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Death Don't Have No Mercy

"Death Don't Have No Mercy" is a song by the American gospel blues singer-guitarist Blind Gary Davis. It was first recorded on August 24, 1960, for the album Harlem Street Singer (1960), released by Prestige Records' Bluesville label during a career rebirth for Davis in the American folk music revival. The recording was engineered by Rudy Van Gelder at his studio in Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, and produced by Kenneth S. Goldstein, who had pursued Davis in Prestige's effort to capitalize on the revival.

"Death Don't Have No Mercy"
Song by Blind Gary Davis
from the album Harlem Street Singer
ReleasedDecember 1960
RecordedAugust 24, 1960
StudioVan Gelder (Englewood Cliffs)
Genre
Length4:47
LabelBluesville
Songwriter(s)Gary Davis
Producer(s)Kenneth S. Goldstein

"Death Don't Have No Mercy" features Davis' characteristically lively yet simple style of blues guitar alongside arrangement techniques and themes from gospel music, in what has since been considered a work of the "holy blues" genre. Unusual for traditional blues players, Davis performed the chord progression in the key of G-flat major with guitar fills in the relative minor of E, lending the song a heightened sense of tension and emotional appeal. The lyrics, based on traditional spirituals, are a lament of death's periodic inevitability and reflect events from the bluesman's early life in the American South, such as the loss of his mother and the premature deaths of his seven siblings.

One of Davis' most well-known songs, "Death Don't Have No Mercy" was covered by Bob Dylan, the Grateful Dead, and Hot Tuna in the 1960s, reaching the era's young white rock audience. Its performance also took on political significance as the decade ensued with growing opposition to U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War. The song was one of the last Davis performed before his death, playing a fierce rendition of it at a Northport, Long Island church concert in April 1972, organized in part by the future photographer Doug Menuez.

Background

 
Davis in his 60s

Gary Davis was born in 1896 in impoverished Laurens County, South Carolina, to parents who were among the county's few black sharecroppers. His 17-year-old mother Evelina bore seven more children, while his father John left during Gary's childhood and was gunned down by authorities in Alabama after he allegedly murdered a lover. With adequate health care services unavailable to African Americans, Davis began to go blind as an infant after improper treatment of an eye problem. While six of his siblings died in infancy.[1][nb 1] Evelina soon gave guardianship of him over to her own mother and, though still present in his life, refused any emotional connection with him, another event that profoundly impacted Davis and the themes he would explore in his musical career.[3][nb 2] Despite this, she purchased an inexpensive guitar for Davis after he turned seven and had demonstrated a curiosity and talent for music, being exposed to instruments through family connections and to local sounds from plantation field work songs, informal rural gatherings, traveling tent shows, and spirituals sung in the black Baptist church, which served as a communal safe haven from the rising threat of racial violence.[4]

By the 1930s, Davis was performing the blues and ragtime guitar professionally, appearing on recordings by the prominent Piedmont blues singer-guitarist Blind Boy Fuller.[5] He also recorded some of his own under the stage name Blind Gary, although they sold poorly.[6] Davis gave up playing the blues publicly upon converting to Christianity and being ordained a minister in 1937, before moving to New York in the early 1940s.[7] There, he lived with his wife Annie in a modest East Bronx apartment, surviving on welfare checks, offerings from churches where he preached, and gratuities from his street performances in neighborhoods like Harlem.[8] The following decade, he began giving guitar lessons to young, white blues players of the city's burgeoning folk music revival. His weekly performances at the Lower East Side apartment of Tiny Ledbetter (Lead Belly's niece), a gathering place for revivalists, also greatly influenced many young guitarists and enhanced his stature as a musician.[7] By 1960, Davis was receiving supporting notices in publications like Sing Out! and The New York Times, while a network of local fans helped the 60-plus-year-old working minister navigate his musical career, leading to regular concert work in and around New York, membership in the musicians union, and a return to recording.[9]

Davis played both blues and gospel music throughout his career, in a repertoire that also included ragtime piano compositions, Sousa marches, and parlor songs from the turn of the 20th century.[10] According to the musician and author Dick Weissman, "Davis had a sort of unique bounce to his guitar work, and his gruff, impassioned singing was highly emotional."[7] While his recorded work was ultimately religious music for the most part, he would be considered, alongside Blind Willie Johnson, to be the dominant performer of the "holy blues", a genre coined to describe Davis' style of traditional blues playing with lyrics conveying a religious message.[11] Recurring themes in both his music and sermons included abandonment, lost children, the wilderness, death, and reuniting with his mother.[3][nb 3]

Recording

 
Rudy Van Gelder (1976), the recording's engineer

As a recording artist, Davis was pursued by Prestige Records producer Kenneth S. Goldstein, who first recorded him in 1956 for the Riverside record label.[13][nb 4] By 1960, Goldstein had become the top producer of folk music in the U.S. and was working with Rudy Van Gelder, who himself had earned renown as a meticulous sound engineer for major jazz musicians and labels. The previous year, Gelder had his own studio built on a wooded lot in the suburb of Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, featuring innovative recording equipment and a high-ceiling space designed for delicate acoustics.[14] On August 24, 1960, Davis was driven from his apartment to the studio for a recording session that would produce songs for his prospective LP album Harlem Street Singer, among them "Death Don't Have No Mercy". Before reaching the studio, he stopped in Harlem and was photographed playing his guitar on a sidewalk for the album cover.[15]

Under Goldstein's supervision, and with Van Gelder engineering the studio session, Davis played a weather-worn Gibson J-200 guitar and recorded 20 songs in the span of three hours, the last of which was "Death Don't Have No Mercy".[16] He refused to take a break or redo a take through the session, following his penchant for playing songs "by the spirit" (in his words), often ignoring the timekeeping of record producers or concert managers. This resulted in performances that often exceeded the three-minute song length typical in popular music.[17]

 
Davis played the song on a Gibson J-200 guitar (1960 model pictured).

