Little Sammy Davis (born November 28, 1928) is an
American blues musician based in New York's Hudson Valley. Although his
musical career began in the 1940s, he was not widely known until the
mid-1990s when he began working in radio, singing, playing live on tour,
and recording studio albums.
Early life and career
Born in Winona, Mississippi and raised in a one-room shack, Davis
learned to play the harmonica at the age of eight. He eventually left
home and settled in Florida, where he continued to play the blues in the
Miami area while working in orange groves and saw mills to make ends
meet.
Throughout the 1940s and 1950s, Davis traveled with medicine shows and
played with blues musicians like
Pine Top Perkins, and
Ike
Turner. He spent a total of nine years on the road with Earl Hooker,
including with the short-lived band of Hooker and Albert King, and
recorded four sides for Rockin' Records in 1952 and 1953 (as Little Sam
Davis). In the late 1950s, Davis lived in Chicago, Illinois, performing
with
Muddy Waters and
Jimmy
Reed. He later married and settled in Poughkeepsie, New York, during
which time he recorded a session for Trix Records that resulted in one
"45" single. After the sudden death of his wife in 1970, Davis stopped
playing and dropped out of the music scene for the next two decades. Comeback
In 1990, local DJ Doug Price spotted Davis playing harmonica in a
Poughkeepsie barber shop. Price made mention of Davis's story and played
some of his old recordings on WVKR, which in turn caught the attention
of radio personality Don Imus. Imus invited Davis to perform on his show
with guitarist Fred Scribner, and "Little Sammy Davis and Midnight Slim"
became the house band for Imus in the Morning for years to come. Imus,
in his trademark style, later quipped that Davis had "more harmonicas
than teeth".
Capitalizing on this Imus fame, Little Sammy Davis and Midnight Slim
toured radio and television stations around the United States. In 1996
Davis released his first full-length album, I Ain't Lyin, for Delmark
Records. The record was nominated for a
W. C.
Handy Award and earned Davis a "comeback artist of the year award"
from Living Blues magazine. Davis and Scribner released a second album,
Ten Years and Forty Days, in 2000.
During this time, Davis began collaborating with Levon Helm for
performances at Helm's home in Woodstock and on tour with the Levon Helm
Band.
In October 2008, after recording his third album, Travelin' Man, Davis
suffered a stroke. He recovered, and was able to resume performing the
following Spring