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Luther "Guitar" Johnson
Of
the three blues guitarists answering to the name of Luther Johnson,
this West side-styled veteran is probably the best-known. Adding to the
general confusion surrounding the triumvirate: like Luther "Georgia
Boy" Johnson, "Guitar Junior" spent a lengthy stint in the top-seeded
band of Muddy Waters (1972-1979).
Gospel
and blues intersected in young Luther Johnson's life while he was still
in Mississippi. But after he moved to Chicago in the mid-'50s, blues
was his main passion, working with Ray Scott and Tall Milton Shelton
before taking over the latter's combo in 1962. Magic Sam was a major
stylistic inspiration to Johnson during the mid-'60s (Johnson spent a
couple of years in Sam's band). The West side approach remains integral
to Johnson's sound today, even though he moved to the Boston area
during the early '80s.
Johnson's
1976 debut album, Luther's Blues, was cut during a European tour with
Muddy Waters. By 1980, he was on his own, recording with the Nighthawks
as well as four tracks on Alligator's second series of Living Chicago
Blues anthologies. With his own band, the Magic Rockers, and the
Roomful of Blues horn section, Johnson released Doin' the Sugar Too on
Rooster Blues in 1984. Since 1990, Johnson has been signed to Ron
Levy's Bullseye Blues logo; his three albums for the firm have been
sizzling, soul-tinged blues (with a strong West Side flavor often
slicing through).
-Written
by Bill Dahl
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