Although Davis initially felt happy to be recording again, the session was filled with tension between him and Goldstein due to their clashing approaches and personalities. The producer, by his own account, did not object to Davis' insistence on recording single takes. "Every song was done in one take, which meant ... a helluva lot of editing", Goldstein later explained. "Okay a bad [guitar] break that was better between two later verses I could copy that over, splice that back into ... where the first verse was." According to the journalist and Davis biographer Ian Zack, Goldstein's comments on Davis may not be entirely reliable, as the bluesman was still performing at a peak level, while Goldstein was reputedly unfriendly with his recording artists. In his own defense, the producer argued that Davis had a poor working relationship in the folk industry.[18][nb 5]

Davis' contract with Prestige earned him a $309 advance for the recording session – three times his previous payment from Riverside – and a twenty-cent royalty payment for each copy that Harlem Street Singer would sell in the U.S. It also gave Prestige an option to record him again through 1961.[19]

Composition and lyrics

"Death Don't Have No Mercy" is composed with words and music by Davis. It features techniques of arrangement and performance from his gospel songs, alongside his style of blues guitar.[20] Davis' guitar accompaniment for the song is a relatively simple chord progression, performed in the key of G-flat major. It is strummed with occasional variations on a fill (played in E-flat minor with the upper bass strings) and a guitar break, wherein the melody is played on the lower treble strings.[21] During the break section, Davis speaks the phrase "talk to me ...", which he often said in reference to his guitar.[20] Commenting on his guitar playing, Zack says Davis demonstrates improvisation and a strong sense of chords while utilizing "the entire fretboard" in a way that deviates from the more conventional twelve-bar, three-chord blues of Robert Johnson and other recording acts in the genre.[22]

 
Death on the Pale Horse by Gustave Doré, 1865. Death is personified as a merciless visitor in the song.

The lyrics of the song are a lament of death, portrayed as an inevitable and recurring visitor.[23] Among them are the verses, "Well death will go in any family in this land / Well it come to your house and it won't stay long / Well you look in the bed and one of the family be gone".[24] They resemble refrains and other text found in traditional spirituals such as "Death Come to My House, He Didn't Stay Long" (collected by James Weldon Johnson in 1926) and "Death Ain't Nothin' but a Robber" (collected by John Wesley Work III in 1940), both of which feature a variation of the following lyrics: "Death come to my house, he didn't stay long / I looked in the bed an' my mother [or father or sister or brother] was gone".[25] While based on traditional spirituals, "Death Don't Have No Mercy" has "a strong autobiographical element" for Davis as "the only surviving child of eight", according to Zack.[3][nb 6] According to the musicologist David Malvinni, the song "presents a terrifying personification of the instant, sudden possibility [of] death at any moment that could have come from the medieval era's confrontation with the plague".[27]

In an analysis of the composition, the scholar and author Brent Wood writes:

"Death Don't Have No Mercy" unfolds as a minor blues mixing in major chords between the E-minor tonic and the B7 dominant, conveying the inevitability of death's periodic visit as the blues-form cycles and its lines repeat. A chord sequence descending by fifths from the B7 through E-minor, A, D, and G, then returning to B7, develops the foreboding tone established by the minor tonic and dissonant dominant, portraying strength and balance slipping quickly away. The tension between fear and acceptance climaxes at the end of the second line with a chromatic climb from G to B7 supporting the repetition of "in this land," creating frightful anticipation and immediacy. This tension is then downplayed by a straight i–iv (E-minor to A-minor) chord change as the lyrics announce the physical discovery of a dead family member with a sense of resignation, and the first line repeats to conclude the verse.[28]

Release and reception

 
Stefan Grossman (1971) played a role in the song's publication and reissue.

"Death Don't Have No Mercy" was first featured on Harlem Street Singer, released in December 1960 on Bluesville Records (a Prestige imprint label) to critical acclaim.[19] Davis was billed as Blind Gary Davis for the album.[20] According to AllMusic, the song "became a folk hit in the '60s".[29]

The composition was later published in Rev. Gary Davis: The Holy Blues (1970), a collection of sheet music and lyrics that gave Davis copyright protection for 80 of his original compositions and arrangements.[30] The book was edited by the musician, historian, and Kicking Mule Records co-founder Stefan Grossman, who studied under Davis in the 1950s and went on to write a biography of him.[31] The recording later appeared on the Davis compilation albums When I Die I'll Live Again (released in 1972 by Fantasy Records) and Let Us Get Together (released in 1974 by Kicking Mule).[20]

"Death Don't Have No Mercy" is among the most popular of Davis' holy blues recordings.[20] Zack says it is "perhaps his most famous song" while calling the line "death don't have no mercy in this land" a "signature lament".[3] He contends that the original spirituals adapted for the song have survived in the public memory because of Davis' genius as an arranger, as his performance "in both the key of G and its relative minor (E) [...] was then almost unheard of among traditional blues-based guitarists", and his use of "dazzling single-string runs" served to "heighten the song's tension and pathos".[25] Grossman describes it as "a beautiful, haunting piece of music".[20] Referencing Davis' "gruff, shouting voice", Michael Ullman of Fanfare calls his performance "hair-chilling".[32]

Performances

A rendition of "Death Don't Have No Mercy" by Davis featured in the 1963 documentary short film Blind Gary Davis by Harold Becker, who juxtaposed the music against scenes of pedestrians on a cold day in Harlem. "Their weary visages, paired with Davis' mournful shouting and brilliant fingerpicking, provided the film's emotional finale", according to Zack.[33] Davis was also recorded performing the song live in his set for the 1965 Newport Folk Festival in Newport, Rhode Island, which Vanguard released in 1968 as The Reverend Gary Davis at Newport. Zack calls the LP his "best-recorded live album", as it "captures him in fabulous form" and is made unique by his "shouting out spirituals" like "Death Don't Have No Mercy".[34]

