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“Washita Love Child: The Life and Times of Jesse Ed Davis,” Douglas K. Miller

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  • Опубликовано: 21 апр 2021
  • This session is part of “Perspectives in History,” the 2021 Oklahoma History Conference. Beginning in the 1960s, Kiowa-Comanche guitar slinger Jesse Ed Davis rose to great prominence in the music business. Born in Norman and raised in Oklahoma City, Davis first honed his chops with country star Conway Twitty and blues icon Taj Mahal before becoming a major studio and live performer representing the Tulsa Sound from his new home in California. His work with fellow Oklahoman Leon Russell led to gigs with Bob Dylan, John Lennon, George Harrison, Eric Clapton, and other rock and roll legends. Yet, there are no elaborate scholarly histories of Jesse Ed Davis, his iconic contributions to popular music, or his career that both reflected and transcended his Native background. Indeed, Davis’s success first stemmed from his incredible musical talent. But if his musical reputation kept his phone ringing, then his identity as an Indigenous artist infused his experiences with deeper meaning. Through an exploration of this principal theme, this session will celebrate an underappreciated musician whose remarkable life can be simultaneously and uniquely told as music history, American Indian history, and Oklahoma history.
    Douglas K. Miller’s first book, Indians on the Move: Native American Mobility and Urbanization in the Twentieth Century (UNC Press, 2019), discusses how and why Native peoples imagined cities as places for new Indigenous futures in the twentieth century. He has two new book projects underway: one about Jesse Ed Davis’s remarkable life and career and one on histories of American Indian incarceration from the colonial period to the present.

Комментарии • 129

  • @flexableferret
    @flexableferret Месяц назад +1

    My mama's cousin. We are descended from the last recognized Kiowa Chief, Chief Ahpeatone.
    He was my dad's hero. My dad was the best blues harmonica player ever IMO. He got to play with Redbone out in L.A. which made me so happy for him.
    When I see Jesse he actually reminds me of my mom. They have such similar bone structure and facial features. My mom has a signed picture from Taj Mahal to her when they met.
    Thank you doe this video❤❤❤

  • @seanmurphy26
    @seanmurphy26 Месяц назад +2

    I was a teenager in the 90s and I purchased the family circus DVD for my father. I was spellbound by Jesse Ed Davis. At the time I could not tell if it was a man or a woman, because of the lack of facial hair.I I would watch the Taj mahal performance over and over again, always focused on Jesse Ed. Something about the way he played guitar, I thought it was sloppy and I showed my guitar player at the time. My guitar player was blown away by the performance and said this is as good as it gets! And I was like really?!!! Been fascinated with him ever since..

  • @dkdonalson9787
    @dkdonalson9787 3 года назад +47

    I sent this to Jesse Ed’s fan club in Kiowa-Comanche land and to music fan clubs all over the world. I worked with his Ten Bears, Quanah and Kiowa relatives 25 years ago on our treaty and Pow wow in Fredericksburg, Texas. Rock on and dance on, Jesse Ed Davis.

  • @user-eu3gj8sz7d
    @user-eu3gj8sz7d 5 месяцев назад +4

    Thankyou for this presentation of the life and times of the great Jesse Ed Davis. His natural abilities to play in such a unique style were obviously picked up by Taj in the late 60's, and the incredible four-piece band that was Taj Mahal came to London and played their part in the Rolling Stones Rock & Roll Circus, which is definately worth checking out, if you can stomach the already oversized egos of the hosts, who seem to have controlled which of the LIVE recordings of the guest stars were deemed the right ones to include on the final cut! Thank goodness for the archive footage that remains of what Jesse Ed, and Taj and the band played on the Circus (LIVE) which was simply amazing..far too brilliant to put the Glimmer Twins in the shade. This was raw rhythm & blues, 4 piece electric. Also in the Circus was a fledgling Jethro Tull....FANTASTIC!
    Thankyou again for the story of JED.

  • @user-ef2wy3dk7d
    @user-ef2wy3dk7d 3 месяца назад +2

    That was awesome,Great presentation !

