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Spanky Davis

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Birth name
  
Ronald J. Davis

Name
  
Spanky Davis

Years active
  
1979-2004


Instruments
  
Trumpet

Genres
  
Jazz, Vocal jazz

Born
  
March 6, 1943 Indianapolis, Indiana, U.S. (
1943-03-06
)

Associated acts
  
Benny Goodman, Roy Eldridge, Walt Levinsky, Buddy Tate

Died
  
October 23, 2014, Manahawkin, Stafford Township, New Jersey, United States

Albums
  
Spanky, Two Thousand Twenty, Journey To The Center Of No Mind

Record labels
  
Challenge Records, Arbors Records

Similar People
  
Dan Barrett, Jim Galloway, Scott Robinson, Wycliffe Gordon, Rebecca Kilgore

Occupation(s)
  
Musician, Trumpeter

Spanky davis the jimmy ryan s all stars struttin with some barbecue


Ronald J. "Spanky" Davis (March 6, 1943, Indianapolis, Indiana - October 23, 2014, Manahawkin, New Jersey) was an American jazz trumpeter.

Contents

Davis played early on with Charlie Palmieri (1979), Sam Jones (1979–82), Machito (1980–81), and Benny Goodman (1982–83). He toured Ireland with Al Cohn in 1983-84, then played with Bob Haggart in 1984-85. Concurrently, he also led the house band at Jimmy Ryan's in New York City from 1980, directly following Roy Eldridge in this position. Jimmy Ryan's closed in 1983, but Davis continued to lead this band in other performances as Jimmy Ryan's All-Stars; this ensemble continued to be active into the late 1990s, and counted among its sidemen Ted Sturgis, Joe Muranyi, and Eddie Locke. Davis led a quartet with Locke, Richard Wyands, and Murray Wall from 1986, in addition to playing with the Savoy Sultans from 1984-91. In the mid-1980s he did work with Arvell Shaw as part of Armstrong Legacy. He played as a sideman with Buck Clayton from 1986 to 1992 and toured with Buddy Tate between 1986 and 1990; he also accompanied Ruth Brown in 1989, Annie Ross in 1991-92 and Frank Sinatra in 1991-93. From 1997 he played in Chuck Folds's group at Sweet Basil in New York.

Discography

With Sam Jones

  • Something New (Interplay, 1979)
  • References

    Spanky Davis Wikipedia