Though their music often shines a light on the struggles of life, bluesmen are not particularly known for their social activism. Sure, there are specific songs about the injustices of racism and poverty, but the days when the Newport Folk Festival of โ60s brought together the likes of Mississippi John Hurt, Reverend Gary Davis, Bob Dylan et al., and the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, protesting everything from Jim Crow to the Vietnam War, seem like a distant memory. The artists at this yearโs Richmond Folk Festival in Richmond, Virginia, for example, while admirably diverse, were all about having an anodyne, nonconfrontational good time, with nary an echo of Woody Guthrieโs or Pete Seegerโs rebellious spirits, even as Proud Boys plague our streets.
But in Memphis, the tradition of blending folk, blues, and activism lives on in the annual Acoustic Sunday Live concerts produced by Bruce and Barbara Newman, and this yearโs iteration will be no different. True to form, it will feature a wide swath of artists from the folk and blues communities, all to benefit Protect Our Aquifer, a local grassroots organization devoted to reminding the powers that be โ loudly โ that our source of clean drinking water is not up for sale or exploitation. Lending their voices to the cause this year will be award winning blues singer Shemekia Copeland, celebrated singer/songwriter James McMurtry, folk-Americana duo Alice Howe & Freebo, and Memphisโ own Eric Lewis and Jimmy Davis. But the most politically-engaged music of the night may well come from that venerable high priest of the blues, Bobby Rush, who will appear in tandem with Kenny Wayne Shepherd.

Rush, speaking from his home in Jackson, Mississippi, wants folks to know that he is one bluesman with a mind for justice and for the environment. While he has plenty of good-time music under his belt, and will no doubt offer some up at this coming Sundayโs concert, heโs about more than that.
His adopted hometown of Jackson, of course, has had its share of clean water woes, with the Associated Press reporting last year that โtens of thousands of people [were left] without safe drinking water for weeks in 2021 and 2022.โ And those problems have lingered on through today. As Rush puts it, โWeโre still in a crisis, but weโve got a new man now.โ
That would be newly elected mayor John Horhn, who Mississippi Today calls โa seasoned moderate who promises to restore basic services, tackle blight and bring back economic development.โ Rush sees signs of hope in Horhnโs election. โHeโs my personal friend, and Iโm involved with him highly on a town hall meeting [where] Iโm one of the speakers, talking about the water situation. It ainโt good, but itโs better than it was. Hopefully, in the next six months itโll be completed and up running with 100 percent clear water and good water.โ
Rushโs proclivity to face political issues head-on is also apparent in his collaboration with Shepherd, with whom he recorded the album Young Fashioned Ways, released this April. (It recently earned the pair a Grammy nomination in the Best Traditional Blues Album category.) Some have considered their partnership politically fraught due to Shepherdโs โcancellationโ in 2021, with the Blues Foundation rescinding its nomination of the singer/guitarist for Best Blues/Rock Artist that year due to โrepresentations of the Confederate flag on Shepherdโs โGeneral Leeโ car, guitars, and elsewhere,โ as the foundation noted in a press release at the time, adding that they had โalso asked Ken Shepherd, father of Kenny Wayne Shepherd, to step down as a member of its Board of Directorsโ over the matter.
Shepherd, for his part, apologized and noted that the car in question, a replica of the one used in The Dukes of Hazzard, had been in storage for years, with the offending flag painted over. He added at the time that heโs always opposed racism. And his current collaboration with Rush would seem to bear that out.
โOne of the reasons I wanted to do this with Kenny Wayne Shepherd was because I wanted to make a statement to the world,โ says Rush, โthat we as a people can get along together and do things together โ whether youโre Black or white or brown or whatever. Weโre both from Louisiana, a white guy and a Black guy, and the music ainโt got no color. Iโm making a statement without making a statement. You follow me?โ
When reporters asked him about Shepherd at the time of the controversy, Rush says, he simply replied, โI know the man, and the man I know ainโt the man that youโre speaking of.โ Noting that heโs known Shepherd since the guitarist was in his late teens, Rush adds that he has โa great knowledge of the blues. Now you might say, โWell, damn, he plays good to be a white guy. Let me tell you something: He plays good to be a person, to be a God-child, because he understands some things about the blues.โ
That understanding is so deep that theyโre both looking at keeping the partnership going. โIโm letting a little rabbit out of the hat,โ Rush says. โNow, I havenโt told this to anyone, but we are talking now about doing another album.โ
That would make sense: With Rush singing and blowing harp over Shepherdโs gritty guitar grooves, Young Fashioned Ways reveals an undeniable chemistry between them. And it confronts the travails of history and race head-on at points, as with Rushโs song โ40 Acres (How Long?),โ which deals with the U.S. governmentโs promised allotment to freed slaves that somehow never materialized. โIโm talkinโ โbout my 40 acres and my mule,โ Rush sings. โGranddaddy died waiting/Grandmama died waiting too/Martin Luther King, he died waiting/Tell me, what about, what about me and you?โ Given Acoustic Sunday Liveโs tradition of troubadours who hold a mirror up to our society, Rush and Shepherd couldnโt be more appropriate as guests on its stage.ย
Acoustic Sunday Live takes place at 7 p.m. on Sunday, December 7th, at First Congregational Church, 1000 Cooper Street. For tickets and details, visit acousticsundaylive.com.
