They're Red Hot

"They're Red Hot" is a song written and performed by Delta blues musician Robert Johnson.[1] The song was recorded on November 27, 1936, in an improvised studio in Gunter Hotel, San Antonio, Texas. Vocalion Records issued it on a 78 rpm record, with "Come On in My Kitchen" as the second side, in 1937.[1]

"They're Red Hot"
Original 78 record label
Single by Robert Johnson
ReleasedJuly 1937 (1937-07)
RecordedNovember 27, 1936
StudioGunter Hotel, San Antonio, Texas, U.S.
GenreBlues, hokum
Length2:58
LabelVocalion
Songwriter(s)Robert Johnson
Producer(s)Don Law

Music historian Ted Gioia describes "They're Red Hot" as:

[one] of his best dance numbers ... evoking the pitches of street vendors, [a] look backward to the world of medicine shows and itinerant merchants ... This is the most lighthearted interlude in all of Johnson's oeuvre, opening up a different perspective on this supposedly devil-haunted soul.[2]

Red Hot Chili Peppers version

Red Hot Chili Peppers recorded the song for their 1991 album Blood Sugar Sex Magik.[3] A reviewer in Far Out describes it as a "joke song":

It’s the same kind of offbeat and lascivious goofiness that made the Chili Peppers the Chili Peppers, and the fact that the band’s name is partially in the song title certainly helps solidify the connection. [It is] silly, simple, and a wonderfully wacky to end Blood Sugar Sex Magik.[3]

References

  1. LaVere, Stephen (1990). The Complete Recordings (Box set booklet). Robert Johnson. New York City: Columbia Records. p. 46. OCLC 24547399. C2K 46222.
  2. Gioia, Ted (2008). Delta Blues (Norton Paperback 2009 ed.). New York City: W. W. Norton. p. 179. ISBN 978-0-393-33750-1.
  3. Golsen, Tyler. "Revisit the moment Red Hot Chili Peppers took on a blues classic". Far Out. Retrieved May 24, 2023.
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