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Guy Davis: Butt Naked Free
Guy Davis,
the winner of the 1999 Keeping the Blues Alive W.C. Handy award, released his
album
Butt Naked Free in
March 2000 on Red House Records.
Levon Helm of The Band plays mandolin and drums on it and
he has other special guests involved on the project like
Tom "T-Bone" Wolk and producer John Platania (Van Morrison).
Updating the rural blues tradition for the modern era, Guy Davis was among the most prominent ambassadors of
African-American art and culture of his generation, additionally winning great acclaim for his work in the theater.
The son of the noted actors, directors and activists Ossie Davis and Ruby Dee, he was born in New York City on
May 12, 1952; though raised in the city, Davis was frequently regaled with stories of Southern country life as a
child, and over time became so enamored of the music of Blind Willie McTell, Skip James, Mississippi John Hurt
and others that he taught himself guitar. As a 13-year-old experiencing his first Buddy Guy concert, Davis' own
fate as a bluesman was sealed, especially after he learned his distinctive fingerpicking style from a nine-fingered
guitarist he met on a train traveling from Boston to New York some years later.
In 1978, Davis recorded his debut LP Dreams About Life, produced for the Folkways label with the assistance of
the legendary Moses Asch; around the same time he also began pursuing a career as an actor, landing a recurring
role on the daytime soap One Life to Live and also appearing in the 1984 hip-hop film Beat Street.
Long seeking
to combine his shared love of music and acting, in 1991 Davis finally found a project that fulfilled all of his
ambitions -- Mulebone, the Broadway production of a Zora Neale Hurston and Langston Hughes collaboration
which included a score by Taj Mahal. Two years later, Davis earned rave reviews for his work in the title role of
the off-Broadway production Robert Johnson: Trick the Devil, with his portrayal later winning the Blues
Foundation's W.C. Handy "Keeping the Blues Alive" Award.
In 1994, Davis wrote and starred in the one-man show In Bed with the Blues: The Adventures of Fishy Waters,
another blues-based off-Broadway drama which played to strong critical notice. A year later, he collaborated with
his parents on Two Hah Hahs and a Homeboy, which combined original material with African-American folklore
and history. Around the same time, he also composed the music for the PBS series The American Promise; his
score for an earlier telefilm, To Be a Man, won an Emmy. During the fall of 1995, Davis returned to writing and
performing in the acoustic country-blues tradition with renewed force, issuing the live LP Stomp Down Rider on
the Red House label; a year later, he returned with Call Down the Thunder. You Don't Know My Mind followed
in 1998.
-- Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
Tracks
- Talkin' 'Bout Wings 'N' Brew
- Waiting On The Cards To Fall
- Let Me Stay Awhile
- Writing Paper Blues
- Sometimes I Wish...
- High Flying Rocket
- Never Met No Woman Treats Me Like You Do
- Sugarbelle Blue
- Meet Me Where The River Turns
- My Rambling Ways
- Come On Sally Hitch A Ride
- Ain't No Bluesman
- The Place Where I Come From (Butt Naked Free)
- Raining In My Soul
Guy Davis - Butt Naked Free - 2000 - Red House Records RHR142
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