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The Ghost of Pete Seeger

9/28/2015

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Guy Davis hits all the high marks on Kokomo Kidd, releasing the best album of his life. Casting an eye over his shoulder, he finds the juice to move forward with a batch of songs that represent the breadth and depth of his remarkable career, showcasing his strength as a songwriter, performer and producer. Davis is in full storytelling mode here, with compositions that paint portraits of politicians, dealers, victims, and lovers. A few of the numbers play out like scenes from a movie, you can see the secret late night dope drops, watch a heartbroken son hang his head and weep over the loss of his mother.

This is Davis’ first attempt to produce himself and the result is extremely rewarding.  Enlisting a cast of seasoned players, Davis makes the most of the moment, and the original material flows seamlessly with covers of Dixon, Donovan, and Dylan. Throughout the album Davis is never far from his beloved banjo and that is a good thing. 

The proceedings kick off with a humorous tale about the Kokomo Kidd, a black bootlegger and dealer in contraband who supposedly kept Washington politicians supplied with a variety of amusements during prohibition and beyond. Acknowledging that the legend of the Kidd may or may not be true, Davis takes liberties expanding the myth in his first real shot at a rap. 

In a recent interview Davis said he has tried to learn about rap from his son Martial. “On that song I think my son may hear the closest thing to a decent rap that I have ever done. “Kokomo Kidd” is the name I decided on for a black man who helped corruption spread down in Washington, DC... Taking the historical spin on it, it goes back to the late 1800s to the present day.”  (You can read that interview here on the Flame Still Burns main page)

The title track sets a banjo against a bass line played on the tuba, as Davis spins the story of the man that the powerful turn to for their fix. Kokomo touts his connections saying he “kept the Supreme Court high for years,” and “I got a meeting at three, I got to bring coke to the GOP.” Updating the story to the present he brags

Office to office, I hack your email
Find out if you like male or female
I keep secrets, if you say so
Buy everybody knows you got to pay mo’
To Kokomo, Kokomo Kidd…


From there the album takes on a very personal turn with the deeply moving “I Wish I Hadn’t Stayed Away So Long.” Written in 2014, Davis suffered two very important losses, his mentor Pete Seeger, and his mother, actress Ruby Dee. The title of the song came from a comment made by Seeger after the passing of his wife Toshi. It would only be a few months later that Seeger was gone. 

The strength of the song rests in its honest admission of regret. While writing it, Davis kept trying to tweak the chord structure and make it a little more complex. He kept coming back to the simple melody he first heard in his head and that decision was the right one. It is in its simplicity that the beauty of the song is revealed and the emotional core preserved. It is the best track on the album, and contains layers within it that continue to unfold with repeated spins.

The production of the song is a stroke of genius in and of itself. The banjo and harmonica, accompanied by Mark Murphy’s plunking double bass immediately set the tone as rural. On the second chorus, the addition of female backup singers illustrate what Davis affectionately refers to as the “Pete Seeger Special,” the song inviting the listener to sing along. Suddenly this gentle tale of loss, while genuinely personal to Davis, becomes a vehicle by which we can deal with the grief that life has dealt us, inviting us to rise above the pain and find solace in carrying on. 

The entire moment is steeped in the folk music of the early 1960s. While the lyrics are specifically about Davis’ mother, the ghost of Pete Seeger is everywhere on this track. The impact of those summer music camps Davis attended as a child has never been more apparent. It is cinematic in its scope and universal in its humanity.

The next track, “Taking Just a Little Bit of Time,” sings the glories of carving out some time to get away and lose yourself for a few hours. The rural feel is there again, and continues the 60s folk vibe. “Like Sonny Did” is a humorous homage to Sonny Terry, and reminds the listener that Davis reprised Terry’s role in the Broadway play Finian’s Rainbow. Davis plays a mean harp and whoops it up as Terry used to. It is great fun. Charlie Musselwhite brings his considerable harp skills to bear on the Willie Dixon classic “Little Red Rooster,” allowing Davis to strut a bit.

Two bold covers make for some great listening. By recording Donovan’s “Wear Your Love Like Heaven” Davis is showing he is confident enough in himself to move beyond just straight blues, having a blast with a pop hit from across the pond. In the liner notes Davis proclaims his version is inspired by Bob Marley. Go figure.

Davis takes Dylan head on, performing one of the most beautiful versions of “Lay Lady Lay” on record. Accompanied by mandolin, and featuring renowned guitarist John Platania, Davis is clearly in transcendence. Professor Louie takes the whole affair even higher, with an evocative turn on the Hammond organ. 

​In his first time at the helm, Davis the producer has made the best album of Davis the performer’s career. The perfect record for the back porch, this one is going to be stuck in constant rotation for a long time.
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    Author

    J.M. McSpadden III is a writer and roots music enthusiast who believes every road trip is an opportunity for the full- tilt boogie.
    He is grounded by the love of his wife, Suzanne, and their six children, all of whom have had to listen to their father ramble on and on about the merits of this song or that band until they finally said, "You need a blog!" He currently lives in Richmond, Virginia. And by the way, he also has a BFA in Creative Writing from University of North Carolina at Wilmington. So there.

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