On October 16, 1965, Davis performed "Death Don't Have No Mercy" at a protest rally outside of Hunter College in New York, held in opposition to U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War. While not politically outspoken, Davis had frequently performed concerts benefiting causes of the Civil Rights Movement and played a "sing-in for peace" at Carnegie Hall a month earlier in response to the war. However, with anti-war sentiment beginning to intensify around the country, the rally proved an atypically turbulent event for the bluesman, whose performance accompanied speeches by the pacifist clergyman A. J. Muste and the journalist I. F. Stone while more than ten thousand protesters and counterprotesters clashed violently in nearby streets.[35] Davis later played a seething, woeful rendition of the song for the 1970 documentary film Black Roots, which featured discussions on family and race relations among several prominent black figures, including Florynce Kennedy, who was shown in tears during the song.[36]

Cover versions

Ironically, a song that was so personal to Davis would take on a whole new meaning for young white rock fans by the time the Grateful Dead and Hot Tuna covered it late in the decade during the worst Vietnam turmoil.

— Ian Zack[37]

While Davis continued releasing more studio recordings in the early 1960s, many folk musicians rerecorded or performed his material live, particularly in the clubs of New York's Greenwich Village and Boston's own folk scene, where venues like Club 47 and Cafe Yana attracted collegiate crowds from nearby universities. "At the hoots of Cafe Yana and the Unicorn, people were playing 'Twelve Gates to the City' and 'Death Don't Have No Mercy,'" recalled David Wilson, who founded the Boston-based folk magazine Broadside in 1962. "It was pretty funny hearing some people trying to do that with the Gary Davis growl."[38]

After seeing Davis play the 1961 Indian Neck Folk Festival in Branford, Connecticut, the then-novice folk singer Bob Dylan returned home to Minnesota and performed "Death Don't Have No Mercy", among other Davis and Woody Guthrie songs, at a party for University of Minnesota students. This performance was recorded and bootlegged as The Minneapolis Party Tape, which was appraised the following year in the local folk fanzine Little Sandy Review as "hectic and shaky, but [containing] all the elements of the now-perfected performing style". Dylan opened for Davis in late 1961 at a Bennington College concert in Vermont and would go on to cover the bluesman's songs occasionally throughout his own recording career.[39]

 
Jerry Garcia (1980) of the Grateful Dead, one of the song's performers

Jerry Garcia, a vocalist-guitarist for the Grateful Dead, first heard "Death Don't Have No Mercy" on Harlem Street Singer and incorporated it into the band's live repertoire in the late 1960s, transforming the song into a slow-moving, impassioned performance. The Grateful Dead debuted their rendition on January 8, 1966, during an Acid Test party held at the Fillmore West in San Francisco, in what was also Garcia's debut solo-vocal performance and "first instrumental exploration of the pathos inherent in melody and chord progression", as Wood describes. Nicholas G. Meriwether, a Grateful Dead archivist for UC Santa Cruz, later reviewed a bootleg recording of the show and found their rendition to be either "terrifying" or "a magnificent catharsis" while observing "spooky, gentle" and "eerie" qualities in Ron "Pigpen" McKernan's organ work.[28]

On March 2, 1969, the Grateful Dead played "Death Don't Have No Mercy" again at the Fillmore West as a "sprawling, electrified ten-minute-plus version", as described by Zack.[40] In this performance, the band plays an extended instrumental improvisation before Garcia sings in a livelier, more demonstrative manner. "As the lyrics become repetitive, death is more present, oxymoronically more 'alive'", says Malvinni, who notes that death is "personified as a live being, alive, stalking the living, the mother, sister, and brother (in this version, not the father)."[41] This version was recorded and released later that year on the Grateful Dead album Live/Dead, which credited Davis for the song and earned him a royalty.[42][nb 7] The band's guitarist Bob Weir took lessons from the bluesman the following year at the suggestion of Jefferson Airplane guitarist and Davis fan Jorma Kaukonen, while the Grateful Dead in general drew influence from Davis' improvisational, broad-based style of blues guitar playing.[22]

Kaukonen was also influenced by Davis and performed the bluesman's songs with his acoustic blues-rock band Hot Tuna.[22] Kaukonen's rendition of "Death Don't Have No Mercy", which resembled the original, featured on the band's self-titled album, recorded in late 1969 at the New Orleans House in Berkeley and released the following year.[43] Davis, usually unimpressed by other guitarists, expressed approval of Kaukonen's playing on hearing the album, saying, "That boy sure can play!"[44] According to Zack, the Grateful Dead and Hot Tuna's cover versions in the late 1960s and early 1970s played a significant role in making Davis best known for "Death Don't Have No Mercy".[25] Hot Tuna would later revisit the song as part of an acoustic blues set at the 2019 FloydFest in Floyd, Virginia. Reporting on the festival for Rolling Stone, Garret K. Woodward said that the rendition's "spooky atmosphere [benefited] from a venue that borders a nearby cemetery and the rolling hills of Floyd County".[45]

Davis' final rendition

 
Doug Menuez (2019), then a young blues fan, helped organize Davis' last performance of the song in 1972.

