Ray Davies
CBE (born Raymond Douglas Davies
, 21 June 1944, Fortis Green, London) is an English rock musician, best known as lead singer and songwriter for The Kinks - one of the most prolific and long-lived British Invasion bands - which he led with his younger brother, Dave. He has also acted, directed and produced shows for theatre and television.
Since the demise of the Kinks in the mid-90s Ray Davies has embarked on a solo career as a singer-songwriter.
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RAY DAVIES TICKETS
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Early Life
Ray Davies (pronounced day-vis
[1], like
Davis) was born and raised in the North London area of
Muswell Hill. He is the seventh of eight children, including six older sisters and younger brother Dave Davies. He has been married three times, and has four daughters - Louisa, Victoria, Natalie and Eva.
Davies was an art student at
Hornsey College of Art in
London in 1962–1963, when the Kinks developed into a professional performing band. After the Kinks obtained a recording contract in early 1964, Davies emerged as the chief songwriter and
de facto
leader of the band, especially after the band's breakthrough success with his composition "
You Really Got Me."
Career
Davies led the Kinks through a period of musical experimentation between 1966 and 1976, with notable artistic achievements and commercial success. Between 1977 and their breakup in 1996, Davies and the group reverted to their earlier mainstream rock format and enjoyed a second peak of success, with other hit songs, like "
Destroyer", "
Come Dancing", and "Do it Again".
In 1990, Davies was inducted, with the Kinks, into the
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and, in 2005, into the
UK Music Hall of Fame. Davies has performed solo since the mid 1990s.
Davies has had a tempestuous relationship with younger brother
Dave (the band's
lead guitarist) that dominated the Kinks' career as a band.
On
4 January 2004, Davies was shot in the leg while chasing thieves, who had snatched the purse of his companion as they walked in the
French Quarter of
New Orleans, Louisiana.
[2] The shooting came less than a week after Davies was named a
Commander of the Order of the British Empire by
Queen Elizabeth II.
Davies was also a judge for the 3rd annual
Independent Music Awards to support independent artists' careers.
[3]
Relationship with Chrissie Hynde
Davies' relationship with
Pretenders singer
Chrissie Hynde came at the expense of his marriage to his second wife, Yvonne, who named Hynde as the other woman in the divorce papers (the topic of the Pretenders song "The Adultress"). Davies and Hynde were involved in a number of bust ups, the most infamous being when they were due to get married but the registrar refused to marry them. In January 1983, Hynde gave birth to Natalie Rae Hynde, her first child and Davies' third. Within a year, Chrissie had taken the baby with her on a world tour. The relationship ended in 1984.
Work
thumb
Davies' compositions over his lengthy career have been an astonishing study in contrasts, from the influential
protopunk, powerchord
rock and roll of the early Kinks hits in 1964–1966 (most prominently "
You Really Got Me" and "
All Day and All of the Night"); followed a few years later by more sensitive, introspective songs ("Too Much on My Mind", "
Waterloo Sunset"); and still later by
anthems championing individualistic lifestyles and personalities ("
Lola", "
Apeman", "
Celluloid Heroes"); celebrations of traditional
English culture and living ("
Autumn Almanac", "
Victoria"); true
Music Hall-style
vaudeville (songs like "
Dandy", "End of the Season", "Little Miss Queen of Darkness", "All of My Friends Were There", and the
Preservation
albums); and commercial rock which combined elements of all of these ("
Come Dancing", "Do It Again").
Davies' songwriting has often been called more mature, sophisticated, and subtle than that of many of his peers among
American and British
rock musicians. His
lyrics often contained elements of
satire and
social commentary about the aspirations and frustrations of British middle-class life — examples including songs like "
A Well Respected Man" and "
Shangri-La", which observed the class-bred insecurity and desperation underlying the materialistic values and conservative protocols of middle-class respectability; "
Dedicated Follower of Fashion", which mocked the superficiality and self-indulgence of the
mod subculture; and "
David Watts", which humorously expressed the wounded feelings of a plain schoolboy who envies the grace and social privileges enjoyed by a charismatic upperclass student.
