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3rd Degree

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (55 ratings)
3rd Degree album cover
01
Mojo Boogie
4:53 $0.99
02
Love, Life and Money
5:20 $0.99
03
Evil On My Mind
2:20 $0.99
04
See See Baby
3:09 $0.99
05
Tin Pan Alley
5:52 $0.99
06
I'm Good
3:50 $0.99
07
Third Degree
6:35 $0.99
08
Shake Your Moneymaker
2:37 $0.99
09
Bad Girl Blues
4:34 $0.99
10
Broke and Lonely
4:51 $0.99
Album Information

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 44:01

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Johnny Winter at his best

szabolcs.nagy

This album made me fall in love with the slide steel guitar. The acoustic tracks are the best that I ever heard.

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The Best Winter on eMusic

BigD-Bluez

All 3 Alligator releases deserve five stars but this would be my vote for best of the bunch - if all you've tried is the recycled schlock, get yourself some serious blues goodness here - it's one of his best albums.

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They Say All Music Guide

After two stellar sets for the independent blues label Alligator Records, Johnny Winter wisely changes things up on his third Alligator LP. He brings in Dr. John to play organ on “Love, Life and Money” and, more prominently, piano on “Tin Pan Alley.” He plays a National steel guitar on “Bad Girl Blues” (a blues about lesbians!) and uses his slide with another National on “Evil on My Mind.” And, most significant, he reunites with his old rhythm section of bass player Tommy Shannon and drummer Uncle John “Red” Turner (with whom he played from the late ‘60s to 1970) on “See See Baby,” “Shake Your Moneymaker,” and “Broke and Lonely.” Particularly on those three tracks, he sounds like the blues-rock singer/guitarist who garnered so much attention when he first emerged from Texas as an “overnight” national star in 1969. Those days have passed, but Winter has matured into a dependable blues musician able to shine in a variety of styles and bring out the best in his fellow musicians. – William Ruhlmann

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