Artist's albums
Live Anthology 1965-1968
2001 · album
Gluggo
1973 · album
Mulberry Bush
1999 · album
The Best Of Spencer Davis Group
1989 · compilation
Gimme Some Lovin’ (L.A. Mix ’06)
2020 · single
All The Hits Plus More
2019 · album
Taking Time Out: Complete Recordings 1967-1969
2016 · album
I Can't Get Enough of It
2010 · album
Living in a Back Street
1974 · album
Live at Blues Garage 2006
2006 · album
The Greatest Hits
2005 · album
Keep On Running
2004 · album
Time Seller
2002 · album
Gimme Some Loving / Blues In F
1966 · single
Somebody Help Me / Stevie's Blues
1966 · single
When I Come Home / Trampoline
1966 · single
Keep On Running / High Time Baby
1965 · single
Their First LP (Mono Version)
1965 · album
You Put The Hurt On Me
1965 · single
The Second Album (Mono Version)
1966 · album
Autumn '66
1966 · album
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Biography
His ferocious soul-drenched vocals belying his tender teenage years, Stevie Winwood powered the Spencer Davis Group's three biggest U.S. hits during their brief lifespan as one of the British Invasion's most convincing R&B-based combos. Guitarist Davis formed the band with Winwood on organ, his brother Muff Winwood on bass, and drummer Peter York. Signing on with producer Chris Blackwell, the quartet got their first hit (the blistering "Keep on Running") from another of Blackwell's acts, West Indian performer Jackie Edwards. After topping the British charts in 1965, the song struggled on the lower reaches of the U.S. Hot 100. The group's two hottest sellers were self-penned projects. "Gimme Some Lovin'" and "I'm a Man" were searing showcases for the adolescent Winwood's gritty vocals and blazing keyboards and the band's pounding rhythms. Although they burned up the charts even on the other side of the ocean in 1967, the quartet never capitalized on their fame with an American tour. At the height of their power, Winwood left to form Traffic, leaving Davis without his dynamic frontman. The bandleader focused on producing other acts, including a Canadian ensemble called the Downchild Blues Band during the early '80s. Spencer Davis died in Los Angeles on October 19, 2020, after contracting pneumonia; he was 81 years old. ~ Bill Dahl, Rovi