  • @7thOrderofficial
    @7thOrderofficial 2 года назад +28

    Great to see you are doing this. I met Jesse Ed (and Patti) in Honolulu in 1978/79, I was 18 years old. He used to sit in with my band at club gigs, he took us into the recording studio to record our first demos, etc. We hung out quite a bit - what an astounding player and human being. Mahalo and best wishes from Hawaii!

    • @pharmerdavid1432
      @pharmerdavid1432 Год назад +4

      Wonderful story, thank you for sharing it. Since Douglas K. Miller who made this video is writing a book about Jesse Ed Davis, perhaps he will contact you to include your story - or maybe you might want to contact him? I'd certainly like to know more about your experience with that incredible human being - Jesse Ed Davis!

    • @thefraish2660
      @thefraish2660 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@princeali1786 , I disagree. My friend's band was playing in Honolulu at that same time, and Jesse Ed befriended them and produced some recordings for them, too. He has pictures of Jesse playing with them, and lots of good stories. Jesse did spend some time living in Honolulu. Another friend of mine bought a guitar from him, which he no longer has, unfortunately.

    • @thefraish2660
      @thefraish2660 10 месяцев назад +2

      Cool! My friends in The Piranha Brothers got some recordings produced by Jesse in Honolulu. What band were you in back then?

    • @7thOrderofficial
      @7thOrderofficial 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@thefraish2660 oh sure, I used to see The Piranha Brothers around. They used to play Pucks Pub, and a few other joints. Actually, we tried out a few names for the band - the one we got the most gigs with was The David Flowers Band (David was lead vocalist)

    • @bigislandsounds1022
      @bigislandsounds1022 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@7thOrderofficial I recall seeing you guys (The David Flowers Band) w/ JED at The Rock & Roll Cellar in Waikiki in 79 - great band!

  • @catherinecodjia1192
    @catherinecodjia1192 2 месяца назад +1

    Thank you so much ! A great among the greats ! RIP Jesse Edwin Davis !

  • @jamesschmitt7736
    @jamesschmitt7736 2 года назад +5

    Thank you very much Douglas Miller for a job very well done about Jesse Ed Davis - i caught him back in the late 60s with Taj Mahal at the Grande Ballroom in Detroit - i had Taj's 1st 3 albums & wore the crap out of them - "Leaving Trunk" was the 1st tune that kicked me in the butt - Giant Step was my favorite album especially "Bacon fat" - i loved Jesse's guitar playing & he influenced me greatly - Of course i had Jesse's albums - i wore the crap our of them as well - i followed up on him as much as i could & was saddened to hear of his passing - Jesse's life & his musik will always be remembered & honored i'm sure - Cause i know there's a bunch of people just like me who loved Jesse - Rest easy with the Lord Red dirt boogie brother

  • @jmb92555
    @jmb92555 Год назад +2

    I ended up here from watching Los Lobos's appearances on Letterman, then catching up on Los Lobos more recent history which included a cover of Jackson Browne's 'Jamaica Say You Will' which led me to listening to 'Dr My Eyes' (still not tired of listening to that after 50(?) years) and realizing I never knew who did the amazing guitar work on that song. It was of course... Jesse Ed Davis, a man I was not unfamiliar with, having first seen him at the Concert for Bangladesh w/ George Harrison etc. Why yes, yes I am a bit ADD ;) I'm sure I'll enjoy learning a bit more about Jesse Ed Davis and I appreciate the opportunity.

  • @timrobertson8407
    @timrobertson8407 Год назад +2

    I stopped by and talked to him last Saturday. Asked him for his blessing for my gig in Tulsa at River Spirit Casino. And put flowers on his mom's headstone.

  • @naligsEkr
    @naligsEkr 3 месяца назад +1

    I've heard so much about Jesse Ed + decided to find of a little more about him. It sounds like he did so much musically, lyrically, + more.
    I have to ask myself though if he was blessed with the gift of music or if anything he picked up he would have been great at.
    When you look at the numbers of really great masters of the guitar one would expect that there'd be a lot more.
    So very sad at how young he was when he left us
    + the tragic way. Thank -You for your wonderful tribute + letting me know him a bit more!

