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Gail Davies

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Genres
  
Country, Folk

Siblings
  
Ron Davies

Name
  
Gail Davies


Years active
  
1978–present

Instruments
  
Vocals, Guitar

Music group
  
Gail Davies Gail Davies What Can I Say Records LPs Vinyl and CDs

Birth name
  
Patricia Gail Dickerson

Born
  
June 5, 1948 (age 75) (
1948-06-05
)

Origin
  
Broken Bow, Oklahoma, United States

Occupation(s)
  
Singer-Songwriter, Record Producer

Role
  
Singer-songwriter · gaildavies.com

Movies
  
Gail Davies: Greatest Hits, Daniel O'Donnell & Friends, Country Music's Best

Albums
  
The Songwriter Sessions, Greatest Hits, Gail Davies

Similar People
  
Ron Davies, Linda Ronstadt, Dolly Parton, Vince Gill, Emmylou Harris

Gail Davies - Grandma's Song Live 1986


Gail Davies -- "Grandma's Song"


Gail Davies (born Patricia Gail Dickerson; June 5, 1948) is an American singer/songwriter and the first female record producer in country music. She is the daughter of country singer Tex Dickerson and the sister of songwriter Ron Davies.

Contents

Gail Davies Bass Routes A Leland Sklar Discography Blog Gail Davies

Gail Davies established herself as a successful singer and songwriter during the 1970s and 1980s, scoring numerous Top 10 and Top 20 Billboard hits. She was one of country music's most influential artists, becoming the genre's first female record producer. She has been cited as a role model for other female singers, including Suzy Bogguss, Kathy Mattea, Mary Chapin Carpenter and Pam Tillis. Gail's son, Chris Scruggs, is a former co-lead singer and guitarist for the roots-country band BR549.

Gail Davies Contact Gail Davies

Early life and career

Gail Davies wwwgaildaviescomimagesWhatCanjpg

Gail Davies was born Patricia Gail Dickerson in Broken Bow, Oklahoma on June 5, 1948. Her father was a popular country singer in the 1940s, performing in and around the Texas/Oklahoma region and occasionally appearing on The Louisiana Hayride. Although born in the South, Gail grew up in Washington State, where her mother remarried. Her last name was changed when she and her two brothers were adopted by their stepfather, Darby Davies. After graduating from high school, Gail moved to Los Angeles and married a jazz musician. She briefly sang jazz, but quit after they divorced. She was later hired as a session singer at A&M Records, working with artists such as Neil Young and Hoyt Axton and Glen Campbell. She was able to sit in on a John Lennon session, produced by Phil Spector, and was befriended by songwriter, Joni Mitchell. Mitchell's engineer, Henry Lewy, taught Gail how to produce records. She was invited to tour Europe with Frank Zappa, but turned the offer down to work with country artist Roger Miller, making her television debut as his singing partner on The Merv Griffin Show. A clip of their performance is now available on YouTube.

Encouraged by her older brother, Ron Davies, Gail began writing songs. She moved to Nashville Tennessee in 1976 and signed with EMI Publishing as a staff songwriter. One of her first successful compositions, "Bucket to the South", became a hit for Ava Barber. This song was also recorded by Lynn Anderson and Mitzi Gaynor. However, Davies was determined to prove she was a singer herself. She signed with Lifesong/CBS Records in 1978 and released a self-titled album that scored three Top 20 hit singles. One of her own compositions, an introspective song entitled "Someone Is Looking for Someone Like You", was the album's highest charting single, reaching No. 7 in Cashbox and No. 11 on the Billboard charts. It has since been recorded in several languages by such internationally known artists as Nana Moskouri, Susan McCann, George Hamilton IV and The Country Gentlemen.

The height of her career

Unhappy with the production of her first album, Gail switched to Warner Bros. Records in 1979 and became the first female record producer in the history of Country music. Her landmark album The Game was even more successful than her previous record had been. It featured a Top 10 single entitled "Blue Heartache", as well as two Top 20 hits, "Like Strangers" and "Good Lovin' Man". Gail went on to produce I'll Be There in 1980, which spawned three more hit singles. The title track went to No. 4 on the Billboard charts followed by "It's a Lovely, Lovely World" (with harmony vocals by Emmylou Harris), and Gail's own composition, a tribute to her maternal grandmother entitled "Grandma's Song". Gail was nominated for a CMA and ACMA Award in 1981 and voted Country music's "Best New Female Vocalist" by The DJs of America.