"Death Don't Have No Mercy" proved to be one of the last songs Davis would perform before his death in 1972.[46] In March of that year, while recuperating at a hospital from a heart attack, Davis received a letter from the teenage blues fans Doug Menuez and Seth Fahey, inviting him to play a concert in their Long Island village of Northport. The community, like many others at the time, was beset by alienation and acts of protest in response to the Vietnam War. Despite his severely weakened and underweight condition, and against the plea of his wife, Davis agreed to perform on a fee of $200. He visited Menuez and Fahey on April 24 to play the concert in Northport's First Presbyterian Church later that evening.[47]

Menuez and Fahey escorted Davis down the aisle across a sellout audience of more than 250 people on the church's basement level. Upon reaching the stage, he shakingly tuned his guitar before opening with an intense performance of "Death Don't Have No Mercy". "He just came to life and just ripped the shit out of that guitar", Menuez recalled. "It was amazing. Everyone was blown away." Larry Conklin, a then-21-year-old Northport native and army dischargee sitting in the front row, later said of the performance that "all that shaking was gone and the fire came out and, boy, everybody was riveted. And I tell ya, I think it was a great moment for everybody there that night."[48]

In ascribing Davis' fierce rendition of the song that night, Zack says that, "maybe it was being back in church, albeit not a Baptist one, or maybe it was adrenaline or the realization that he might not get another chance to perform."[49] A few weeks later, on May 5, 1972, Davis died of a massive heart attack at the age of 76.[46]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ According to Gary Davis, at three weeks old he was taken to a doctor for sore eyes and treated with alum and milk, causing them to develop ulcers; a family friend's account attributed his blindness instead to Evelina having treated his eye infection with lye soap, a traditional folk remedy. When medically examined later in adulthood, he was assessed to have suffered from both juvenile glaucoma and corneal ulceration, a condition that can be caused by severe Vitamin A deficiency in the child or by neonatal conjunctivitis contracted from a mother afflicted with gonorrhea.[2]
  2. ^ As Davis later recalled, "I felt horrible about it 'cause I felt like I was throwed away. In fact, my mother never had cared as much about me as she did my younger brother. ... He was her heart. ... Because of the way she talkin' to me, she'd wish that I were dead. She tell me that a heap of times."[3]
  3. ^ Public records indicate that Davis' mother died in 1934.[12]
  4. ^ Both Riverside and Prestige were jazz-oriented record labels seeking to capitalize on the burgeoning folk revival.[13]
  5. ^ As Goldstein reasoned in regards to Davis, "How do you work with a man who ... had been so stung by people misusing him and ripping him off ... a street singer who was stolen from and who had his instruments stolen when he would fall asleep on the train ... He was a bitter man in a lot of ways."[16]
  6. ^ Davis' younger brother (and likely half-brother) Buddy Pinson died in 1930 at 25 years old after being stabbed with a butcher's knife by a girlfriend, leaving Davis as the sole survivor among Evelina's children.[26]
  7. ^ Malvinni says that the album title's juxtaposition of "Deadness" (in reference to the band) and "liveness" (the authenticity and quality in live performance) may indicate an aesthetic strategy that resonates in the song, which attributes qualities of liveness to death.[41]

References

Notes

  1. ^ Zack 2015, pp. 7–9.
  2. ^ Zack 2015, p. 49.
  3. ^ a b c d e Zack 2015, p. 9.
  4. ^ Zack 2015, pp. 14–16.
  5. ^ Weissman & Weissman 2005, pp. 71, 77.
  6. ^ Zack 2015, pp. 49–50.
  7. ^ a b c Weissman & Weissman 2005, p. 77.
  8. ^ Zack 2015, p. 2.
  9. ^ Zack 2015, pp. 119–122.
  10. ^ Grossman 1974, p. 108; Weissman & Weissman 2005, p. 77.
  11. ^ Weissman & Weissman 2005, p. 77; Grossman 1974, p. 108.
  12. ^ Zack 2015, p. 277.
  13. ^ a b Zack 2015, p. 122.
  14. ^ Zack 2015, pp. 122–123.
  15. ^ Zack 2015, pp. 122, 123, 126.
  16. ^ a b Zack 2015, p. 124.
  17. ^ Zack 2015, pp. 124, 140.
  18. ^ Zack 2015, pp. 123–124.
  19. ^ a b Zack 2015, p. 127.
  20. ^ a b c d e f Grossman 1974, p. 108.
  21. ^ Grossman 1974, p. 108; Zack 2015, p. 126.
  22. ^ a b c Zack 2015, p. 239.
  23. ^ Zack 2015, p. 9; Wood 2020.
  24. ^ Grossman 1974, p. 111.
  25. ^ a b c Zack 2015, p. 126.
  26. ^ Zack 2015, p. 8.
  27. ^ Malvinni 2013, p. 93.
  28. ^ a b Wood 2020.
  29. ^ j. poet n.d.
  30. ^ Zack 2015, p. 237.
  31. ^ Zack 2015, p. 237; Weissman & Weissman 2005, p. 77; Mancuso, Lampe & Gilbert 1996, p. 101.
  32. ^ Ullman 1994, p. 444.
  33. ^ Zack 2015, p. 173.
  34. ^ Zack 2015, p. 270.
  35. ^ Zack 2015, pp. 215–217.
  36. ^ Zack 2015, p. 241.
  37. ^ Zack 2015, p. 216.
  38. ^ Zack 2015, pp. 143–144.
  39. ^ Zack 2015, pp. 139–140.
  40. ^ Malvinni 2013, p. 23; Zack 2015, p. 238.
  41. ^ a b Malvinni 2013, p. 23.
  42. ^ Zack 2015, p. 238.
  43. ^ Wood 2020; Zack 2015, p. 239.
  44. ^ Zack 2015, p. 240.
  45. ^ Woodward 2019.
  46. ^ a b Zack 2015, pp. 258–259.
  47. ^ Zack 2015, pp. 256–257.
  48. ^ Zack 2015, pp. 257–258.
  49. ^ Zack 2015, p. 258.

