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Reverend Gary Davis

Reverend Gary Davis


Reverend Gary Davis, also Blind Gary Davis, (April 30, 1896 – May 5, 1972) was an American blues and gospel singer and guitarist, who was also proficient on the banjo and harmonica. His finger-picking guitar style influenced many other artists and his students in New York included Stefan GrossmanDavid BrombergRoy Book BinderLarry JohnsonWoody MannNick KatzmanDave Van RonkTom Winslow, and Ernie Hawkins.   He has influenced Bob DylanThe Grateful DeadJackson BrowneTownes van ZandtWizz JonesJorma KaukonenKeb’ Mo’OllabelleGodspeed You Black Emperor!, and Resurrection Band.

Gary Davis was born in LaurensSouth Carolina, and was the only one of eight children his mother bore who survived to adulthood. He became blind as an infant. Davis reported that his father was killed in Birmingham, Alabama, when Davis was ten, and Davis later said that he had been told that his father had been shot by the Birmingham High Sheriff. He recalled being poorly treated by his mother and that before his death his father had given him into the care of his paternal grandmother.

He took to the guitar and assumed a unique multi-voice style produced solely with his thumb and index finger, playing not only ragtime and blues tunes, but also traditional and original tunes in four-part harmony.

Bull City Blues, DurhamNorth Carolina

In the mid-1920s, Davis migrated to Durham,North Carolina, a major center for black cultureat the time. There he collaborated with a number of other artists in the Piedmont bluesscene including Blind Boy Fuller and Bull City Red.   In 1935, J. B. Long, a store manager with a reputation for supporting local artists, introduced Davis, Fuller and Red to the American Record Company. The subsequent recording sessions marked the real beginning of Davis’ career. During his time in Durham, Davis converted to Christianity; he would later become ordained as a Baptist minister.   Following his conversion and especially his ordination, Davis began to express a preference for inspirational gospel music.

In the 1940s, the blues scene in Durham began to decline and Davis migrated to New York.[1] In 1951, well before his ‘rediscovery’, Davis’s oral history was recorded by Elizabeth Lyttleton Harold (the wife of Alan Lomax) who transcribed their conversations into a 300+-page typescript.

The folk revival of the 1960s re-invigorated Davis’ career, culminating in a performance at the Newport Folk Festival and the recording by Peter, Paul and Mary of “Samson and Delilah“, also known as “If I Had My Way”, originally a Blind Willie Johnson recording that Davis had popularized.

Davis died in May 1972, from a heart attack in Hammonton, New Jersey.   He is buried in plot 68 of Rockville Cemetery in Lynbrook, Long Island, New York.

 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reverend_Gary_Davis

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