again.
So if you want to have a good time, go see both of these bands.