Stephen Davis
Personal Information
Description
Stephen Davis (1947-) Stephen Davis was born in New York City in 1947 and educated in Philadelphia and Boston. October of 1969 was an defining moment in Stephen's early life - the maverick Jack Kerouac had died of alcoholism and was being buried near Stephen in Massachusetts. Still at university and enthralled by the 'Rolling Stone' newspaper he was asked to cover the funeral with his friend and photographer Peter Simon. At Kerouac's wake (in Lowell) were the likes of Allen Ginsberg, Gregory Corso, Lawrence Ferlinghetti and Jimmy Breslin all from the 'New York Daily News'... >"So I wrote all this up and it was my first story in Rolling Stone, for 50 dollars and I went out and bought a big block of hashish and that´s the beginning of my career". Continuing with his articles and reviews for 'Rolling Stone' he also began writing for 'The Cambridge Phoenix' in 1970, taking special interest in music. Just two years later he joined the Rolling Stone's staff as an associate editor and took the opportunity to travel to Morocco for the first time (1973), and even lead an expedition to record tribal music in the Djebela mountains, sponsored by The National Geographic Society (1974). By the mid-1970's Stephen's free-lance writing and journalism appeared in the New York Time, The Boston Globe, and many national magazines, enticing readers into new musical worlds with stories like... >"The driving, infectious soul music of Jamaica [that] has been percolating through American pop culture until it threatens to boil over [is] the music called reggae (pronounced reg-eye) and it comes from the West Kingston shanty town called Ward 12..." >"New voices on new albums to speak for their generation at mid-decade. Tom Waits is a jazz-rapping Angeleno with a mania for stand-up monologue [and] Patti Smith [who] is the current darling of the New York..." >"Demonstrating a resiliency that most performers would envy, Brazilian singer Flora Purim recently finished a major concert tour that began only three months after her release ... from a federal prison..." >"The chanting of 40 Tibetan monks is a cavernous, impenetrable drone, a wall of sound. Using a secret, difficult technique termed 'onevoice chording', each monk produces three notes simultaneously to form a chord..." >"Master guitarist, musician's musician, folklorist, detective and collector of songs, consummate rock and roller somehow all these still seem inadequate to describe what Ry Cooder actually is...". This all led up to his first book published in 1977 in which he used photographs by his friend Peter Simon, this was "Reggae Bloodlines: In Search of the Music and Culture of Jamaica". In 1979, he was honored for his music journalism (specifically his collaboration with composer Charles Mingus) by ASCAP. This was followed by further works like "Reggae International" (1981), and the acclaimed biography "Bob Marley", first published in 1983. His latest book is a biography of Carly Simon titled "More Room In A Broken Heart: The True Adventures of Carly Simon". >“My qualifications for writing Carly’s life include a long professional relationship with her brother, photographer Peter Simon, going back 45 years. Our work has appeared together in 15 books to date. I’ve known the Simon family for at least that long. My wife and I were friends with Carly’s mother. I’ve never really been close to Carly, but we did have a professional friendship. I wrote about her music in Rolling Stone, where I was an editor in the early ’70s. In 1988 she asked me to interview her for the cable channel VH-1. In 2004 I interviewed her extensively when she asked me to write the booklet notes for 'Reflections,' a compilation of her hit songs on compact disc." Stephen and his wife lives and works in Boston, MA.
Books
Watch you bleed
From the New York Times bestselling author, the complete story of the last rock supergroup— from their drugfueled blast-off in the 1980s to the turbulent life of legendary singer Axl Rose and his fifteen-year, multimilliondollar effort to make the perfect hardrock album. With 90 million of the band’s records sold worldwide since 1987, Guns N’ Roses prolonged rock music past its sell-by date with controversial albums and immense, often riotous world tours. But the band’s complete story has never been fully told—until now. In his sixth major rock biography, Stephen Davis details the riveting story of a band that originated in the gutters of Sunset Strip and went on to set attendance records on the biggest stadiums on the planet. Watch You Bleed documents the improbable story of W. Axl Rose, the biggest rock star of his generation. Taken from an abusive father in his infancy, he was raised as “Bill Bailey” in a strictly religious Indiana household by a stepfather who beat him for playing Led Zeppelin songs on the family piano. After quitting high school, and on the run from the police in his hometown, Axl arrived in Los Angeles in the midst of the street battles for supremacy among the top music genres of the eighties—post-punk, thrash, hair metal, and glam. The book also charts the backgrounds of every band member, especially Slash, a Hollywood street kid whose designer mother dated David Bowie. Davis brilliantly captures the birth of Guns’ raw power, which—despite rape charges, drug-induced rampages, and a general appetite for destruction— launched the band into the pantheon of rock gods such as Led Zeppelin and the Rolling Stones. With a wealth of detail, Davis looks at Axl’s unrelenting quest to release the long-awaited, mystery-shrouded Chinese Democracy album, as well as the further adventures of some of the Gunners under the banner of the hard-rocking band Velvet Revolver. For the first time, millions of Guns N’ Roses fans will learn the whole truth—sometimes funny, sometimes tragic—about the last of the great rock bands.
This wheel's on fire
Biography of the pioneer rock drummer and the band who helped shape the course of rock and roll from the 1950s to the 1970s.
Hammer of the Gods
When Alex decides to return to the Alterworld to search for his missing father, he enters the myth of Loki, the trickster god of Norse mythology, as the god's son Vali, but then runs the risk of destroying the very fabric of the universe.
Gold dust woman
Stevie Nicks' work and life are equally sexy and interesting, and Davis delves deeply into each, unearthing fresh details from new, intimate interviews and interpreting them to present a rich new portrait of the star.
More room in a broken heart
This is a biography of singer-songwriter Carly Simon written by rock journalist and biographer Stephen Davis. It is not altogether unbiased, nor does it pretend to be. In the preface, the author admits to his being "transfixed" by an early concert appearance by Carly and her sister Lucy (the "Simon Sisters"). He also peppers the book with references to people he knows, and "what Carly thought" but he does not bother with annotation, much less a bibliography. Thus I would describe this book as a fan letter to Carly Simon in the guise of a book, or as a 409 page story of a close friend's life, with plenty of name-dropping, designed to impress the reader with the writer's "connections".