His songs also showed signs of social conscience — examples being "God's Children" and songs on the albums,
The Kinks are the Village Green Preservation Society
and
Muswell Hillbillies
, which denounced
industrialization and
commercialism in favour of simple pastoral living. Mid-period songs like "
Dead End Street" and "
Big Black Smoke" offered grim, neo-
Dickensian portraits of the desperate poverty that existed amidst the thriving metropolitan British economy of the 1960s.
In particular, Davies' songs on the 1968 Kinks album
The Village Green Preservation Society
embraced "
Merry England" nostalgia and preservation as themes long before they became fashionable in pop music. Many of his best songs focus on the small-scale, poignant dramas of everyday people (e.g., "
Waterloo Sunset", "Two Sisters", "Did You See His Name?"), commonly told as wistful mini-stories.
Aside from the lengthy Kinks discography, Davies has released five solo albums; the 1985 release
Return to Waterloo
(which accompanied a
television film he wrote and directed), the 1998 release
The Storyteller
,
Other People's Lives
in early 2006,
Working Man's Café
in October 2007 and
The Kinks Choral Collection
in June 2009.
Other People's Lives
was his first top 40 album in the UK since the 1960s, when he worked with the Kinks.
The release of
Working Man's Café
was followed on 28 October 2007 with a performance at the
BBC's
Electric Proms series, at
The Roundhouse,
Camden, accompanied by the
Crouch End Festival Chorus. The concert was broadcast the same evening on
BBC Two. An edited version of
Working Man's Café
, excluding two bonus tracks and
liner notes, was given away with 1.5 million copies of the
Sunday Times on 21 October.
Since the Kinks ceased performing in 1996, Davies has toured independently. Initially, he toured with the mainly acoustic 20th Century Man, An Evening With Ray Davies and
Storyteller
shows, accompanied by guitarist Pete Mathison. More recently, he has toured with a full band consisting of, among others, Toby Baron - drums, Geoff Dugmore - drums, Dick Nolan - bass, Gunnar Frick - keyboards,
Ian Gibbons - keyboards, Scott Donaldson - guitar, Mark Johns - guitar,
Michael "Milton" McDonald - guitar (who replaced Mark Johns in 2007) and Bill Shanley - guitar. In 2005, Davies released a four-song
EP in the
UK -
The Tourist' - and a five-song EP in the U.S. -
Thanksgiving Day''.
Davies published his "unauthorized
autobiography",
X-Ray
, in 1994. In 1997, he published a book of
short stories entitled
Waterloo Sunset
, described as 'a
concept album set on paper'. He has made two films,
Return to Waterloo
in 1985 and
Weird Nightmare
in 1991, a documentary about
Charles Mingus.
A choral album,
The Kinks Choral Collection
, on which Ray Davies has been collaborating with the Crouch End Festival Chorus since 2007, was released in the UK in June 2009 and is scheduled for US release in November 2009. There has been extensive TV, radio and press promotion for the project and further tour dates in support of the disc are planned.
Musicals
In 1981 Davies collaborated with
Barrie Keefe to write his first stage musical,
Chorus Girls
, which opened at the
Theatre Royal Stratford East,
London [4] starring
Marc Sinden and also had a supporting cast of
Michael Elphick,
Anita Dobson,
Kate Williams and
Charlotte Cornwell. Directed by
Adrian Shergold, the
choreography was by
Charles Augins and
Jim Rodford played bass with the theatres 'house band'. Sinden only accepted the role on the condition that he did not have to sing a solo, however Davies wrote the
reggae-style song
"Everybody's Slagging Off England"
specifically for him and gave it to him with two days to go before the First Night. Sinden did sing it and later recorded it with Davies.
