Brian Davison (drummer)
Brian Davison (25 May 1942 – 15 April 2008), nicknamed "Blinky", was a British drummer, best known for his work in The Nice. He was born in Leicester and died in Horns Cross, Bideford, Devon.
Brian Davison | |
---|---|
Also known as | "Blinky" |
Born | Leicester, England | 25 May 1942
Died | 15 April 2008 65) Horns Cross, Bideford, Devon, England | (aged
Genres | Progressive rock |
Occupation(s) | Musician |
Instruments | Drums |
Years active | 1950s (?)-2008 |
Associated acts | Mark Leeman Five, The Nice, Brian Davison's Every Which Way, Refugee, Gong |
Biography
Davison was born on 25 May 1942 in Leicester.[1] In the late 1950s, Davison played drums in various skiffle groups in and around the youth clubs in north-west London, especially around Baker Street. He rose to prominence drumming in the 1960s in Mark Leeman Five and then progressive rock group Shinn with keyboard player Don Shinn and bassist Paul Newton (later with Uriah Heep) and finally The Nice with keyboardist Keith Emerson, guitarist David O'List and bassist Lee Jackson.
After the breakup of The Nice, Davison formed a short-lived band called Brian Davison's Every Which Way featuring ex-Skip Bifferty lead singer Graham Bell. The band broke up after one album.[2] He then joined Jackson and keyboardist Patrick Moraz in Refugee. Refugee released one album, Refugee on Charisma Records, with music was composed by Moraz with lyrics from Jackson. An archival live album recorded at Newcastle City Hall (a soundboard recording, taken from Davison's private collection) was released in 2007. Davison subsequently played in Gong before leaving the music business for a period.
In 1978 he rehearsed briefly with Vic Godard, who was continuing to rehearse at Rehearsal Rehearsals (Bernie Rhode's rehearsal rooms, as used by The Clash) after Rhodes had sacked the rest of the Subway Sect during the recording of what was to be their debut album. Nothing came of this, and Davison sold his drumkit, bought a motorcycle, saying he was heading to India.
In 2002, he and his bandmates Jackson and Emerson resurfaced to reform The Nice and, together with guitarist Dave Kilminster, performed a four-date reunion tour. A three-disk box-set album, Vivacitas, recorded at Glasgow Royal Concert Hall, was released in September 2003.[3]
Davison taught drumming at Bideford College.[4] He died of a brain tumour on 15 April 2008 at his home in Horns Cross near Bideford in Devon, at age 65.[1][5]
Discography
Singles
- 1965 : Portland Town/Gotta get myself together : Columbia – DB 7452
- 1965 : Blow my blues away/On the horizon : Columbia – DB 7648
- 1966 : Forbidden Fruit/Going To Bluesville : Columbia - DB 7812
- 1966 : Follow me/Gather Up The Pieces : Columbia – DB 7955 Promo Single
Album
- 1963 : Rhythm and Blues Plus! : serial number unknown
Compilations
- 1971 : Rock Generation Volume 8 - Soft Machine At The Beginning - Mark Leeman Five And Davy Graham : Byg Records - 529.708
- 1991 : The Mark Leeman Five – Memorial Album : See For Miles Records Ltd. SEE CD 317 - Available on CD
Studio Albums
- 1968: The Thoughts of Emerlist Davjack (Immediate)
- 1968: Ars Longa Vita Brevis (Immediate)
- 1969: Nice (Immediate)
Live Albums
- 1970: Five Bridges (Charisma)
- 1971: Elegy (Charisma)
- 1996: America – The BBC Sessions (Receiver)
- 2001: The Swedish Radio Sessions (Sanctuary)
- 2002: BBC Sessions (Sanctuary)
- 2003: Vivacitas (Sanctuary)
- 2009: Live at the Fillmore East December 1969 (Virgin)
Singles
- 1967 : The Thoughts of Emerlist Davjack / Azrael (Angel of Death) (Immediate)
- 1968 : America / Diamond Hard Blue Apples of the Moon (Immediate, 1968)
- 1968 : Brandenburger / Happy Freuds (Immediate)
- 1969 : Diary of an Empty Day / Hang On to a Dream (Immediate)
- 1969 : Country Pie / Brandenburg Concerto #6 / One of Those People (Charisma)
Collaborations
- 1967 : Don't Burst My Bubble/Come Home Baby (Side One P. P. Arnold with Small Faces - Side Two Rod Stewart with P. P. Arnold) (Keith Emerson is on Hammond organ on side two with Rod Stewart on vocals, Ron Wood on guitar, Keith Richards on bass, Nicky Hopkins on electric piano Mickey Waller on drums - Immediate Records)