    • @douglasmillerhistory
      @douglasmillerhistory 3 месяца назад

      Juliette, he was multitalented. Pretty good athlete in high school and he acted in school theater productions. He was very intelligent, and could have become an English teacher, his initial goal when enrolling at OU, if he didn't instead devote most all of his time to music. Finally, he was talented at drawing and painting, like his father. I acknowledge Jesse's wider range of talents in my book that will be published this November.

  • @reallyMrPoobah
    @reallyMrPoobah 3 года назад +5

    RIP JED
    All that matters is he was here for awhile .

  • @bearclaw007
    @bearclaw007 3 года назад +15

    Jesse Ed Davis was a giant. His style is so easily recognizable from even one note.

  • @dant9310
    @dant9310 Год назад +4

    Saw Mr. Davis in the Fall of 1967 at Fillmore West. Left leg carrying the beat with his heel tapping the floor. Not sure that it was with Taj Mahal but his stature , the tone of his sound and resolute delivery just dropped my jaw. Didn't figure out who this cat was for a few years (way PRE-Google), and, to see him at the Concert for Bangladesh alongside Geo Harrison on film later told me that the others recognized his simple GREATness. Mom taught me 3 chords, she came from Peoria OK and Dad ran a bar when I was in the oven . Rendezvous Bend at Concord, CA, that upon occasion featured Ernest Tubb, Bob Wills, and loads of Oakland / Bay Area Country players in 1948. That beat, that warmth that sound made me feel right at home. How nice you could share so much of this great player. Thanks

  • @1rwjwith
    @1rwjwith 7 месяцев назад +1

    He was one if my favorites, first with Taj Mahal but I was also amazed at that incredible solo on Dr. My Eyes by Jackson Browne…He is on Lennons , Whatever Gets You Through The Night..incredible guitar playing. An immortal musician…great doc here.

  • @MrDickycampilongo
    @MrDickycampilongo 2 года назад +9

    this practically unknown genius in my country ARGENTINA is revered by the musicians who knew him

    • @pharmerdavid1432
      @pharmerdavid1432 Год назад

      Yessir, musicians who hear great guitar playing know it, so Jesse Ed has many musician fans - especially guitarists.

  • @walks.akadannystylusjnr.9346
    @walks.akadannystylusjnr.9346 Год назад +2

    I first heard Jesse on John Lennon's album Wall and Bridges in 1974 when i was 14 , his guitar lured me into playing and inspired me , i could feel his power then. I'm still finding music he did in his short yet full life . thankyou Jesse Ed Davis , shine on !! This is a brilliant testimony to the life and work of the man , well done Douglas K Miller . i wish you success .. be lucky :-)

  • @matthewzakszewski2105
    @matthewzakszewski2105 2 года назад +5

    That's so cool man. I first found out about him from a documentary about John trudell because he played along with some of John's poetry. But then I found out that is playing on Taj Mahal's Statesboro Blues is what inspired Duane Allman to start playing in the slide style and after hearing it I can certainly tell why. Such a beautiful tone and style. I'm sure he he was a lovely person as well.

  • @laurabethmichels2865
    @laurabethmichels2865 2 года назад +3

    i am native raised outside any contact with tribe........i just discovered JED two weeks ago and was walking around with all kinds of questions about his life. Rumble helped (thank you filmmakers) however your documentary really helped fill in the picture of this artist. It turns out his was the guitar music that moved my feet throughout my teens and still. I am so glad i have learned that i've listened to his guitar riffs most of my life with great appreciation. Thank you doesn't begin to cover my gratitude for your excellent voice and well researched video. Happy trails!!

  • @carolinefurr2868
    @carolinefurr2868 3 года назад +6

    A beautiful reminder. Thank you Douglas Miller.

  • @Mwbarrels
    @Mwbarrels 11 месяцев назад +3

    From OK & love Jesse

  • @progqueen5952
    @progqueen5952 2 года назад +3

    A bio on Duane Allman brought me here! Thank you for this wonderful content! Greetings from Illinois!

