| Clay Davidson was
born in the mountains of southwestern Virginia. From porches full of
pickers, to bands gigging at fairs and local bars, to music played at
church, the ridges and hollows surrounding the small town of Saltville,
where Davidson grew up, were soaked in music. This meant gospel, soul,
rock and roll, bluegrass, pop, blues, anything, really, all appreciated
as the various elements of country. It was a world powered more by this
ongoing richness of performed music than, for example, television.
"For the longest time, Davidson
laughs, I didn't know the difference between my family's music and the
radio. My dad, a guitarist and probably my biggest influence, would
always be sitting around doing some very tasty Chet Atkins or Duane Eddy
number. He was one of twelve children, and all of them played or sang.
My first performance was singing an Elvis song at my grandmother's house
for about forty relatives. There I am, standing in the middle of the
floor, shaking my leg, wailing out "Hound Dog."
It
seems natural that a gifted guy from such a fertile background might
make a country album. And with Unconditional, the 29-year-old
singer-writer guitarist's debut for Virgin Records Nashville, produced
by the fresh studio combo of Virgin President & CEO Scott Hendricks
and L.A.-based artist-writer-producer Jude Cole, that recording has
arrived. Yanking the great tradition of the superbly well crafted
country song to the instrumental freedom of soul, rock, blues, and
gospel, Unconditional offers some of the most alive and on-target
Nashville music in many seasons. Songs range from "I Can't Lie to
Me," with its intensely fresh twist on blues friction, to "One
More Day," which has a light yet stomping traveling vibe, to
"Unconditional," an orchestrated ballad that grapples with the
rare species of emotion that is permanent, unmovable.
From there, Davidson's songs deal with
unusual everyday relationships, as on "My Best Friend and Me,"
done in a soulful mountain singer-songwriter style. They deal with
heartbreak, as on "Plain Old Pain," which ends up rocking
right through its trouble. Occasionally, they're about hanging out, as
on We're All Here, a blue-ribbon Waylon-like drinking tune. Then there
is Doghouse Rights, about the slightly comic yet all too grave domestic
result of, as Davidson sings in his no-fuss soulful tenor,
"breaking the rules of love." This is a country groove,
touched by blues intimacy and gospel fire, like none other.
The eleven songs, seven of which Davidson
himself wrote, comprise a stellar collection of Soulful Rocking Country.
It's country music influenced by, but hardly limited to, Davidson's
life-long love of artists like Merle Haggard, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Don
Williams, and Elvis Presley. I like to think that my songs remove the
guess-work, Davidson says. "Most things today are so full of
guess-work. So much stuff actually aims to confuse you, to shoot over
your head. I like the simpler stuff, the kind of thing where you don't
have to wonder what someone is talking about. That doesn't mean that
some of the songs can't be heard or contemplated in different ways; they
have their share of little complexities. But I try to concentrate on
whatever it is I want to communicate. I like that blinding focus of
trying to be as simple as dirt."
Davidson didn't come to Nashville
immediately. When he was 18, he joined his older brother in Las Vegas
for a while. All his life, Davidson had thrived on music, playing in
bands with high school buddies ("four hour shows, he recalls),
opening locally for touring artists like Tom T. Hall and Restless Heart.
But Davidson knew he had something to say to people outside Virginia.
"I
went to Las Vegas on a Greyhound, he says in his straightforward way.
When we passed through Nashville, I remember looking out the window. It
was probably nine or ten at night, and the place was all lit up. I
looked out the window and vowed, that is where I want to be.
So, after returning home from Nevada, he
made monthly trips to Nashville. Eventually, he auditioned for and won
TNN's Charlie Daniels' Talent Round-up artist competition. With his
award money, he and his wife Frances moved to central Tennessee,
establishing themselves out-side Nashville, in nearby and more laid-back
Mt. Juliet. Davidson was soon tapped as one of Nashville's most
in-demand demo singers. Publishing deals and record company discussions
followed. But his big break occurred when, through the wise intervention
of his good friend Tammy Brown, a Music Row A&R rep, he substituted
for Michael McDonald at an outdoor party for Jude Cole hosted by Scott
Hendricks.
"It was a nervous high, Davidson
says, remembering the night he sang My Best Friend and Me" for
guests around a blazing fire. "But Scott walked up after I was
finished and told me he was going to be heading up a new label, and that
when the doors actually opened, to come see him. That was my invitation
in."
Unconditional is the result. "From
the beginning," Davidson says, "this has been completely
different to how it usually goes down with a new artist in Nashville. I
was not told to bend any. I was just told to be honest and truthful,
just try to make something that we could all be proud of." In this
case, magically enough, that's just what happened.
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