Barnoldswick Music & Arts Centre

DANNY BRYANT performs a remembrance concert of the Late Great OTIS RUSH

Mon 29 September 2025 7:00 pm - 11:00 pm
Barnoldswick Music & Arts Centre


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A remembrance gig celebrating the life of the Late Great OTIS RUSH Performed by DANNY BRYANT

One of Danny's biggest influences was the amazing Otis Rush. Otis passed away on 29th September 2018.

Tonight Danny will play tribute to Otis along with fan favourites and songs from his latest album.

Otis Rush Jr. (April 29, 1934 – September 29, 2018) was an American blues singer, guitarist and songwriter who's been long revered as one of the creators of modern Chicago blues and though he was respected and praised, the success he sought eluded him while others profited from what he created and his career never reached the heights that he deserved.

As a performer, Otis was unique. (Everyone called him Otis, or Mr. Rush.) He had an intense and powerful tenor voice that grabbed your attention and he had big hands so he could make unusual chord inversions on the guitar which he said he got from Charles Brown, the jazz blues piano player, an acknowledged influence. Also, he played his guitar upside down and backwards. Albert King, who Otis borrowed licks from, Jimi Hendrix and Eddy "The Chief" Clearwater played the same way though Otis' sound was other worldly. He had the low strings adjusted very low, and the G, B and high E strings adjusted for slightly higher action so that he could curl his left pinky under the low strings and pull them down, sometimes two and three at a time. Music critic Lester Bangs wrote in one of his last articles that it was the sound of "being mugged by an iceberg".

While Muddy Waters and Howlin' Wolf, his predecessors on Chicago's South Side, popularized an amplified update of the bare bones, down home sound of the Mississippi Delta where the sound of the band was the focus, Otis listened to piano and horn players which gave him his unique phrasing. He also loved T-bone Walker. He said T-bone Walker was one of the best guitar players because he was a great rhythm guitarist as well as a great soloist. Otis always felt that if you couldn't play rhythm guitar very well and you were just a soloist, you weren't a complete guitar player. He and his modern variations, along with Magic Sam 's and Buddy Guy's, were more lyrical and more rhythmically complex and are credited with bringing the guitar out front in what came to be known as the West Side sound because it was prevalent in nightclubs on that side of town, influencing a generation of blues and rock musicians including Carlos Santana, Michael Bloomfield, John Mayall, Peter Green, Eric Clapton and Stevie Ray Vaughan, who named his band after Otis' 1958 hit "Double Trouble."

Citing Otis as one of the deepest of deep blues men, Muddy Waters commented to critic and author, Robert Palmer in his book, Deep Blues, "He's so good, man."--

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About Danny

Renowned British guitarist and singer Danny Bryant announces his return to the stages of the UK and Europe in 2025. He will embark on an extensive tour to showcase songs from his latest studio album "Rise" (Jazzhaus Records). Fans can look forward to a blend of virtuosic guitar playing and powerful vocals, which have established Danny Bryant as a standout musician in the blues scene. For the UK's leading music magazine, Classic Rock Magazine, Danny Bryant is hailed as a "National Blues Treasure."

This exceptional guitarist has earned this title through hard work and relentless touring. At just 44 years old, Bryant has made a name for himself in the European blues scene over nearly two decades, performing over 2,500 club and festival shows for his numerous fans. He is considered one of the best in the industry. Danny Bryant's highly praised new studio album "Rise" was recorded in early 2023 at Chapel Studios in the UK and produced by Grammy winner Ian Dowling (known for his work with Adele). Staying true to his roots, Bryant offers an exciting mix of blues, rock, and singer-songwriter styles. However, the production features a slightly more modern sound, making the Brit sound fresher than ever. "My label and I agreed that everyone wanted a slightly more produced, richer-sounding record without neglecting my sound," explains Danny Bryant.