ALBUMLife's Better With Sunshine - SingleBrendan Clemente, G. Love & Special Sauce & Johnny Cosmic
Albums by G. Love & Special Sauce
ALBUMPhiladelphia MississippiG. Love & Special Sauce
ALBUMComing Back Home for ChristmasG. Love & Special Sauce
ALBUMThe JuiceG. Love & Special Sauce
ALBUMComing Home For ChristmasG. Love & Special Sauce
ALBUMLove Saves the DayG. Love & Special Sauce
ALBUMSugarG. Love & Special Sauce
ALBUMLive At Austin City Limits Music Festival 2008: G. Love & Special Sauce - EPG. Love & Special Sauce
ALBUMSuperhero BrotherG. Love & Special Sauce
ALBUMRidin' HighG. Love & Special Sauce
ALBUMElectric MileG. Love & Special Sauce
G. Love & Special Sauce's Popular Music Videos
Muse (feat. Citizen Cope)
G. Love & Special Sauce
New York City (feat. Lucinda Williams)
G. Love & Special Sauce
Diggin' Roots (feat. Ron Artis II)
G. Love & Special Sauce
She's the Rock
G. Love & Special Sauce
Go Crazy (feat. Keb' Mo')
G. Love & Special Sauce
The Juice (feat. Marcus King)
G. Love & Special Sauce
Mississippi (Acoustic)
G. Love & Special Sauce
Shake Your Hair
G. Love & Special Sauce
Baby's Got Sauce
G. Love & Special Sauce
Soulbque (feat. Roosevelt Collier)
G. Love & Special Sauce
Artist Playlists
G. Love & Special Sauce Essentials
An easy-drinking cocktail of blues, soul, and rock.
G. Love & Special Sauce: Deep Cuts
The good-time trio discover new ways to keep it positive.
Artist Biography
G. Love & Special Sauce are one of those rare bands that truly own their sound. While the early ’90s boasted no shortage of idiosyncratic artists smashing up hip-hop with college rock, none sounded anything like the blues-obsessed junkyard racket concocted by the trio of Garrett Dutton (a.k.a. G. Love), Jeffrey Clemens, and Jim Prescott. Coming together in 1992 and releasing their self-titled debut two years later, the Philly act dropped a string of sloppy, funky hits like “Cold Beverage” and “Rodeo Clowns” that have one foot planted in the alt-rock ’90s and the other in a Southern juke joint in the ’30s. With the band’s activity slowing down in the 2000s, Dutton stuck with the G. Love moniker for solo records that approached roots music with a more measured though no less infectious tone. The original trio got back to business beginning with 2014’s Sugar. Since then, G. Love & Special Sauce have consistently demonstrated their chemistry to be unique while also teaming up with collaborators (including celebrated bluesman Keb’ Mo’, a coproducer of 2020’s The Juice) who have helped to draw new clangs out of their lovable clatter.