Bibliography

  • Grossman, Stefan (1974). Rev. Gary Davis Blues Guitar. Oak Publications. ISBN 9781783234592.
  • j. poet (n.d.). "You Can Always Turn Around – Lucky Peterson". AllMusic. Archived from the original on March 12, 2021. Retrieved March 9, 2021.
  • Malvinni, David (2013). Grateful Dead and the Art of Rock Improvisation. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 9780810883482.
  • Mancuso, Chuck; Lampe, David; Gilbert, Reg, eds. (1996). Popular Music and the Underground: Foundations of Jazz, Blues, Country, and Rock, 1900–1950. Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company. ISBN 9780840390882.
  • Ullman, Michael (January–February 1994). "The Jazz Column". Fanfare. Vol. 17, no. 3.
  • Weissman, Dick; Weissman, Richard (2005). Blues: The Basics. Routledge. ISBN 9780415970686.
  • Wood, Brent (2020). "Death Don't Have No Mercy in This Land". The Tragic Odes of Jerry Garcia and The Grateful Dead: Mystery Dances in the Magic Theater. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 9780429582219. Retrieved February 15, 2021 – via Google Books.
  • Woodward, Garret K. (July 29, 2019). "FloydFest 2019: 10 Best Things We Saw". Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on July 10, 2021. Retrieved July 10, 2021.
  • Zack, Ian (2015). Say No to the Devil: The Life and Musical Genius of Rev. Gary Davis. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0226234106.

External links

  • "Death Don't Have No Mercy" at Dead.net (lyrics to the Grateful Dead version)
  • "Death Don't Have No Mercy" at MusicBrainz (information and list of recordings)