  • @pharmerdavid1432
    @pharmerdavid1432 Год назад +1

    That was beautiful man, I sincerely appreciate your work, and will look for the book. He was/is one of my greatest influences in music, and to a lesser degree - life. My life could have ended as his did - many times. At 67 I'm still kicking in 2023, but I know the end is coming soon, don't see this world lasting more than 5-6 years more, and by then my old dog (10 now) and me will be tired old boys by then!! God bless Jesse Ed Davis for all the great music he gifted the world, I agree that life doesn't end when we die, it begins in a different world.

  • @robertking7269
    @robertking7269 Год назад +1

    Good luck on the success of your book and bringing light to the heroes of rock and roll...great session players who know how to put on a show

  • @wmdoux2108
    @wmdoux2108 Год назад +3

    Thank You Doug. Jesse is a guitar hero of mine. Like lots of guitarists, my first encounter with his playing was “Doctor My Eyes”. Of course, I had to cop his parts to play it out with my band(s). I have to say, compared to other attempts I’ve heard, I got pretty damn close, but never to a “t”. Jesse OWNED his unique playing style, so his nuances, which sounded simple but were deceiving complex, were nearly impossible to recreate exactly.

    • @josephdonofrio328
      @josephdonofrio328 Год назад +3

      I too was mesmerized by the guitar on “Doctor My Eyes”. Not even aware at the time of the role studio musicians played, I assumed it was Jackson Brown playing the guitar bits. Subsequent Jackson Brown albums proved to be a disappointment for this guitar junkie looking for another fix. It was years later that I discovered that Jesse Ed was the guitar player I was seeking. I’ve seen Jackson Brown perform live several times since then, and each I am disappointed by guitar player playing Jessie’s part. No one even comes close to the sound of Indian Ed.

  • @HD35MAN
    @HD35MAN 2 года назад +5

    Thank you for this insightful video into the interesting life Jessie Ed Davis I am 69 years old and followed all the careers and music of all my heroes and yes Jesse was right there in the middle of it he is on many of the hit records that we listened to everyday

  • @grammakitty519
    @grammakitty519 3 года назад +5

    As someone who loves rock 60's 70's + 80's I Know Jesse's work but I am recently. Rediscovering the beautiful man behind that sound.
    Bravo Mr Miller....This is Amazing . Very well done & I'm excited for. Learning and watching more !!!

  • @joncopps1073
    @joncopps1073 2 года назад +3

    I’m someone who was totally taken by six days on the Road featuring Jesse had on blazing piano and the best telecaster sound ever produced. Thank you Dr. Miller for putting his life in a broader context of Heritage and personality.

  • @lauragaron148
    @lauragaron148 3 года назад +21

    Well done, Mr. Miller! An outstanding presentation about the man and how you wove together Jesse's family/ancestral past with his impressive rock and roll musical legacy weaving it all together into a joyful and poignant tapestry about his life.

  • @pbtoutant
    @pbtoutant 3 года назад +12

    Thank you for putting this together. Jesse Ed Davis is a great treasure and a tragedy, and deserves every acknowledgement and celebration.

  • @azzaz1
    @azzaz1 3 года назад +6

    I have a view short interviews with him in Hit Parader magazine. Always been a fan. Thank you!

  • @bradparker9664
    @bradparker9664 Год назад +1

    Mr. Miller has done a phenomenal job of fleshing out who this man, who has always been sort of mysterious to me, really was. Yes...the end was tragic. But that doesn't define who he was. Who he was is found in his playing. Those he worked with absolutely loved him...Gene Clark, Taj Mahal, George Harrison, Ringo Starr, John Lennon, Jackson Brown, Eric Clapton, et al. Just as another tragic figure, Jim Gordon, was the go to drummer during the same era, Jesse Ed Davis was the first call many of the biggest stars in the world made when they needed a guitarist. Well done, Mr. Miller!

  • @Leekim44
    @Leekim44 3 года назад +9

    Very cool . . . Jess has always been one of my favorite guitar players of all time.

