I’m Your Hoochie Coochie Man

Greatly Appreciated

I’M YOUR HOOCHIE COOCHIE MAN
 
 
“Hoochie Coochie Man”  (originally titled “I’m Your Hoochie Cooche Man”) is a blues standard written by Willie Dixon and first recorded by Muddy Waters in 1954.  The song references hoodoo folk magic elements and makes novel use of a stop-time musical arrangement.  It became one of Waters’ most popular and identifiable songs and helped secure Dixon’s role as Chess Records’ chief songwriter.  The song is a classic of Chicago blues and one of Waters’ first recordings with a full backing band.  Dixon’s lyrics build on Waters’ earlier use of braggadocio and themes of fortune and sex appeal.  The stop-time riff was “soon absorbed into the lingua franca of blues, R&B, jazz, and rock and roll”, according to musicologist Robert Palmer, and is used in several popular songs.  When Bo Diddley adapted it for “I’m a Man”, it became one of the most recognizable musical phrases in blues.  (More from Wikipedia)
 
 

Rollin’ Stone by Muddy Waters is a bridge from the raw blues of Robert Johnson directly to rock and roll; while it is basically a straight blues song, there are startling changes in the beat and cadences over the course of Rollin’ Stone.  Within the blues world, it is a direct antecedent to Muddy Waters1954 recording of the Willie Dixon song “I’m Your Hoochie Coochie Man” (Steppenwolf included “Hoochie Coochie Man” on their 1968 debut album Steppenwolf, among numerous other covers by various rock musicians), Bo Diddley’s I’m a Man (1955), and Waters’ answer “Mannish Boy” (also in 1955).  I suppose that Bo and Muddy had a pretty good rivalry going back then, but on several occasions, I saw a performance of “I’m a Man” by Muddy Waters in later life on a series of films on TV called Living Legends of the Blues – that rendition even leaves the cover of I’m a Man by the Yardbirds in the dust.

 
(March 2014/1)
 
Last edited: March 22, 2021