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Larry Davis - Sooner Or Later (1992)

Larry Davis - Sooner Or Later (1992)

BAND/ARTIST: Larry Davis

Larry Davis - Sooner Or Later (1992)


Tracklist:

01. How Could You Do It To Me (4:46)
02. I'm Workin On It (3:00)
03. Penitentiary Blues (4:11)
04. You'll need another favor (4:23)
05. Help The Poor (3:55)
06. Letter From My Darling (3:54)
07. Goin' Out West (Parts I & 2) (5:58)
08. 102nd St. Blues (4:23)
09. How Long (3:06)
10. Little Bluebird (5:50)
11. Little Rock (2:45)

Bass – George Journigan
Drums – Curtis Steele
Guitar – Thomas Bingham
Organ – Ron Levy
Piano – James Rudy
Producer – Ron Levy
Tenor Saxophone – Andrew Love
Trumpet, Trombone – Wayne Jackson
Vocals, Guitar – Larry Davis

Anyone who associates "Texas Flood" only with Stevie Ray Vaughan has never auditioned Larry Davis' version. Davis debuted on vinyl in 1958 with the song, his superlative Duke Records original remaining definitive to this day despite Vaughan's impassioned revival many years down the road.

Davis grew up in Little Rock, AR, giving up the drums to play bass. Forging an intermittent partnership with guitarist Fenton Robinson during the mid-'50s, the pair signed with Don Robey's Duke label on the recommendation of Bobby Bland. Three Davis 45s resulted, including "Texas Flood" and "Angels in Houston," before Robey cut Davis loose. From there, Davis was forced to make the most of limited opportunities in the studio. He lived in St. Louis for a spell and took up the guitar under Albert King's tutelage while playing bass in King's band.

Funny Stuff A handful of singles for Virgo and Kent and a serious 1972 motorcycle accident that temporarily paralyzed Davis' left side preceded an impressive 1982 album for Rooster Blues, Funny Stuff, produced by Gateway City mainstay Oliver Sain. But follow-up options remained hard to come by: few blues fans could find a copy of the guitarist's 1987 Pulsar LP I Ain't Beggin' Nobody.
Sooner or Later Finally, in 1992, Ron Levy's Bulleye Blues logo issued a first-class Davis set, Sooner or Later, that skillfully showcased his rich, booming vocals and concise, Albert King-influenced guitar. Unfortunately, it came later rather than sooner: Davis died of cancer in the spring of 1994.


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