Sunday, 6 July 2025

Hank Davis born 6 July 1941

Hank Davis (born July 6, 1941) is a Rockabilly and Country singer / songwriter who has recorded since the 1950’s. He is a reissue producer and compiler also a professor of psychology and author. 

As any other teenager born and brought up in New York, Henry        “ Hank”  Davis grew up listening o the standard music that was regularly played on the radio back in the mid-fifties, but he soon learned the way to escape the mainstream by listening to the Country and Rhythm & Blues stations. Discovering not long after all the music that was coming out of Memphis through the Sun label, Hank attended some of Alan Freed’s Rock’n’Roll shows in New York, and armed with a cheap guitar he had bought from Sears, started playing his favourite Carl Perkins, Johnny Cash or Billy lee Riley songs with some fellow schoolmates. 

The power of music from Memphis was contagious. "Sun Records were changing my life and, in turn, I brought that energy to the lives of my friends. I went to summer camp around 1957 and brought a bunch of my Sun 45s with me. 'Ubangi Stomp;' 'Rock & Roll Ruby;' 'Folsom Prison Blues;' 'Blue Suede Shoes;' 'Trouble Bound.' Every day after lunch I'd listen to them and before long I had my whole bunk listening with me. My parents brought up my guitar on visiting day and several bunkmates and I started singing these songs. The music moved even closer to the center of my life. I'd be swimming in the lake and 'Folsom Prison Blues' would be going through my head. I'd be standing in left field waiting to catch a fly ball and 'Rock & Roll Ruby' was with me. 

In early 1958 he and his first band Hank And The Electras recorded some raw demos that attracted the attention of Dauphin Records. The boys were taken into the studio to re-cut a couple of Davis’ originals. At the same time Hank kept sharing around his songs to other companies and Wizz records offered him a deal of his own, which resulted in a single in 1959 titled “I want You To Be My Baby”. When Dauphin released the record a few weeks later, the band was already history. 

                                   

Hank’s solo record sold moderately in the New York area and he was prompted to cut a follow up in a busy session including “One Way Track” and “Real Score”. However, Jack Waltzer, owner of Wizz Record changed his initial plan and left the masters to Stag Records. A Chicago based company. The single was released in May 1960 and didn’t sell enough to secure another release. 

Of course, this was not the end of Hank’s musical career. He kept quite active during the first half of the 60’s by way of different projects that would leave behind a vast collection of recordings, although only a few came to light through formal record releases. Without a hit record to his name, Hank has recorded throughout a six decade period. An on-line discography lists well over 200 recordings, appearing almost randomly on numerous compilation CDs, LPs and singles. Some of this music is quite collectable and all of it is interesting. It's what the critics today call 'authentic music': honest and underproduced. 

Music has always been his passion and went from playing and recording it when a teenager, to writing about it later on. He has been writing magazine articles and album liner notes for a long time. In an interview with Eden Music Hank said “Writing about ’50s music isn’t time travel to me. My musical taste, both as a performer and a journalist, is largely based in ’50s music. My record collection is strongly rooted in the ’50s. It isn’t so much about going back in time as it is digging into what I care most about and wanting to share it.” 

Man of many faces Hank also found time to complete his studies of psychology. His education includes attending Columbia University, B.A., 1963; Boston University, M.A., 1965 and University of Maryland, Ph.D., later moving to Canada in the 70’s after teaching for 3 years at California State University. Davis has remained in Canada contributing professional duties as Psychology professor and researcher with his profound love for everything of the American R&B music. It’s a tireless interest that has produced not only tons of new songs through the years but also extensive liner notes written to accompany reissues by his original hero’s music.

He now lives in rural Ontario Canada, where he is Professor Emeritus of Psychology at the University of Guelph. He has written books on animal cognition and evolutionary psychology, including his most recent, the controversial Caveman Logic. 

(Edited from Eden Music. Bear Family, Carlos A.del Bosque liner notes &Columbia College Today)

3 comments:

boppinbob said...

A big thank you goes to Quot for suggesting today’s birthday singer / songwriter & professor!

For “Hank Davis – One Way Track (2012 Bear Family)” go here:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/MNrFzoNv

1 One Way Track
2 There Is No Right Way
3 Rock With Me Baby
4 Move On Down The Line
5 Lift Up Your Hands
6 I Just Don't Feel Like Dancing
7 Dinosaur Girl
8 Trying To Get To You
9 Got My Mojo Working
10 Nothing Means Nothing
11 Crazy Living
12 Afraid To Try (1961)
13 Crying In My Beer
14 Early In The Morning
15 There Goes The Guy
16 Low Down Moaning
17 I Want You To Know
18 Bearly Able
19 Rock In The Woods
20 Be Strong
21 Go On And Go
22 I Don't Care Who Knows
23 I Never Meant To Say Goodbye
24 Station Break (with Rusty & Doug)
25 Salamay
26 This Town
27 Real Soon
28 Please Don't Steal My Truck
29 Lonely Road
30 Afraid To Try (1974)
31 Dark Was The Night
32 Down The Line
33 The Extra Man
34 I Will Trust In The Lord
35 I Can't Believe In You
36 Bad Move Baby
37 A Minute To Run
38 Peace And Contentment

This gem sounds as though it was recorded in Memphis by Sam Phillips but in fact it was mostly recorded in New York or Ontario, Canada by the author himself. Hank Davis became infatuated with Sun Records in the ‘50s listening to the Alan Freed show on the radio and his own take occupies a pretty unique space between Sun’s country and rockabilly artists. With its emphasis on striking melody, swaggering rhythms and slapback vocal treatment, Davis provided some fantastic chapters in the beginnings of rock and roll. And as his career progressed, it delved into more bluesy territory.
There’s no doubt that growing up in New York City would have given Davis access to a broader range of popular music than many of his Memphis peers and it shows in Davis’s own music. Songs like the title track and ‘There Is No Right Way” portray an artist ahead of his time in the synthesis of what come to be regarded as authentic styles of early popular music.
Covering 38 tracks and 89 minutes on one CD (how do they do that?) and contains duets with legendary steel guitarist Winnie Winston and unissued Hank & Carolee recordings. One Way Track is a comprehensive overview of a lost treasure. As Bear Family Records themselves state, “This one will surprise hardcore ‘50s collectors.”

Martin Jones, Rhythms magazine. Available on the usual streamers @ 192

Lester said...

Much appreciated, Bob.

D said...

nice add, thanks BB