Get Down To The Nitty Gritty

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Get Down To The Nitty Gritty album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK // LIVE

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 59:22

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Michael Azerrad

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eMusic editor-in-chief Michael Azerrad is the author of Come As You Are: The Story of Nirvana (Doubleday, 1993), which remains the definitive Nirvana biography,...more »

04.22.11
One of the last live sets that this Chicago bluesman would ever put to tape.
2007 | Label: Last Call Records / Believe Digital

"A bedroom without a woman," declares Luther "Snakeboy" Johnson, "is just like a heart that don't have no beat." Man, that's one thing about the blues — it doesn't mince words. I'll admit I was drawn to this album because I just had to check out anything by someone named "Snakeboy," and I was not disappointed. This is for fans of the skeletal, trancey blues of Junior Kimbrough, even if it's a little faster, fancier and funkier.

On the Chicago-style Get Down to the Nitty Gritty, Mr. Johnson — who was a mainstay of Muddy Waters 'mid-'60s band and passed away in 1976, the year this live date in Rochester, NY, was recorded — plays standards like "Got My Mojo Working" and "Hoochie Coochie Man" with the deep soul they require. It's hard to think of a more aptly named album. And the groove this deft band lays down is deep — the drummer plays so far behind the beat, it sounds like he showed up after the gig was over. What makes a groove anyway? I suppose someone could analyze it with a computer and figure out what makes a great one — or they could just pull… read more »

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Very Enjoyable

rtimm42

I was very pleased with this "discovery." I hadn't heard anything from this artist before and I was very surprised. A solid Album.

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good rowdy jukejoint fun

mr. mark

Nothing earth shaking, but good rowdy fun straight from the southside dives. One of Muddy's men who died too young, the Snakeboy leads a solid band thru some of Muddy's hits and a few orginals. Good energy, OK vocals. Also known as "Georgia Boy" Johnson, he led the Waters band on LP's on Document and Spivey labels in the late 60's.

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They Say All Music Guide

Culled from a radio broadcast made for a Rochester, NY radio station in 1976, Get Down to the Nitty Gritty is a nifty set of hard-edged Chicago blues. Luther Johnson pays homage to his mentor and employer, Muddy Waters, throughout the album, playing classics like “Hoochie Coochie Man” and originals in the same vein. Although the sound quality of the recording is poor — there are dropouts and tape hiss all over the place — the performance is stellar. Johnson sings with passion and his guitar solos are blistering. Get Down to the Nitty Gritty is a rough gem that is worthwhile to any fan of Johnson or Muddy Waters. – Thom Owens