[5]
Davies wrote songs for a musical version of
Jules Verne's
Around the World in Eighty Days
; the show,
80 Days
, had a book by playwright
Snoo Wilson. It was directed by
Des McAnuff and ran at the Mandell Weiss Theatre in San Diego from August 23 to October 9, 1988. The musical received mixed responses from the critics. Davies's multi-faceted music, McAnuff's directing, and the acting, however, were well received, with the show winning the "Best Musical" award from the San Diego Theatre Critics Circle.
[6]
Davies' latest musical
Come Dancing
, based partly on his 1983 hit single with twenty new songs, opened at the Theatre Royal Stratford East, London in September - November 2008. The play was awarded The MOBIUS Best Off-West End Production in February 2009.
Bill Kenwright's touring production of the musical will be staged in the UK from January 2010.
[7]
Awards
- On 17 March 2004, Davies received the CBE from Queen Elizabeth II for "Services to Music."
- On 22 June 2004, Davies won the Mojo
Songwriter Award, which recognises "an artist whose career has been defined by their ability to pen classic material on a consistent basis."
- Davies was also a judge for the 3rd annual Independent Music Awards. His contributions helped assist upcoming independent artists' careers. [3]
- Davies and the Kinks were the third British band (along with The Who) to be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1990, at which Davies was called "almost indisputably rock's most literate, witty and insightful songwriter." They were inducted into the UK Music Hall of Fame in 2005.
- On 3 October 2006, Davies was awarded the BMI Icon Award.
- On 15 February 2009, The MOBIUS Best Off-West End Production in the UK for the musical Come Dancing
.
Solo discography
For Kinks discography see The Kinks discography
#
Return to Waterloo
(1985)
#
The Storyteller
(1998)
#
Other People's Lives
(2006) (UK#36)
#
Working Man's Café
(2007)
#
The Kinks Choral Collection
(2009) (UK#28)
Chart singles written by Davies
The following is a list of Ray Davies compositions that were chart hits for artists other than The Kinks. (See
The Kinks discography
for hits by The Kinks.)
| Year
| Title
| Artist
| Chart Positions
|
| UK Singles Chart [9]
| Canada
| U.S. Hot 100
|
| 1965
| "This Strange Effect"
| Dave Berry
| #37
|
|
|
| "Something Better Beginning"
| The Honeycombs
| #39
|
|
|
| 1966
| "A House in the Country"
| The Pretty Things
| #50
|
|
|
| "Dandy"
| Herman's Hermits
|
| #1
| #5
|
| 1978
| "You Really Got Me"
| Van Halen
|
| #49
| #36
|
| "David Watts"
| The Jam
| #25
|
|
|
| 1979
| "Stop Your Sobbing"
| The Pretenders
| #34
|
| #65
|
| 1981
| "I Go To Sleep"
| The Pretenders
| #7
|
|
|
| 1988
| "All Day and All of the Night"
| The Stranglers
| #7
|
|
|
| "Victoria"
| The Fall
| #35
|
|
|
| 1989
| "Days"
| Kirsty MacColl
| #12
|
|
|
| 1997
| "Waterloo Sunset"
| Cathy Dennis
| #11
|
|
|
See also
Songs written by Ray Davies
Notes
- A Solo Ray Davies Peers into 'Other People's Lives'
- Kinks star shot in New Orleans
- Independent Music Awards - Past Judges
- www.thestage.co.uk/news/newsstory.php/21291/kinks-frontman-davies-makes-musical-debut
- Daily Mail 17.3.82
- http://www.kinks.de/40jahre/teil6_e.html
- http://www.whatsonstage.com/board/index.php?showtopic=7656
- Independent Music Awards - Past Judges
- British Hit Singles & Albums
References
- A Solo Ray Davies Peers into 'Other People's Lives'
- Kinks star shot in New Orleans
- Independent Music Awards - Past Judges
- www.thestage.co.uk/news/newsstory.php/21291/kinks-frontman-davies-makes-musical-debut
- Daily Mail 17.3.82
- http://www.kinks.de/40jahre/teil6_e.html
- http://www.whatsonstage.com/board/index.php?showtopic=7656
- Independent Music Awards - Past Judges
- British Hit Singles & Albums