James Davis

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Co-Pilot 00:00 Tools
Better Than You Are 00:00 Tools
On Me 00:00 Tools
Can't Love Me 00:00 Tools
Kansas City 00:00 Tools
Praise 00:00 Tools
Beveled 00:00 Tools
All Er Nuthin' 00:00 Tools
Old Country Rock #1 00:00 Tools
Wish You Bye 00:00 Tools
Bucket Head 00:00 Tools
Blue Monday 00:00 Tools
Doodle Bee 00:00 Tools
Instrumental #1 00:00 Tools
Instrumental #4 00:00 Tools
James Boogie 00:00 Tools
Good Morning Little School Girl 00:00 Tools
Who Stole The Lock Off the Henhouse Door 00:00 Tools
I'm Gonna' Tell It On You 00:00 Tools
AIN'T IT GREAT 00:00 Tools
Fred, You Ought To Be Dead! 00:00 Tools
Christmas Time 00:00 Tools
Zombie (The Cranberries Cover) 00:00 Tools
Georgia Drumbeat 00:00 Tools
Flou 00:00 Tools
Southern Breeze 00:00 Tools
Chains Around My Heart 00:00 Tools
Bodies 00:00 Tools
I'm Gonna Tell It On You 00:00 Tools
Who Stole The Lock Off The Henhouse Door? 00:00 Tools
Your Turn To Cry 00:00 Tools
Flight Path 00:00 Tools
Old Country Book 00:00 Tools
James' Boogie 00:00 Tools
Bill Cosby 00:00 Tools
Lingering 00:00 Tools
Home Turf 00:00 Tools
Ghettotech - Edit 00:00 Tools
Come To The Rock N Roll 00:00 Tools
Inward Gaze - Part 1 00:00 Tools
Turning Point 00:00 Tools
Fred, You Ought to Be Dead 00:00 Tools
Bad Dream 00:00 Tools
To Love 00:00 Tools
Obama's Gone (Jfl 2017) 00:00 Tools
Old Country Rock 00:00 Tools
The Boy 00:00 Tools
Token Black Friend 00:00 Tools
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A jazzy sound sharing the inspiration and spiritual stories of when he was growing up, using a blend of popular music styles. James Davis (1931-2007) was from Perry, Georgia. Mid-Georgia remains a vast untapped area of undocumented musical traditions. His music stemed from the fife and drum music, which is among the oldest African-American musical traditions. His father played the snare drum and his uncle played the bass drum. They used to go to the crossroads store on Saturday nights and play until Sunday morning, drawing crowds all night long. This music is simply called “Drumbeat.” When I first met James in 96 I saw simple flyers that stated “Drumbeat at the Turning Point.” This is where James played every Saturday night for many years. James played the old melodies of the fife with his electric guitar while his partner performed the old rhythms on a trap set. Folklorist George Mitchell first met James Davis in the 70s. Blues scholar Axel Küstner visited James in the 90s and exclaimed to me, “James Davis is killer! Man, this guy is as deep and anything that ever came out of Mississippi!” I soon made my way to his gig in Warner Robbins, Georgia. Vendors were frying fish outside, I met James in the parking lot, he was a hulking giant, intimidating, but when I introduced myself and we got to talk, he was soft-spoken gentleman. I asked about recording that night and he just smiled and said that was a good idea. James once told the eminent British photographer Val Wilmer: “The people around her call it the old country drumbeat. They like that old country-style playing. A lot of them say they’d rather hear my playing than hear them piccolos. I don’t know what the drum do to people but look like peoples just enjoy drums. Somehow the drum just draws peoples - it always did an I reckon it always will…Just’ bout all the records now that come out, you got some drums in there, it’s coming from the spirit. I believe they sang blues before they sang spirituals, ‘cause most times somebody strikes a blues, they can’t even play a church song. Put it this way - the Good Book tell you if you’re going to be a devil, be a devil. You can’t serve two Gods at one time, so that leaves a gap. You either got to serve God or serve the Devil I know who I be serving, it be the Devil-God. The Devil we say. But I look at it on the other hand and see there be a time for all things, a time to pray, a time to sing, a time to do anything we want to do. He only asks you for one day, we got six days to do what we want to do. I don’t play none on Sunday, not no blues. You know, a lot of the spirituals got the blues in it. Some songs, the guitar player be playing the blues right along in that spiritual. The blues bad? Not for me, because what you like, you like. People say that, but that be a lot of them been too old for anything else! When he say that, he done everything he could do!” -Timothy Duffy MMRF President Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.