Blues Legend Who Inspired Huge Acts Dead at 84

Otis Rush made it big with 1956 hit "I Can't Quit You Baby"
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Sep 30, 2018 11:10 AM CDT

Legendary Chicago blues guitarist Otis Rush, whose passionate, jazz-tinged music influenced artists from Carlos Santana and Eric Clapton to the rock band Led Zeppelin, died Saturday at the age of 84, his longtime manager says, per the AP. Rush succumbed to complications from a stroke he suffered in 2003, manager Rick Bates says. Born in Philadelphia, Mississippi, Rush settled in Chicago as an adult and began playing the local clubs, wearing a cowboy hat and sometimes strumming his guitar upside down for effect. He catapulted to international fame in 1956 with his first recording on Cobra Records of "I Can't Quit You Baby," which reached No. 6 on the Billboard R&B charts. He was a key architect of the Chicago "West Side Sound" in the 1950s and 1960s, which modernized traditional blues to introduce more of a jazzy, amplified sound.

"He was one of the last great blues guitar heroes. He was an electric God," says Gregg Parker, CEO and a founder of the Chicago Blues Museum. Rush loved to play to live audiences, from small clubs on the West Side of Chicago to sold out venues in Europe and Japan. "He was king of the hill in Chicago from the late 1950s into the 1970s and even the 80s as a live artist," says Bates. But he got less national and international attention than some other blues musicians because he wasn't a big promoter. Rush won a Grammy for Best Traditional Blues Recording in 1999 for "Any Place I'm Going," and he was inducted into the Blues Foundation Hall of Fame in 1984. He is survived by his wife Masaki Rush, eight children, and numerous grandchildren and great grandchildren, according to a family statement.

(More obituary stories.)

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