Artist's albums
The Bassist ~ Homage to Diversity
2001 · album
Fauré: Orchestral Works
1995 · album
Tenderness
1993 · album
One For Frederick
1990 · album
Divine Gemini
1989 · album
Live at the Elvehjem Art Museum
1986 · album
F.O.A
2022 · single
Chester Williams
2022 · single
Mo Black
2022 · single
A Big Bag
2021 · single
Ball Like I Never
2020 · single
Preserved
2019 · album
The Muses for Richard Davis
2015 · album
Found Out
2012 · single
Cold Hard Facts
2007 · single
El Silencio
1967 · album
Heavy Sounds
1968 · album
Similar artists
Sam Rivers
Artist
Clifford Jordan
Artist
Woody Shaw
Artist
Ken McIntyre
Artist
Harold Land
Artist
Jackie McLean
Artist
Arthur Blythe
Artist
Dewey Redman
Artist
Booker Ervin
Artist
Elvin Jones
Artist
Walt Dickerson
Artist
Jimmy Heath
Artist
Lucky Thompson
Artist
Clifford Jordan Quartet
Artist
Jaki Byard
Artist
Biography
A superb bass technician who doesn't have as extensive a recorded legacy as expected, Richard Davis has a wonderful tone, is excellent with either the bow or fingers, and stands out in any situation. He has been a remarkable free, bebop, and hard bop player, served in world-class symphony orchestras, backed vocalists, and engaged in stunning duets with fellow bassists. He does any and everything well in terms of bass playing: accompaniment, soloing, working with others in the rhythm section, responding to soloists, or playing unison passages. He combines upper-register notes with low sounds coaxed through the use of open strings. Davis studied privately nearly ten years in the '40s and '50s, while also playing with Chicago orchestras. He played with Ahmad Jamal, Charlie Ventura, and Don Shirley in the early and mid-'50s, then worked with Sarah Vaughan in the late '50s and early '60s, as well as Kenny Burrell. Davis divided his duties in the '60s between recording and performing sessions with jazz musicians and freelance work with symphony orchestras conducted by Leonard Bernstein and Igor Stravinsky. He recorded often with Eric Dolphy, including the unforgettable dates at the Five Spot. He also worked with Booker Ervin, Andrew Hill, Ben Webster, Stan Getz, Earl Hines, and the Creative Construction Company. Davis teamed with Jaki Byard and Alan Dawson on sessions with Ervin, and others like Rahsaan Roland Kirk. He also played with Van Morrison. During the '70s Davis worked with Hank Jones and Billy Cobham, and he was a member of the Thad Jones/Mel Lewis Orchestra in the '60s and '70s. Davis left New York in 1977 to teach at the University of Wisconsin in Madison, where he has remained as a professor into the 21st century. Concurrent with his life as an educator, he continued making intermittent appearances as a performer, including at the Aurex Jazz Festival in Tokyo in 1982, playing in a jam session led by trombonists J.J. Johnson and Kai Winding, and at the 1984 Chicago Jazz Festival. Davis was featured in the 1982 film Jazz in Exile. He's done relatively few recordings as a leader, though three Muse sessions are available on CD. The superb The Philosophy of the Spiritual, which matched Davis and fellow bassist Bill Lee, is not in print or on CD. Notable Richard Davis recordings during the 21st century include The Bassist: Homage to Diversity (a duo recording with John Hicks) issued by Palmetto in 2001, as well as two Japanese releases on the King label, So in Love in 2001 and Blue Monk (with pianist Junior Mance) in 2008. ~ Ron Wynn, Rovi