There will never be another like Otis Rush, he plays from his deep deep soul and every note he plays leaves a tingle in your soul, the blues at its pinnacle very best, and the voice , wow , amazing. A great band beside him.There is no other but the great Otis Rush. Thank you for this great music Otis.
@@iket.9930 Oh Please Muddy Waters, Jeff Beck, Albert King and Stevie Ray Vaughan. Are the 4 best Guitar Players to ever pick one up. So you need to get a CLUE.
1.) Tops 01:48 2.) I Wonder Why (Will My Man Be Home Tonight 06:32 3.) Lonely Man 13:49 4.) Gambler's Blues 18:55 5.) Natural Bal 28:11 6.) Right Place, Wrong Time 34:00 7.) Mean Old World 40:35 8.) You Don't Love Me 46:17 9.) Crosscut Saw (with Eric Clapton) 51:35 10.) Double Trouble (with Eric Clapton)59:03 11.) All Your Love (I Miss Loving) (with Eric Clapton) 01:04:45 12.) Every Day I Have The Blues (with Eric Clapton and Luther Allison) 01:12:55 13.) If I Had Any Sense, I'd Go Back Home
A legend of the Blues, Otis Rush at his best, the guitar cries the blues, every note he hits has a meaning. Brilliant. Never will there be anyone again like this giant of the Blues. Thanks for the upload .
Merci pour le commentaire. J'ai eu la chance de voir Otis Rush en concert gratuit à Toulon vers 1996/2000 je me souviens plus exactement... Très bons souvenirs
@@turkeeg7644 You'd have a hard time jamming on Anthony Palmer's guitar - he's self-taught, and no-one told him when you get to the B string you tune it to the fourth fret of the G string, so he tuned it to the fifth fret like all the others. That means his guitar is tuned (from lowest string) E, A, D, G, C, F! He did a track with Eddie Lusk called Professor's Boogie which is worth a listen. It's a two-chord shuffle, but grooves like mad, with great playing from both men. There were also some videos of him playing with the band of a flowing-haired Japanese looking jazz influenced guitarist which were great, but I don't know the guy's name and haven't found the videos since. I you ever spot them, let me know!
He’s been covering Otis’ songs for years. It’s different playing them in front of him. Also, he was still drinking at this stage and was a bag of nerves everywhere he went. Can’t blame him, Otis is a hero!!!
Casino Montreux, July 10, 1986 Otis Rush (vocals, guitar) Professor Eddie Lusk (vocals, keyboards) Anthony Palmer (guitar) Fred Barnes (bass) Eddie Turner (drums) Special guest artists: Eric Clapton (guitar, vocals), Luther Allison (guitar, vocals). 1 Tops 2 I Wonder Why (Will My Man Be Home Tonight 3 Lonely Man 4 Gambler's Blues 5 Natural Bal 6 Right Place, Wrong Time 7 Mean Old World 8 You Don't Love Me 9 Crosscut Saw (with Eric Clapton) 10 Double Trouble (with Eric Clapton) 11 All Your Love (I Miss Loving) (with Eric Clapton) 12 Every Day I Have The Blues (with Eric Clapton and Luther Allison) 13 If I Had Any Sense, I'd Go Back Home
Hey, is there something in pulling strings, instead of pushing strings, in these upside-down guitar players like Otis and Albert King? I think they have something in common in that tone. What say others? Tom
+tariksba And then Luther came on stage and blew Eric away. Wonder why the uploader cut that out. I have the complete show on DVD. Luther played and left Eric stunned.... Eric is a VERY good guitar player, knows what he does, but to my opnion lacks the real blues "feel" that masters like Otis Rush, Luther Allison, Buddy Guy, Albert Freddie and BB King. Luther Johnson, and many more black blues guitarists have/had. Must be in their genes, haha.
+jeannot dujardin That's a pity, because there are 15 minutes lacking, tracks 12 and 13 that mrjohn1964 has provided here in the tracklist. See if you can get it elsewhere, because Luther really hit it. See if you can get it here: www.montreuxjazzshop.com/product_info.php?info=p92_otis-rush---friends-live-at-montreux-1986.html Good luck.