The year 1982 showed that Gail Davies was not slowing down. She released her third self-produced album Giving Herself Away. This record brought a new female perspective to Country Music with another Top 10 hit, written by Rory Bourke and K.T. Oslin, entitled "Round the Clock Lovin'". Gail's career took a short hiatus in the winter of 1982, when she gave birth to her only child, Christopher Scruggs, who is also the son of songwriter Gary Scruggs and the grandson of bluegrass legend Earl Scruggs.

Warner Bros. released Gail's last album for the label What Can I Say in 1983. Although there were some sizable hits from this record, including two Top 20 singles - "You're a Hard Dog (To Keep Under the Porch)" and a self-penned song entitled "Boys like You," - Gail's chart success was beginning to wane. The last single from this album, a duet with Ricky Skaggs written by Gail's brother, Ron Davies, was entitled "It's You Alone." It was released just as Gail was preparing to leave Warner Bros. Records. With no support from the label it stalled at No. 55 on the Billboard charts.

Gail signed with RCA Records in 1984 and released Where Is a Woman to Go. Produced by Gail and James Taylor's bass player, Leland Sklar, this album featured two more hit singles - "Breakaway", which went to No. 15 on the charts and "Jagged Edge of a Broken Heart," climbing to No. 20. The last single from this album, a duet with Dolly Parton entitled "Unwed Fathers," was said to be too controversial for country radio. Written by John Prine and Bobby Braddock, this song barely made it into the Billboard Top 50.

Inspired by a trip to England in 1985, Gail formed a country/rock band called Wild Choir. They released one self-titled album on RCA Records and three Billboard singles - "Heart To Heart, "Safe In The Arms of Love" and "Next Time," written by Gail, Pam Rose and Mary Ann Kennedy. Although Wild Choir only released one album during their tenure, they have been cited as one of the incunabula of the "alt-country" genre, better known as Americana Music.

In 1989, Gail signed with MCA Records and produced an album of 10 self-penned compositions entitled Pretty Words. The album garnered two more Top 50 singles "Waiting Here For You" and "Hearts in the Wind". The song the record company chose not to release, written by Gail and Harry Stinson, was entitled "Tell Me Why." It went on to become a hit for Curb recording artist Jann Browne.

Undaunted by the lack of label support, Gail continued to produce great music. She moved to Capitol Records in 1989 and released two critically acclaimed albums - "The Other Side of Love" and "The Best Of Gail Davies". Hired by Capitol/EMI in 1990 to become Nashville's first female staff producer, Gail spent four years working with talented young artists like Mandy Barnett before starting her own record label Little Chickadee Productions. She produced and released an album in 1995 entitled Eclectic, which was chosen by The New York Times as one of the "Ten Best Country Albums of the Year." Other LCP releases include "Gail Davies Greatest Hits", "Love Ain't Easy", "Live And Unplugged At The Station Inn", "The Songwriter Sessions","Since I Don't Have You," featuring Jazz legend Benny Golson, and "Beyond The Realm of Words".

Later career and life today

Gail received an IBMA award in 2002, along with a Grammy nomination, for her duet with bluegrass patriarch Ralph Stanley. She was also nominated for an Americana Music award that same year for producing and arranging a tribute to country legend Webb Pierce entitled Caught In the Webb. This album features, along with Gail, George Jones, Emmylou Harris, Willie Nelson, Pam Tillis, Dwight Yoakam, Crystal Gayle, Charley Pride, The Del McCoury Band, Allison Moorer, Guy Clark, Dale Watson, The Jordanaires, Rosie Flores, Lionel Cartwright, Robbie Fulks, Mandy Barnett and Billy Walker. Proceeds from this album benefit The Minnie Pearl Cancer Foundation and The Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum.

Although semi-retired, Gail continues to tour, mostly in Europe. She was named "Country Music International Ambassador" during CMA week in 2009 and released her autobiography "The Last of the Outlaws" in 2011. Gail's latest project is an album dedicated to her late brother entitled "Unsung Hero - A Tribute To The Music of Ron Davies." Released in 2013, this album features such iconic artists as Dolly Parton, John Prine, Alison Krauss, Vince Gill, Shelby Lynne, Rodney Crowell, Suzy Bogguss, John Anderson, and a host of other great artists. Proceeds from this album will benefit The W.O. Smith Music School and provide musical instruments and lessons to underprivileged children. For more information see http://www.rondaviesunsunghero.com/

References

Gail Davies Wikipedia