Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Pure Religion

 
Album Review: Pure Religion
 

Review

This 1957 release has been issued throughout the world under a bevy of names. These recordings are worth mentioning for both their sacred and secular nature. Equally as interesting is the wide range of performance styles that the Rev. Gary Davis incorporates throughout this long player -- the first full-length disc to do so. Among them are the rarely displayed preachin' blues of "Bad Company," "Runnin' to the Judgement," and "Pure Religion." Notable are the spoken introductions or talkin' blues recitation techniques, as well as the more obvious and overtly religious themes. Davis took his commitment to the Lord seriously and had become an ordained minister in the summer of 1937. His vehemence and compulsion to spread the word is a blatant motif that works on several strata. In the musical parables of "Seven Sisters" -- which isn't a voodoo reference -- and "Right Now," Davis recalls the fatality of not rebuking sin with lyrics like "Don't 'cha put off today for tomorrow/for tomorrow may never be/Let the Saviour bless yo' soul, right now." This collection also includes a few equally heady instrumentals -- most notably "Cocaine Blues," "Buck Dance," and "Hesitation Blues." Davis' astonishingly potent guitar playing and conversational approach has arguably never been captured more aptly on record. The direct lineage between artists such as Dave Van Ronk, Jorma Kaukonen, Stefan Grossman, and Brownie McGhee becomes infinitely clear. One need not listen any further for their versatility in technique -- coupled with simultaneous chord strumming and picking -- can be traced to Davis. "Moon Goes Down" is one of the more secular pieces, originating in the slave fields as a "hollar." Davis' emotionally heavy performance and dirge-like chord changes rank the tune among his most emotive recordings. Pure Religion was amended with two additional and otherwise previously unreleased tunes -- "Time Is Drawing Near" and "Crucifixion" -- when the title was issued on CD in 1991. Both tracks are from the same June 1957 session documented by Tiny Robinson and Fred Gerlach in New York City. ~ Lindsay Planer, All Music Guide

Similar Albums

Life Ain't Worth Livin', Carolina Bluesman, Real St. Louis Blues, Live at Newport, East Coast Blues [Catfish], Blues Magician, Atlanta Twelve String, Medicine Show Man, Vol. 2, Sonny & Brownie at Sugar Hill, Walk Right In

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
I Belong to the Band-Hallelujah! Rev. Gary Davis Rev. Gary Davis
Let Us Get Together Rev. Gary Davis Rev. Gary Davis
Samson and Delilah Traditional Rev. Gary Davis
Lo I Be With You Always Rev. Gary Davis Rev. Gary Davis
Goin' to Sit Down on the Banks of the River Rev. Gary Davis
Twelve Gates to the City Rev. Gary Davis Rev. Gary Davis
Tryin' to Get Home Rev. Gary Davis
Lord, I Feel Just Like Going On Rev. Gary Davis
Pure Religion Traditional Rev. Gary Davis
Great Change Since I Been Born Rev. Gary Davis
Death Don't Have No Mercy Rev. Gary Davis Rev. Gary Davis

Credits

Blind Gary Davis (Guitar), Blind Gary Davis (Vocals), Rev. Gary Davis (Guitar), Rev. Gary Davis (Vocals), Rev. Gary Davis (Main Performer)
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a word or phrase...
All Community Q&A Reference topics
 
 

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more

 

Mentioned in