Biography
David was born
into a musical family in Rock Hill, South Carolina on July 9th,
1953. His father was a Baptist minister and his mom was a
multi-talented musician, who still enjoys playing ragtime piano.
David is the third of four sons and a daughter, who started
playing music on the ukulele and switched to guitar at 12.
During his high school years, he began playing with two hometown
friends, Walter Hyatt and Champ Hood. They formed a trio called
Uncle Walt's Band and after graduation the three young musicians
moved to Nashville. After a year of playing the clubs, starving,
sleeping on peoples floors and splitting twenty bucks a night
three ways, the group moved to Austin, Texas at the urging of
friends. It was there, during the 70's and 80's that David says
he grew up as a musician. "We were young and hungry and all
we did was listen and play music." In the group,
David sang lead and harmony vocals and played string bass. They
were all writing and playing original songs, but also had a
large repertoire of folk and roots country songs by artists like
Jimmy Rogers, Hank Williams, Sr., Webb Pierce and Bob Wills just
to mention a few. By the end of the 80's the group had earned a
loyal following in the Southwest and had recorded and released
three albums.
Wanting the
opportunity to do his own kind of music, David decided to give
Nashville another try and by 1993, he recorded the now double
platinum album and hit single THINKIN' PROBLEM. David received
the BMI Millionaire Award (over one million airplays) for three
of the songs he wrote or co-wrote from that album. Those songs
are THINKIN' PROBLEM, WHEN THE THOUGHT OF YOU CATCHES UP WITH ME
and LOOK WHAT FOLLOWED ME HOME. David says you can hear the
Texas dancehall influences in these and the records that
followed. In 1994 he was nominated for a Grammy for Male
Vocalist of the Year.
In the spring of
2001, David began co-writing with Wood Newton, a songwriter with
twenty years of experience in Nashville. Wood has just finished
producing an album project for another artist in his new studio
on Nashville's Music Row, when he and David went to record the
first few songs they had written together. Over a period of more
than a year, they completed David's new album AMIGO, which was
released on the new Dualtone Nashville label. They used a
different approach than is typical of Nashville, you can hear
vintage instruments like the 1953 Fender Hawaiian steel (no
pedals), accordion, chromatic harmonica and trumpets. The album
has twelve great songs that will make you want to laugh, cry,
clap your hands or even get on your feet and dance like they do
in the dancehalls down in Texas.
THE AUSTIN
YEARS
David still gets a twinkle in his eyes when he talks about
the music scene he found in Austin in the early seventies. When
the band started playing the Saxon Pub, he was still underage
and remembers having to sit in the kitchen between sets.
"They put us on the bill with local favorites Kenneth
Threadgill who sang a lot like Jimmy Rogers and did a lot of his
songs. We were doing a lot of Appalachian traditional folk songs
along with our original material and the audiences loved
it." David points out this was even before Willie Nelson
hit big down there. "There was a folk scene happening, as
well as all this other great music too."
After a year with
the help of local radio, they started getting booked into some
of the bigger clubs like the Armadillo, where David remembers
hearing everything from Jerry Jeff Walker to the great Count
Basie Orchestra. David recorded LINGER AWHILE, a Count Basie
cover, for his new AMIGO album. In '73, Uncle Walt's Band played
The Kerrville Folk Festival for the first time period. "We
lived above a liquor store on 6th street in Austin and paid $75
a month rent. I could go see Stevie Ray Vaughn for five dollars
every Monday night. In the afternoons I'd go hang out at the
little bars on 6th Street to hear these old Mexican guys playing
accordions and guitars. I'd go out to these dancehalls that
would hold five hundred people and hear these bands including
the original Texas Playboys with Leon Rausch singing lead
vocals. They had twin fiddles, steel guitars and every other
instrument in the book. The jukeboxes back then still played
Hank Williams and Ernest Tubb." He often went in junk
stores looking for old 78's of Bob Wills and the like. The style
of music David plays was heavily influenced by those days in
Texas. |