Down to Earth is the debut album by the American musician Willie Cobbs, released 1994. It is dedicated to his daughter, LaTasha. The album was nominated for a W. C. Handy Award for "Traditional Blues Album".
Produced by Cobbs, Jim O'Neal, and Patty Johnson, the album was recorded at the Rooster Blues studio, in Clarksdale, Mississippi. Cobbs worked on the songs for more than 10 years, composing them when he felt he had something to say rather than in scheduled writing sessions or under deadline. He thought that the lyrics told a story about the past three decades of his life. "You Don't Love Me" is a rerecorded version of Cobbs's most famous song, to which he added new lyrics. He was backed by members of O. V. Wright's old band, including L.C. Luckett and Johnny Rawls, who together cowrote four of the songs.
The Chicago Tribune said that "Cobbs faithfully reprises his best-known composition, its familiar loping bass line and Cobbs's high-pitched vocal still packing a wallop." The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette stated that "Cobbs's vocals are gritty and soulful, even when he moves into the upper registers".
The Penguin Guide to Blues Recordings labeled Down to Earth "an uneasy blend of downhome blues and retro soul."