  • @kendramoon4722
    @kendramoon4722 2 года назад +3

    Thank you for all of the time and effort to share the story of Jesse Ed Davis .

  • @travissmith9451
    @travissmith9451 3 года назад +9

    Thoroughly enjoyed your presentation and look forward to your book. Jesse Ed Davis' story is one that deserves to told.

  • @raycooper3269
    @raycooper3269 6 месяцев назад

    I've saved your video for further listening. I'm impressed by the Taj Mahal connection. Wishing you great success with the book.

  • @marcbuehre7660
    @marcbuehre7660 3 года назад +4

    Thank You Douglas K. Miller For This Outstanding Presentation !

  • @arnoldzilban8274
    @arnoldzilban8274 Год назад +2

    A fine retrospective, an in depth dive of an integral journey of an American Rock musician.

    • @me67226
      @me67226 Год назад +2

      He was a babe....soo good looking first saw him on the Stones rock and roll circus so sad he oded on H. ❤

    • @me67226
      @me67226 Год назад +2

      Wish id known about him earlier. But he left his brilliant guitar playing behind . Rest in piece my
      friend

  • @ChrisDrohan
    @ChrisDrohan 3 года назад +9

    Absolutely fascinating story, Dr. Miller! Thanks for sharing it!!

  • @finch45lear
    @finch45lear 2 года назад +2

    Jesse is one of the greats! Love him.

  • @taildragger53
    @taildragger53 2 года назад +8

    Wow, I thought Duane Allman had been resurrected when i saw this guy-- Jesse Ed was a master! Thank you SO much for this.

    • @SOUTHSDR
      @SOUTHSDR 2 года назад +4

      He's the reason Duane Allman learned how to play slide guitar his playing in Taj Mahals Statesboro blues is the song that inspired Duane to learn how to play slide

    • @daviddawson1718
      @daviddawson1718 Год назад +2

      The best thing to happen to slide guitar since Duane is Derek Trucks. I really feel that Derek and Susan et al are bringing people back to what this shit started with.

    • @wahatoya8532
      @wahatoya8532 Год назад +3

      My cousin Jesse also
      Played the solo guitar of Jackson Browne’s Doctor my eyes. Doctor my eyes Browne’s first hit.

    • @pharmerdavid1432
      @pharmerdavid1432 Год назад +1

      @@wahatoya8532 And it was the first take, which Jesse Ed Davis (your cousin?!) thought was just a warm-up sesh.

    • @wahatoya8532
      @wahatoya8532 Год назад

      @@pharmerdavid1432
      Still he was a great guitarist. You must think you’re perfect smh

  • @dajonbradford
    @dajonbradford 2 года назад +5

    great presentation, very heartening to know Jesse Ed Davis' story will be told thoroughly and honestly

  • @emmettdodge2613
    @emmettdodge2613 10 месяцев назад

    Douglas K Miller thank you for feeding all our souls with all the great history that you've learned much things I never knew even though I have been listening to Jesse for long long time, Douglas K Miller you are highly articulate highly intelligent historian right now we need you like we need Jesse this is as close as we've ever gotten to any written spoken truth of the genius of Jessie May the sun always shine gently on your face and the wind push you forward

  • @pentastarr666
    @pentastarr666 7 месяцев назад

    Oh my…. Thank you for this♥️

  • @rg353
    @rg353 3 года назад +5

    Brilliant work and a great presentation Dr Miller

  • @nancymoore5024
    @nancymoore5024 Год назад +1

    Very thoughtful writing. Excellent creativity how you tied the ending up in a bow. "He always found his way back until the one time he didn't."