death, have, mercy, song, american, gospel, blues, singer, guitarist, blind, gary, davis, first, recorded, august, 1960, album, harlem, street, singer, 1960, released, prestige, records, bluesville, label, during, career, rebirth, davis, american, folk, music,. Death Don t Have No Mercy is a song by the American gospel blues singer guitarist Blind Gary Davis It was first recorded on August 24 1960 for the album Harlem Street Singer 1960 released by Prestige Records Bluesville label during a career rebirth for Davis in the American folk music revival The recording was engineered by Rudy Van Gelder at his studio in Englewood Cliffs New Jersey and produced by Kenneth S Goldstein who had pursued Davis in Prestige s effort to capitalize on the revival Death Don t Have No Mercy Song by Blind Gary Davisfrom the album Harlem Street SingerReleasedDecember 1960RecordedAugust 24 1960StudioVan Gelder Englewood Cliffs GenreHoly blues spiritualLength4 47LabelBluesvilleSongwriter s Gary DavisProducer s Kenneth S Goldstein Death Don t Have No Mercy features Davis characteristically lively yet simple style of blues guitar alongside arrangement techniques and themes from gospel music in what has since been considered a work of the holy blues genre Unusual for traditional blues players Davis performed the chord progression in the key of G flat major with guitar fills in the relative minor of E lending the song a heightened sense of tension and emotional appeal The lyrics based on traditional spirituals are a lament of death s periodic inevitability and reflect events from the bluesman s early life in the American South such as the loss of his mother and the premature deaths of his seven siblings One of Davis most well known songs Death Don t Have No Mercy was covered by Bob Dylan the Grateful Dead and Hot Tuna in the 1960s reaching the era s young white rock audience Its performance also took on political significance as the decade ensued with growing opposition to U S involvement in the Vietnam War The song was one of the last Davis performed before his death playing a fierce rendition of it at a Northport Long Island church concert in April 1972 organized in part by the future photographer Doug Menuez Contents 1 Background 2 Recording 3 Composition and lyrics 4 Release and reception 5 Performances 5 1 Cover versions 5 2 Davis final rendition 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksBackground Edit Davis in his 60sGary Davis was born in 1896 in impoverished Laurens County South Carolina to parents who were among the county s few black sharecroppers His 17 year old mother Evelina bore seven more children while his father John left during Gary s childhood and was gunned down by authorities in Alabama after he allegedly murdered a lover With adequate health care services unavailable to African Americans Davis began to go blind as an infant after improper treatment of an eye problem While six of his siblings died in infancy 1 nb 1 Evelina soon gave guardianship of him over to her own mother and though still present in his life refused any emotional connection with him another event that profoundly impacted Davis and the themes he would explore in his musical career 3 nb 2 Despite this she purchased an inexpensive guitar for Davis after he turned seven and had demonstrated a curiosity and talent for music being exposed to instruments through family connections and to local sounds from plantation field work songs informal rural gatherings traveling tent shows and spirituals sung in the black Baptist church which served as a communal safe haven from the rising threat of racial violence 4 By the 1930s Davis was performing the blues and ragtime guitar professionally appearing on recordings by the prominent Piedmont blues singer guitarist Blind Boy Fuller 5 He also recorded some of his own under the stage name Blind Gary although they sold poorly 6 Davis gave up playing the blues publicly upon converting to Christianity and being ordained a minister in 1937 before moving to New York in the early 1940s 7 There he lived with his wife Annie in a modest East Bronx apartment surviving on welfare checks offerings from churches where he preached and gratuities from his street performances in neighborhoods like Harlem 8 The following decade he began giving guitar lessons to young white blues players of the city s burgeoning folk music revival His weekly performances at the Lower East Side apartment of Tiny Ledbetter Lead Belly s niece a gathering place for revivalists also greatly influenced many young guitarists and enhanced his stature as a musician 7 By 1960 Davis was receiving supporting notices in publications like Sing Out and The New York Times while a network of local fans helped the 60 plus year old working minister navigate his musical career leading to regular concert work in and around New York membership in the musicians union and a return to recording 9 Davis played both blues and gospel music throughout his career in a repertoire that also included ragtime piano compositions Sousa marches and parlor songs from the turn of the 20th century 10 According to the musician and author Dick Weissman Davis had a sort of unique bounce to his guitar work and his gruff impassioned singing was highly emotional 7 While his recorded work was ultimately religious music for the most part he would be considered alongside Blind Willie Johnson to be the dominant performer of the holy blues a genre coined to describe Davis style of traditional blues playing with lyrics conveying a religious message 11 Recurring themes in both his music and sermons included abandonment lost children the wilderness death and reuniting with his mother 3 nb 3 Recording Edit Rudy Van Gelder 1976 the recording s engineerAs a recording artist Davis was pursued by Prestige Records producer Kenneth S Goldstein who first recorded him in 1956 for the Riverside record label 13 nb 4 By 1960 Goldstein had become the top producer of folk music in the U S and was working with Rudy Van Gelder who himself had earned renown as a meticulous sound engineer for major jazz musicians and labels The previous year Gelder had his own studio built on a wooded lot in the suburb of Englewood Cliffs New Jersey featuring innovative recording equipment and a high ceiling space designed for delicate acoustics 14 On August 24 1960 Davis was driven from his apartment to the studio for a recording session that would produce songs for his prospective LP album Harlem Street Singer among them Death Don t Have No Mercy Before reaching the studio he stopped in Harlem and was photographed playing his guitar on a sidewalk for the album cover 15 Under Goldstein s supervision and with Van Gelder engineering the studio session Davis played a weather worn Gibson J 200 guitar and recorded 20 songs in the span of three hours the last of which was Death Don t Have No Mercy 16 He refused to take a break or redo a take through the session following his penchant for playing songs by the spirit in his words often ignoring the timekeeping of record producers or concert managers This resulted in performances that often exceeded the three minute song length typical in popular music 17 Davis played the song on a Gibson J 200 guitar 1960 model pictured Although Davis initially felt happy to be recording again the session was filled with tension between him and Goldstein due to their clashing approaches and personalities The producer by his own account did not object to Davis insistence on recording single takes Every song was done in one take which meant a helluva lot of editing Goldstein later explained Okay a bad guitar break that was better between two later verses I could copy that over splice that back into where the first verse was According to the journalist and Davis biographer Ian Zack Goldstein s comments on Davis may not be entirely reliable as the bluesman was still performing at a peak level while Goldstein was reputedly unfriendly with his recording artists In his own defense the producer argued that Davis had a poor working relationship in the folk industry 18 nb 5 Davis contract with Prestige earned him a 309 advance for the recording session three times his previous payment from Riverside and a twenty cent royalty payment for each copy that Harlem Street Singer would sell in the U S It also gave Prestige an option to record him again through 1961 19 Composition and lyrics Edit Death Don t Have No Mercy is composed with words and music by Davis It features techniques of arrangement and performance from his