Louisiana music legends Bobby Rush and

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Dr. John, two of the most colorful figures in the blues, have known each other for more than 50 years. They met as young men in their 20s on the early 1960s R&B circuit and have remained good friends ever since.
“When they’re telling stories it’s hilarious because they’re talking about bluesmen so ugly they had to turn their backs to the audience to play guitar,” says mutual friend
Carl Gustafson of the Southern California band
Blinddog Smokin’. “And in some cases running from the same women.”
Yet despite their decades-long relationship, Rush and Dr. John had never recorded together until this year’s “Another Murder in New Orleans.” A collaboration between Rush and acclaimed Funk band Blinddog Smokin’, the track was cut in New Orleans in 2012 around Mardi Gras. The setting inspired Gustafson to ask if Rush’s old friend might want to guest on the song, which the 73-year-old Rock and Roll Hall of Famer — whose real name is Malcolm John “Mac” Rebennack Jr. — eagerly did.
“We come up as kids together, man, but I never even thought about recording together before,” says Rush, a chitlin’ circuit legend who is pushing 80-years-old. “How great is it that this late in the game we can do something together while we can still talk about it and smile about it and laugh about it? It came to pass, and I’m so proud I did this with Dr. John.”
The song that finally brought these two masters of the blues together is the first single from
Decisions, the first album teaming of Rush and Blinddog Smokin’, due in stores April 15, 2014. As with “Another Murder In New Orleans,”
Decisions is also the culmination of a long friendship rooted in the blues, this one between Rush and Gustafson, who both became obsessed with roots music early in life.
Rush, born Emmett Ellis, Jr. in Homer, Louisiana, started playing in his early teens, changing his name out of respect for his preacher father and fronting, for a time, a band that featured a young