- 1969 : An Old Raincoat Won't Ever Let You Down by Rod Stewart (Keith plays organ on I Wouldn't Ever Change a Thing)
- 1969 : Music From Free Creek - Various artists. (1969) (Keith plays on 3 songs)
- 1970 : Flat, Baroque and Berserk by Roy Harper (Keith Emerson, Lee Jackson and Brian Davison play on Hell's Angels)
- 1973 : Lifemask de Roy Harper (Brian Davison plays drums on the long suite The Lord's Prayer)
- 2000 : Rod Stewart 1964-1969 by Rod Stewart (Includes Come home baby with P.P Arnold)
- 2001 : Rod Stewart a Little Misunderstood: The Sixties Sessions (Come Home Baby)
- 2001 : Rod Stewart and the Steampacket – Can I Get a Witness (2001) - Same
- 2002 : Immediate Pleasure - Various artists (best of including Come Home Baby as well as two of The Nice, The Thoughts of Emerlist Davjack et America)
- 2013 : The Theory of Everything de Ayreon (Keith on synthesizer on the song Progressive Waves. - With Steve Hackett, John Wetton, Rick Wakeman and Jordan Rudess who also play on the album)
Compilations
- Hang on to a dream - Esperar un sueno (Emidisc 1C 048-50 722 - 1970)
- The Nice (Phillips 9299 718 - 1970)
- The best of The Nice (Immediate 1C 048-90 674 - 1970)
- Keith Emerson With The Nice (Mercury – 830 457-2 M-1 - 1971) Include albums Five Bridges Suite and Elegy
- Keith Emerson With The Nice Vol 2 (Fontana 9286 862 1971)
- In memoriam (Immediate 2C 054 - 95954 - 1972)
- Autumn '67 - Spring '68 (Charisma, 1972, UK) Reedited under the title : Autumn to Spring (Charisma, 1973, USA)
- The Immediate Story (Double CD - Sire SASH - 37102 - 1975)
- Amoeni Redivivi (Immediate IML1003 - 1976)
- Greatest Hits (Immediate IML 2003 - 1977)
- Ars Longa Vita Brevis (3 LP Box - Charly Records 26 76 210 - 1977)
- The Immediate Years (3 LP Box - Charly Records CDIMMBOX2 - Charly Schallplatten GmbH - 1995 Germany)
- Nice Hits Nice Bits (BMG Fabricated, 1999)
- The Immediate Collection (Recall Records - 1999 Double CD Album)
- Here Comes The Nice The Immediate Anthology (3CD Castle Music - CMETD 055 - 2000)
- Keith Emerson & The Nice Absolutely The Best (True North 1003941 - 2001)
- BBC Sessions - Ian Hague on drums on Flower King Of Flies, Sombrero Sam and Rondo recorded for the television show Top Gera.
- Artistes Variés - Immediate Pleasure - Including Rod Stewart and P.P. Arnold, Come home baby and two songs from The Nice, The Thoughts of Emerlist Davjack and America (2002).
- The best of The Nice, The Small Faces. Humble Pie, Eric Clapton & John Mayall (Immediate - 1C 148-92 661/662) Double Album
- The Nice & The Humble Pie*- Famous Popgroups Of The '60s Vol. 4 (Music For Pleasure – 1M 146-94319/20) - CD 1 The Nice - CD 2 Humble Pie) Double Album
Brian Davison's Every Which Way
- 1970 : Brian Davison's Every Which Way
Refugee
- 1974 : Refugee
- 2007 : Live in Concert Newcastle City Hall 1974
- 2010 : Refugee & Refugee Live In Concert 1974 Both albums were reedited on Floating World Records.
Collaborations
- 1970 : Flat, Baroque & Berserk de Roy Harper - Keith Emerson, Lee Jackson et Brian Davison play on th song Hell's Angels.
- 1973 : Lifemask de Roy Harper - Brian Davison plays drums on the long suite suite The Lord's Prayer.
References
- Alan Clayson (20 June 2008). "Brian Davison". The Guardian. Retrieved 10 September 2020.
- Joseph Murrells -The Book of Golden Discs -1978 Page 291 "The first recording of the poem, entitled 'Child of the Universe' featuring the 'Desiderata' words and set to a tune by singer Graham Bell, seems to be that by the British group Every Which Way in September 1970 formed by ex-Nice drummer Brian Davison, on their first and only album."
- Anderson, Doug (November 2002). "Keith Emerson & The Nice: London Royal Festival Hall: 6 Oct 2002". s159645853.websitehome.co.uk/. Rock Reviews (RockReviews.co.uk). Archived from the original on 5 October 2008. Retrieved 13 March 2016.
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 15 May 2010. Retrieved 27 June 2008.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - "Brian Davison: Drummer with The Nice". 22 April 2008. Retrieved 4 August 2017.