gospel songs alongside his style of blues guitar 20 Davis guitar accompaniment for the song is a relatively simple chord progression performed in the key of G flat major It is strummed with occasional variations on a fill played in E flat minor with the upper bass strings and a guitar break wherein the melody is played on the lower treble strings 21 During the break section Davis speaks the phrase talk to me which he often said in reference to his guitar 20 Commenting on his guitar playing Zack says Davis demonstrates improvisation and a strong sense of chords while utilizing the entire fretboard in a way that deviates from the more conventional twelve bar three chord blues of Robert Johnson and other recording acts in the genre 22 Death on the Pale Horse by Gustave Dore 1865 Death is personified as a merciless visitor in the song The lyrics of the song are a lament of death portrayed as an inevitable and recurring visitor 23 Among them are the verses Well death will go in any family in this land Well it come to your house and it won t stay long Well you look in the bed and one of the family be gone 24 They resemble refrains and other text found in traditional spirituals such as Death Come to My House He Didn t Stay Long collected by James Weldon Johnson in 1926 and Death Ain t Nothin but a Robber collected by John Wesley Work III in 1940 both of which feature a variation of the following lyrics Death come to my house he didn t stay long I looked in the bed an my mother or father or sister or brother was gone 25 While based on traditional spirituals Death Don t Have No Mercy has a strong autobiographical element for Davis as the only surviving child of eight according to Zack 3 nb 6 According to the musicologist David Malvinni the song presents a terrifying personification of the instant sudden possibility of death at any moment that could have come from the medieval era s confrontation with the plague 27 In an analysis of the composition the scholar and author Brent Wood writes Death Don t Have No Mercy unfolds as a minor blues mixing in major chords between the E minor tonic and the B7 dominant conveying the inevitability of death s periodic visit as the blues form cycles and its lines repeat A chord sequence descending by fifths from the B7 through E minor A D and G then returning to B7 develops the foreboding tone established by the minor tonic and dissonant dominant portraying strength and balance slipping quickly away The tension between fear and acceptance climaxes at the end of the second line with a chromatic climb from G to B7 supporting the repetition of in this land creating frightful anticipation and immediacy This tension is then downplayed by a straight i iv E minor to A minor chord change as the lyrics announce the physical discovery of a dead family member with a sense of resignation and the first line repeats to conclude the verse 28 Release and reception Edit Stefan Grossman 1971 played a role in the song s publication and reissue Death Don t Have No Mercy was first featured on Harlem Street Singer released in December 1960 on Bluesville Records a Prestige imprint label to critical acclaim 19 Davis was billed as Blind Gary Davis for the album 20 According to AllMusic the song became a folk hit in the 60s 29 The composition was later published in Rev Gary Davis The Holy Blues 1970 a collection of sheet music and lyrics that gave Davis copyright protection for 80 of his original compositions and arrangements 30 The book was edited by the musician historian and Kicking Mule Records co founder Stefan Grossman who studied under Davis in the 1950s and went on to write a biography of him 31 The recording later appeared on the Davis compilation albums When I Die I ll Live Again released in 1972 by Fantasy Records and Let Us Get Together released in 1974 by Kicking Mule 20 Death Don t Have No Mercy is among the most popular of Davis holy blues recordings 20 Zack says it is perhaps his most famous song while calling the line death don t have no mercy in this land a signature lament 3 He contends that the original spirituals adapted for the song have survived in the public memory because of Davis genius as an arranger as his performance in both the key of G and its relative minor E was then almost unheard of among traditional blues based guitarists and his use of dazzling single string runs served to heighten the song s tension and pathos 25 Grossman describes it as a beautiful haunting piece of music 20 Referencing Davis gruff shouting voice Michael Ullman of Fanfare calls his performance hair chilling 32 Performances EditA rendition of Death Don t Have No Mercy by Davis featured in the 1963 documentary short film Blind Gary Davis by Harold Becker who juxtaposed the music against scenes of pedestrians on a cold day in Harlem Their weary visages paired with Davis mournful shouting and brilliant fingerpicking provided the film s emotional finale according to Zack 33 Davis was also recorded performing the song live in his set for the 1965 Newport Folk Festival in Newport Rhode Island which Vanguard released in 1968 as The Reverend Gary Davis at Newport Zack calls the LP his best recorded live album as it captures him in fabulous form and is made unique by his shouting out spirituals like Death Don t Have No Mercy 34 On October 16 1965 Davis performed Death Don t Have No Mercy at a protest rally outside of Hunter College in New York held in opposition to U S involvement in the Vietnam War While not politically outspoken Davis had frequently performed concerts benefiting causes of the Civil Rights Movement and played a sing in for peace at Carnegie Hall a month earlier in response to the war However with anti war sentiment beginning to intensify around the country the rally proved an atypically turbulent event for the bluesman whose performance accompanied speeches by the pacifist clergyman A J Muste and the journalist I F Stone while more than ten thousand protesters and counterprotesters clashed violently in nearby streets 35 Davis later played a seething woeful rendition of the song for the 1970 documentary film Black Roots which featured discussions on family and race relations among several prominent black figures including Florynce Kennedy who was shown in tears during the song 36 Cover versions Edit Ironically a song that was so personal to Davis would take on a whole new meaning for young white rock fans by the time the Grateful Dead and Hot Tuna covered it late in the decade during the worst Vietnam turmoil Ian Zack 37 While Davis continued releasing more studio recordings in the early 1960s many folk musicians rerecorded or performed his material live particularly in the clubs of New York s Greenwich Village and Boston s own folk scene where venues like Club 47 and Cafe Yana attracted collegiate crowds from nearby universities At the hoots of Cafe Yana and the Unicorn people were playing Twelve Gates to the City and Death Don t Have No Mercy recalled David Wilson who founded the Boston based folk magazine Broadside in 1962 It was pretty funny hearing some people trying to do that with the Gary Davis growl 38 After seeing Davis play the 1961 Indian Neck Folk Festival in Branford Connecticut the then novice folk singer Bob Dylan returned home to Minnesota and performed Death Don t Have No Mercy among other Davis and Woody Guthrie songs at a party for University of Minnesota students This performance was recorded and bootlegged as The Minneapolis Party Tape which was appraised the following year in the local folk fanzine Little Sandy Review as hectic and shaky but containing all the elements of the now perfected performing style Dylan opened for Davis in late 1961 at a Bennington College concert in Vermont and would go on to cover the bluesman s songs occasionally throughout his own recording career 39 Jerry Garcia 1980 of the Grateful Dead one of the song s performersJerry Garcia a vocalist guitarist for the Grateful Dead first heard Death Don t Have No Mercy on Harlem Street Singer and incorporated it into the band s live repertoire in the late 1960s transforming the song into a slow moving impassioned performance The Grateful Dead debuted their rendition on January 8 1966 during an Acid Test party held at the Fillmore West in San Francisco in what was also Garcia s debut solo vocal performance and first instrumental exploration of the pathos inherent in melody and chord progression as Wood describes Nicholas G Meriwether a Grateful Dead archivist for UC Santa Cruz later reviewed a bootleg recording of