Who was/is Link Davis ? - CDs, Vinyl LPs, DVD and more

Link Davis

Big Mamou

If the Fifties in America are remembered as a decade of remarkable transformations in popular music, the multiple rebirths of Texan fiddler-saxophonist Link Davis during those turbulent ten years must qualify him for special study. National recognition eluded him, and posterity has not been especially kind to him, but a closer look at his career forces us to consider him in a different light than nearly all of his peers. He began the Fifties as a forward-looking white R&B singer and saxophonist, recording a storming version of Good Rockin' Tonight five years before Elvis Presley's supposedly ground-breaking attempt at the same song. Davis then morphed into a Cajun fiddler, scoring a big regional hit with the ancient-sounding waltz Big Mamou, which (along with Jole Blon a few years earlier) helped introduce America to Cajun music. By mid-decade, when rock 'n' roll came along and forced most of his country music friends into early retirement, Link instead re-emerged as a born-again rocker, cutting some of his most memorable records: Don't Big Shot Me, Trucker From Tennessee, and Sixteen Chicks.

Versatility and adaptability: these words have been employed endlessly by music journalists over the years to try and describe Link Davis. Yet it was not simply a matter of Davis adapting to whatever was popular at the time: great numbers of his peers tried to do the exact same thing, and nearly all of them failed. Badly. What made Link so different? It was partially his environment: Audiences along the Texas/Louisiana Gulf Coast encouraged men like Link to play a musical gumbo and work with different genres of music, as long as they were danceable. It was also partially out of necessity: Davis found his calling as a professional musician early in life, and there was no chance of him ever working some square day job. He had to change with the times, or die trying. But the difference was largely explained just by who Link Davis was – an irascible character who loved drinking, smoking, and having a good time the best way he knew how: playing music.

Most of what has been written about Davis singles out his facility with two wildly different instruments – fiddle and tenor sax – but it is his voice that ultimately separates him from his contemporaries. It was not a country voice, emerging out of the bottom of his raspy throat and gut rather than through his nose. There is an almost breathless urgency to a lot of what Link sings, a phrasing style more patterned after blues shouters like Big Joe Turner or Wynonie Harris (who undoubtedly influenced him) than country or pop singers. It was a voice weak at country ballads, but a slow, bluesy number (like Lonely Heart) could draw out the best of what he had. "If I could put him in one class that was his favorite, it probably would be blues,"his friend and bandmate Clyde Brewer says."That would be his number one thing."

Versatility aside, the broad view of Davis's career invites some frustrating questions.  Why did it take him so long to become established as a bandleader? Although he had led his own bands as early as the late 1930s, he didn't permanently establish himself as a leader until he was almost 40 years old, seemingly content to work as a sideman for most of his early career. This relative anonymity may be one factor why the major record labels – who recorded nearly all of Link's peers in East Texas during the pre-war years – almost completely ignored him during the same period. It was only in 1947 that Link began to be regularly recorded, and even then, it was for the new, barely functional independent label, Imperial.

By any measure, Link Davis should have been as famous as his friends Moon Mullican, Floyd Tillman, and Cliff Bruner. Perhaps his versatility worked against him early in his career as much as it worked for him in later years; sideman status aside, he might have been too unconventional to the world outside East Texas in those early days to attract a major record company. And while Davis's talents were later recognized by a few famous producers – Don Law and 'Pappy' Daily among them – they also stifled and limited him, and none of them ever found the magic formula that could deliver Link a national hit.

The final frustration of his stroke and subsequent death in 1972 was that it robbed Link of the attention he would have undoubtedly received had he lived a few years longer, when a revival of western swing and rockabilly, and wider recognition of the music's pioneers, began to seep into European and American consciousness. He had arrived too late as a bandleader; as a pioneer he had now left too soon.

Bear Family Records collects all of Link Davis's OKeh/Columbia (1952-1954) and Starday (1956-57) recordings together here for the first time, presented in their best sound quality ever. With the exception of Big Mamou, none of these records sold well when new, yet their irrepressible quality ensured that they would not be forgotten. Nor would their creator.

Wills Point

Although he will forever be associated with the Texas Gulf Coast, Lewis Lincoln Davis's origins lie 400 miles to the north, in Sunset, Montague County, Texas, northwest of Fort Worth, and just below the Oklahoma border. He was born there on July 8, 1914, one of eight musical children sired by William and Betty Davis. Some years after this, the family packed up and moved east of Dallas, to the small community of Wills Point (the place traditionally but erroneously cited as Link's place of birth), and it was on a sharecropping farm there that Link spent his formative years. His childhood evolution was typical of the professional string band musician of his generation: the fiddling father, the family band, the house parties, and the inevitable abandonment of farm life for the riskier but far more exciting world of the urban musician.

Link Davis Big Mamou
Read more at: https://www.bear-family.com/davis-link-big-mamou.html
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Copyright © Bear Family Records®. Copying, also of extracts, or any other form of reproduction, including the adaptation into electronic data bases and copying onto any data mediums, in English or in any other language is permissible only and exclusively with the written consent of Bear Family Records® GmbH.

More information about Link Davis on Wikipedia.org

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Laissez Les Bon-Ta-Ru-La (Let The Good Times Roll) (LP & CD, 10inch, 45rpm)
Link Davis: Laissez Les Bon-Ta-Ru-La (Let The Good Times... Art-Nr.: BAF14020

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1-LP (10“ vinyl) with 8-page booklet, 12 tracks (LP) / 26 tracks (CD). Total playing time approx. 28 min. (LP) / 65 min. (CD) Bear Family Records® presents the first high-quality vinyl LP (25 cm) with recordings of the blues shouting...
$29.37 $33.89
Big Mamou (CD)
Link Davis: Big Mamou (CD) Art-Nr.: BCD16523

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1-CD-Album Digipak (4-plated) with 60-page booklet, 34 tracks. Playing time approx. 82 mns. The complete OKeh/Columbia and Starday recordings of this classic Texas singer collected together for the first time, most from the original...
$16.92 $19.18
Gumbo Ya Ya - The Best Of 1948-58 (CD)
Link Davis: Gumbo Ya Ya - The Best Of 1948-58 (CD) Art-Nr.: CDREV252

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(Rev-Ola) 30 tracks
$10.14 $16.92
Big Mamou Boogie - Crazy Cajun Recordings (CD)
Link Davis: Big Mamou Boogie - Crazy Cajun Recordings (CD) Art-Nr.: CDNEST914

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(1999/Crimson) 11 tracks - Originally sealed!
$28.24
Collector Card Vol.1 - Link Davis Gumbo Ya-Ya
Link Davis: Collector Card Vol.1 - Link Davis Gumbo Ya-Ya Art-Nr.: BFCC001

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Collector Card - Sheet Metal 18x18 cm, 98 gram with drillholes perfect for your wall. Bear Family collector's cards are tin signs in postcard or single envelope format with cultural nostalgia motifs from the good old days. These cards...
$7.87