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Skinny Molly : No Good Deed
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Modern southern rock with an edge.
Genre: Rock: Southern Rock
Release Date: 2008
No Good Deed
Skinny Molly
Record Label: Moss Rose Records
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Preview Song Name Time Buy
1. Better Than I Should 3:52 Album Only
2. High Price of Low Livin' 3:55 Album Only
3. Enough of Nothin' 4:02 Album Only
4. Just Me 4:31 Album Only
5. Straight Shooter 2:53 Album Only
6. Whiskey, Cocaine and Blues 3:52 Album Only
7. Me and the Devil Himself 3:04 Album Only
8. Too Much 3:23 Album Only
9. Miss Fortune 3:44 Album Only
preview all songs

Album Notes

Skinny Molly announces Spring European tour 2009
Go to www.myspace.com/skinnymolly for details!

Mike Estes-Lead guitar, Lead vocals Mike’s band, Helen Highwater (named by Lynyrd Skynyrd guitarist Allen Collins) had played just about every club and had opened for almost every national Southern rock and Outlaw country band throughout the Southeast and Midwest for ten years. While in high school, Mike became friends with the guys in the Rossington Collins Band (founded by Skynyrd plane crash survivors) who had decided to do the Lynyrd Skynyrd Tribute Tour in 1987, bringing Helen Highwater on to open some shows for them. In 1992 Mike began going on the road with Skynyrd to write songs for an upcoming album, and signed a publishing deal with Skynyrd guitarist Ed King’s company I Can’t Read Music. He had been writing for six months when he was asked to join the band as guitarist. Mike spent the next three years touring, writing and recording with his favorite band, appearing on the ’94 Capricorn release “Endangered Species” 1995’s live recording, “Southern Knights” and the “100 Minutes with Lynyrd Skynyrd” video. After moving to Tennessee in 1995, Mike co wrote a song with Johnny VanZant and Gary Rossington for Sony Music’s “Hotter Than Asphalt” CD called “White Knuckle Ride” that broke the Billboard charts.
In 2006 the song was used in a CMT original movie called “True Grit: The Junior Johnson Story” as well as in the video game released in conjunction with the Disney/Pixar movie “Cars” also released in 2006. Since leaving Skynyrd, Mike has released two CD’s; Drivin’ Sideways and Brave New South, logged over 200 European dates, and has appeared on many major European TV and radio music shows. Mike has written for and produced songs for artists in the States as well as Europe. In the States, Mike has appeared on HBO, CMT, CNN, MTV, VH-1 and others. He has been profiled in “Guitar Player”, “Guitar”, “Acoustic Musician”, and other major music magazines, and was inducted into the Hollywood Rock Walk of Fame in 1995. Lynyrd Skynyrd was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2006.



Kurt Pietro-Drums Kurt started playing sixteen years ago at his parent’s house, playing along with records that featured his favorite drummers, including Jakson Spires of Blackfoot, Tommy Aldridge, and Tommy Lee of Motley Crue. Kurt had spent six years in the proverbial woodshed when a friend of his neighbors overheard him practicing and asked him if he would like to join a band. Kurt accepted, and spent a few years playing clubs and casinos with the band Crystal, as well as doing studio work around the Marquette, Michigan area. Kurt attended Northern Michigan University where he majored in broadcasting and music. This led Kurt to a gig working in Omni Studios in Nashville, Tennessee, where he met Mike Estes. Mike was in need of someone to overdub a drum part. Kurt mentioned that he played drums. He knocked out the part and is now smashing the skins for Skinny Molly.



Chris Walker was born and raised and resides in England. He had his first contact with a guitar that belonged to his dad, who was also a guitarist. Chris was classically trained on violin as young’un, so this was a natural inclination. "Played well, classical music can reduce a man to tears, but it can't rearrange internal organs like a cranked up electric guitar” is the Walker mantra. He prefers being untrained on guitar to being fully trained on the violin, and was influenced by blues and southern rockers Stevie Ray Vaughn, Jimmy Page, Jeff Beck, Eric Clapton, and Ed King. He has been playing for twenty five years and has been in bands that opened for Saxon, Blur, Mothers Finest, Richard Chapman, Carlos Santana, and dare we say it, Skinny Molly! Chris also builds and modifies his own guitar amplifiers.



Bassist Luke Bradshaw was born in Peoria, Illinois and raised in northern Arkansas. He had a love for music at an early age, but it wasn’t until he turned 15 that he found his love for the bass. Luke was primarily influenced by Leon Wilkeson of Lynyrd Skynyrd and Allen Woody of Gov’t Mule and the Allman Brothers, but has spent a lot of career playing with country and bluegrass legends. He has now found a home for his aggressive, floor stomping style with Skinny Molly. Luke has played with a variety of Artists including American Idol’s Bo Bice, Grand Ole Opry Star George Hamilton IV and Al Perkins (from Emmylou Harris‘s band). He has played upright and electric bass with bluegrass artists Bobby Hicks (Bill Monroe), Paul Brewster (Ricky Skaggs) and was a member of the legendary Jesse McReynolds and the Virginia Boys, with whom he performed on the Grand Ole Opry dozens of times. Bradshaw has played all over the United States including the Ryman Auditorium, the Kentucky Music Hall of Fame, USO shows in Alaska, and world famous Nashville venues The Ernest Tubb Record Shop, and B.B. King’s. “Not very often are you fortunate enough to play with your heroes“, Bradshaw says, “but to play in Skinny Molly with Mike Estes is a great honor for me. I have been a big fan of his work and it’s truly exciting to share the stage with him and do something I enjoy so much.”

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REVIEWS

GRITZ Review
author: Michael Buffalo Smith
                            
For anyone who cries out that Southern Rock is dead, I have two words for your butt....Skinny Molly. Mike Estes ain’t about to let our legacy go away, even if he has to single handedly hold it up to the light. The former Lynyrd Skynyrd guitarist leads the four-man Skinny Molly in a set of absolutely Southern Rockin’ tunes that vacillate between the blues of “Whiskey, Cocaine and Blues” (a personal favorite) to the hard rockin’ “Straight Shooter” and the “Shooter Jennings meets Ronnie Van Zant” sounds of “Me and The Devil Himself,” another instant classic. Skinny Molly is no one trick pony. Besides swampy Southern Rock and blues, they can churn out a country rocker pop song like nobody’s business, as in “Better Than I Should.” Looking for some classic Skynyrd sound? There’s plenty of that peppered throughout the CD, including “High Price of Low Livin,’” a song I believe ol’ Ronnie himself would have loved to sing. With No Good Deed, Skinny Molly stand and deliver the goods in abundance. Dr. Buffalo’s prescription is take one Skinny Molly CD, add one bottle of Jim Beam, one rocking chair, one front porch, one hound dog, one Southern sunset. Add all ingredients together and stir. Now that’s livin.’
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skinny molly
author: john broomhall
                            
this is a super southern rock cd they are a great band with super tracks especially whiskey cocaine and blues and high price low of livin 100% recomended
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skinny molly
author: John Hickey
                            
you must buy this cd the best southern rock record to come out this year not a bad track on this cd
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Skinny Molly
author: iain short
                            
I saw Skinny Molly live at the 'Three Tuns' pub in Gateshead England. One of the best live bands Ive seen, and headed home to try and get a CD. Every track on it is a good one especially 'Whiskey, Cocaine and Blues'. Any Skynyrd fan will enjoy this CD.
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