From Blues To Gospel [Remaster]Rev. Gary Davis
Release Date: 02/24/2004
Original Release:
1971
# of Discs:
1
J&R Item # 95499_CD
UPC # 826663400724
Label: Biograph
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Disc: 1
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Performer: Rev. Gary Davis
Producer: Arnold S. Caplin Distributor: Sony Music Distribution ( Notes: FROM BLUES TO GOSPEL collects the last recordings Reverend Gary Davis made before his death in 1972. Solo performer: Reverend Gary Davis (vocals, 12-string guitar). Recorded on March 17, 1971. Originally released on Biograph (BCD 123). His most Rev. Gary Davis was an active musician in addition to being a guitar instructor during his later years. From Blues to Gospel (1993) contains a bakers' dozen of selections featuring his inimitable performance style on an assortment of gospel and secular blues tunes. By the time of these 1971 recordings -- a year prior to his passing -- Davis' legend had long-been established. Likewise, his influence had become far reaching and was being felt by a concurrent generation of artists. Electric rockers the Grateful Dead and Hot Tuna, and acoustic troubadours David Bromberg and Stefan Grossman were bringing both his material and variations on Davis' delivery to audiences that otherwise may not have been exposed to him. These studio tunes showcase Davis accompanying himself on the distinct 12-string 'Bozo' guitar custom-made by Serbian-born master luthier, Bozo Podunavac. The instrument's liberated tone is aptly matched by the equally loose and limber execution. Even through his advanced years, Davis' finger-picking remained clean, with the pure and direct timbre that had become his trademark. If anything, age seems to have actually enhanced his adept execution and ability to melodically augment beyond his somewhat limited Piedmont blues origins and into an improvisational space. Much of the repertoire on From Blues to Gospel can be considered a seminal contribution to Davis' catalog, including "Sally, Where'd You Get Your Whiskey?" (aka "Sally, Where'd You Get Your Liquor?") "Cocaine Blues," "Samson and Delilah," "Children of Zion," and "You'd Better Get Right." At the age of 76, his ardent 'fire and brimstone' vocals are countered by an equally aggressive and fervent prowess. Unlike many of Davis' contemporaries, there are far too few documents such as this available, increasing the inherent value as all dimensions of enthusiast will be well-served by this collection. ~ Lindsay Planer
Uncut (p.122) - 3 stars out of 5 -- "[T]his 13-track marvel recalls an era when ragtime, minstrel ballads and street-corner blues were passed on for posterity."
Blind blues guitarist Reverend Gary Davis is one of the most influential bluesmen in terms of the evolution of folk and rock fingerpicking. A key member of the Piedmont blues movement of the 1920s and '30s, Davis put his own upbeat yet simplistic spin on the rural picking style that marked that scene's sound. Davis moved to New York City in the 1940s where he recorded for the famed Folkways label, eventually becoming a darling of the folk revival that would explode in the coming decades. Everyone from Bob Dylan and Dave Van Ronk to Taj Mahal, Jackson Browne, and Bob Weir of the Grateful Dead cite Davis as an influence.
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