Jackie Davis - Easy Does It (1963)

  • 25 May, 19:50
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Artist:
Title: Easy Does It
Year Of Release: 1963
Label: Rhino, Warner Records
Genre: Jazz, Jazz-Soul
Quality: Flac (tracks)
Total Time: 33:30
Total Size: 196 Mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. 'Round Midnight (Album Version) 3:18
02. Blues in the Night (My Mama Done Tol' Me) (Album Version) 2:53
03. Sleepy Time Gal (Album Version) 2:09
04. Five Minutes More (Album Version) 2:46
05. Lonely Wine (Album Version) 3:07
06. Night Train (Album Version) 2:40
07. If I Could Be with You (Album Version) 3:10
08. Midnight Sun (Album Version) 3:11
09. In the Wee Small Hours of the Morning (Album Version) 2:25
10. Easy Does It (Album Version) 2:41
11. One for My Baby (And One More for the Road) (Album Version) 2:47
12. Saint Louis Blues (Album Version) 2:26

One of the earliest jazz organists, Jackie Davis emerged not long after Wild Bill Davis, around the same time as Milt Buckner and Bill Doggett. Davis was born in Jacksonville, FL, on December 13, 1920, and began playing piano around town before he was even ten. He soon joined a band and a 19-piece orchestra, and went on to study music at Florida A&M. He experimented with pipe organ, but didn't make the switch until the advent of the Hammond, which responded much more quickly to the player's hands, making it far more suitable for jazz. Early on, Davis was a follower of Wild Bill Davis, and like Bill Doggett, he gained valuable experience playing for a little over a year in Louis Jordan's band. Davis began leading his own sessions in the mid-'50s, and spent 16 years recording numerous albums for Capitol, debuting with Hi-Fi Hammond. Most of his work fell into the realm of small-group soul-jazz, often with covers of pop standards, though there were occasional changes in instrumentation (Jackie Davis Meets the Trombones, The Hammond Organ Plus Voices) and stylistic detours (Hammond Gone Cha-Cha, plus some later gospel sessions). Davis returned with a new self-titled album for EMI in 1980, plus an appearance in the comedy Caddyshack. Davis continued to make his home in Jacksonville, where he died on November 2, 1999, following complications from a stroke.~Steve Huey