the show and found their rendition to be either terrifying or a magnificent catharsis while observing spooky gentle and eerie qualities in Ron Pigpen McKernan s organ work 28 On March 2 1969 the Grateful Dead played Death Don t Have No Mercy again at the Fillmore West as a sprawling electrified ten minute plus version as described by Zack 40 In this performance the band plays an extended instrumental improvisation before Garcia sings in a livelier more demonstrative manner As the lyrics become repetitive death is more present oxymoronically more alive says Malvinni who notes that death is personified as a live being alive stalking the living the mother sister and brother in this version not the father 41 This version was recorded and released later that year on the Grateful Dead album Live Dead which credited Davis for the song and earned him a royalty 42 nb 7 The band s guitarist Bob Weir took lessons from the bluesman the following year at the suggestion of Jefferson Airplane guitarist and Davis fan Jorma Kaukonen while the Grateful Dead in general drew influence from Davis improvisational broad based style of blues guitar playing 22 Kaukonen was also influenced by Davis and performed the bluesman s songs with his acoustic blues rock band Hot Tuna 22 Kaukonen s rendition of Death Don t Have No Mercy which resembled the original featured on the band s self titled album recorded in late 1969 at the New Orleans House in Berkeley and released the following year 43 Davis usually unimpressed by other guitarists expressed approval of Kaukonen s playing on hearing the album saying That boy sure can play 44 According to Zack the Grateful Dead and Hot Tuna s cover versions in the late 1960s and early 1970s played a significant role in making Davis best known for Death Don t Have No Mercy 25 Hot Tuna would later revisit the song as part of an acoustic blues set at the 2019 FloydFest in Floyd Virginia Reporting on the festival for Rolling Stone Garret K Woodward said that the rendition s spooky atmosphere benefited from a venue that borders a nearby cemetery and the rolling hills of Floyd County 45 Davis final rendition Edit Doug Menuez 2019 then a young blues fan helped organize Davis last performance of the song in 1972 Death Don t Have No Mercy proved to be one of the last songs Davis would perform before his death in 1972 46 In March of that year while recuperating at a hospital from a heart attack Davis received a letter from the teenage blues fans Doug Menuez and Seth Fahey inviting him to play a concert in their Long Island village of Northport The community like many others at the time was beset by alienation and acts of protest in response to the Vietnam War Despite his severely weakened and underweight condition and against the plea of his wife Davis agreed to perform on a fee of 200 He visited Menuez and Fahey on April 24 to play the concert in Northport s First Presbyterian Church later that evening 47 Menuez and Fahey escorted Davis down the aisle across a sellout audience of more than 250 people on the church s basement level Upon reaching the stage he shakingly tuned his guitar before opening with an intense performance of Death Don t Have No Mercy He just came to life and just ripped the shit out of that guitar Menuez recalled It was amazing Everyone was blown away Larry Conklin a then 21 year old Northport native and army dischargee sitting in the front row later said of the performance that all that shaking was gone and the fire came out and boy everybody was riveted And I tell ya I think it was a great moment for everybody there that night 48 In ascribing Davis fierce rendition of the song that night Zack says that maybe it was being back in church albeit not a Baptist one or maybe it was adrenaline or the realization that he might not get another chance to perform 49 A few weeks later on May 5 1972 Davis died of a massive heart attack at the age of 76 46 See also Edit Blues portalAfrican American music Death personification List of Grateful Dead cover versionsNotes Edit According to Gary Davis at three weeks old he was taken to a doctor for sore eyes and treated with alum and milk causing them to develop ulcers a family friend s account attributed his blindness instead to Evelina having treated his eye infection with lye soap a traditional folk remedy When medically examined later in adulthood he was assessed to have suffered from both juvenile glaucoma and corneal ulceration a condition that can be caused by severe Vitamin A deficiency in the child or by neonatal conjunctivitis contracted from a mother afflicted with gonorrhea 2 As Davis later recalled I felt horrible about it cause I felt like I was throwed away In fact my mother never had cared as much about me as she did my younger brother He was her heart Because of the way she talkin to me she d wish that I were dead She tell me that a heap of times 3 Public records indicate that Davis mother died in 1934 12 Both Riverside and Prestige were jazz oriented record labels seeking to capitalize on the burgeoning folk revival 13 As Goldstein reasoned in regards to Davis How do you work with a man who had been so stung by people misusing him and ripping him off a street singer who was stolen from and who had his instruments stolen when he would fall asleep on the train He was a bitter man in a lot of ways 16 Davis younger brother and likely half brother Buddy Pinson died in 1930 at 25 years old after being stabbed with a butcher s knife by a girlfriend leaving Davis as the sole survivor among Evelina s children 26 Malvinni says that the album title s juxtaposition of Deadness in reference to the band and liveness the authenticity and quality in live performance may indicate an aesthetic strategy that resonates in the song which attributes qualities of liveness to death 41 References EditNotes Zack 2015 pp 7 9 Zack 2015 p 49 a b c d e Zack 2015 p 9 Zack 2015 pp 14 16 Weissman amp Weissman 2005 pp 71 77 Zack 2015 pp 49 50 a b c Weissman amp Weissman 2005 p 77 Zack 2015 p 2 Zack 2015 pp 119 122 Grossman 1974 p 108 Weissman amp Weissman 2005 p 77 Weissman amp Weissman 2005 p 77 Grossman 1974 p 108 Zack 2015 p 277 a b Zack 2015 p 122 Zack 2015 pp 122 123 Zack 2015 pp 122 123 126 a b Zack 2015 p 124 Zack 2015 pp 124 140 Zack 2015 pp 123 124 a b Zack 2015 p 127 a b c d e f Grossman 1974 p 108 Grossman 1974 p 108 Zack 2015 p 126 a b c Zack 2015 p 239 Zack 2015 p 9 Wood 2020 Grossman 1974 p 111 a b c Zack 2015 p 126 Zack 2015 p 8 Malvinni 2013 p 93 a b Wood 2020 j poet n d Zack 2015 p 237 Zack 2015 p 237 Weissman amp Weissman 2005 p 77 Mancuso Lampe amp Gilbert 1996 p 101 Ullman 1994 p 444 Zack 2015 p 173 Zack 2015 p 270 Zack 2015 pp 215 217 Zack 2015 p 241 Zack 2015 p 216 Zack 2015 pp 143 144 Zack 2015 pp 139 140 Malvinni 2013 p 23 Zack 2015 p 238 a b Malvinni 2013 p 23 Zack 2015 p 238 Wood 2020 Zack 2015 p 239 Zack 2015 p 240 Woodward 2019 a b Zack 2015 pp 258 259 Zack 2015 pp 256 257 Zack 2015 pp 257 258 Zack 2015 p 258 Bibliography Grossman Stefan 1974 Rev Gary Davis Blues Guitar Oak Publications ISBN 9781783234592 j poet n d You Can Always Turn Around Lucky Peterson AllMusic Archived from the original on March 12 2021 Retrieved March 9 2021 Malvinni David 2013 Grateful Dead and the Art of Rock Improvisation Scarecrow Press ISBN 9780810883482 Mancuso Chuck Lampe David Gilbert Reg eds 1996 Popular Music and the Underground Foundations of Jazz Blues Country and Rock 1900 1950 Kendall Hunt Publishing Company ISBN 9780840390882 Ullman Michael January February 1994 The Jazz Column Fanfare Vol 17 no 3 Weissman Dick Weissman Richard 2005 Blues The Basics Routledge ISBN 9780415970686 Wood Brent 2020 Death Don t Have No Mercy in This Land The Tragic Odes of Jerry Garcia and The Grateful Dead Mystery Dances in the Magic Theater Taylor amp Francis ISBN 9780429582219 Retrieved February 15 2021 via Google Books Woodward Garret K July 29 2019 FloydFest 2019 10 Best Things We Saw Rolling Stone Archived from the original on July 10 2021 Retrieved July 10 2021 Zack Ian 2015 Say No to the Devil The Life and Musical Genius of Rev Gary Davis University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0226234106 External links Edit Death Don t Have No Mercy at Dead net lyrics to the Grateful Dead version Death Don t Have No Mercy at MusicBrainz information and list of recordings Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Death Don 27t Have No Mercy amp oldid 1168882595, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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