  • @emmettdodge2613
    @emmettdodge2613 10 месяцев назад

    Thanks so much, can't say enough Douglas Miller you're a fine historian so very generous of your heart to share so much the past the present and the future all happened simultaneously Jesse is still much alive more than we are you'll see that when you leave this carcass

  • @claudemayers
    @claudemayers Год назад +1

    If you haven't seen it yet, you must see the music movie 'Rumble' about contributions of American Indians' music to the music we hear today, esp noting Jimi Hendrix and Jesse Edwin Davis. I think it is the best movie about music made so far in this century!! 'The Legends Are Legion'

  • @emmettdodge2613
    @emmettdodge2613 10 месяцев назад

    Anybody that knows Jesse or has heard that haunting licks on the guitar knows what a genius in a spirit Weaver and still is Jesse spirit is eternal like the universe Douglas K Miller thank you so kindly for putting together such an incredible piece of History of this musical genius often overlooked

  • @guitarplayingdrifter
    @guitarplayingdrifter Год назад +1

    Thank you for this. I can't begin to tell you just how much I look forward to one day reading your book.

  • @inez8335
    @inez8335 2 года назад +2

    I came across the Oklahoma Music Hall of Fame in Muskogee this summer and familiar with Jesse prior to seeing his bio there. You brought together a good background on our Red Brother. He was uniquely talented in a very challenging time and I am so very sorry he couldn't see his way through it. Jesse's Spirit, as well as John's (Trudell) are inspirational still and remembered with Respect and Love.

  • @amspir
    @amspir Год назад +1

    Nice honoring of JED

  • @howiecampbellmusic
    @howiecampbellmusic 2 года назад +1

    Well done. I recently learned of JED. Amazing story, sad and tragic end to a talented individual. Thanks for more of his story. He had an amazing smile, was a fine musician and had a full life, no doubt.

  • @kittyanaspenelope3128
    @kittyanaspenelope3128 Год назад +2

    EXCELLENT!

  • @grantsmythe8625
    @grantsmythe8625 Год назад

    Most people don't realize just how intense and long-suffering must be a serious musician's devotion to music. For good or evil, that devotion consumes his or her life totally, as much as any drug and it's actually a bittersweet love story with as much pain as it is joy, probably more at certain times.

  • @johnCjr4671
    @johnCjr4671 28 дней назад

    Thanks for sharing his amazing journey ! Also I believe addictions are not necessarily genetic but most likely tied to life’s Trauma’s of which Native Americans have had more than their fair share . 😢😊

  • @jonathandorr2234
    @jonathandorr2234 Год назад

    I’m honored to be among, abuncha jesse ed, fans.. after so long, as I did integrate his 1st album, as if , it was verified and in line, for our next 💫enlightenment..Inter-connected thru this story, reading Leon, and Levon, as musical text, with important in-form-ation. I recorded an album in(goat’s head)Dynamic sound studios, I played guitar+sang in a reggae group, fr . Massachusetts, and played stage-shows , opening, for Taj, near his alma school U-Mass, ‘78-‘84.🇲🇱
    Lastly, we musicians, come to have our experience touching music, so that we know what we’ve done. We are motivated to show the world, that we don’t exist for any single, cause ,reason or paradigm. Bob M. did green light, my 1st album, in 🇯🇲JA, because we gave him herb in Amerika, +we were bluesy, +recorded a song of his, that he liked. 💜Jesse taught me that truth..🙉

  • @tonydimeck
    @tonydimeck 2 года назад +2

    Jesse Ed Davis's work on John Lennon's "Walls & Bridges takes it into the Pinnacle of the Heavenly Sublime Realm.

  • @TwangThang57
    @TwangThang57 7 месяцев назад

    Great work, thanks for doing this!

  • @patrickhite3026
    @patrickhite3026 Год назад

    Jesse Ed Davis is the reson Duane Allman picked up the slide..Listen to JED version of Statesboro Blues then Allman Brothers version...Brilliant player...Plus the concert for Bangladesh was just incredible..RIP JED🍄

  • @JPVillalobos27
    @JPVillalobos27 Год назад

    This is really great. Thanks man.

  • @hieronymusbosch693
    @hieronymusbosch693 Год назад +1

    Well done. Thanks.

  • @iljagitaar
    @iljagitaar 5 месяцев назад

    Thank you for telling.

  • @dacethejackofhearts7209
    @dacethejackofhearts7209 Год назад

    Great beaitiful document . Absolutely stunning piece of work , well documented and straight to the point in the eyes of his collaborators. He was one in a million. A true legend. The image around the 40' mark is priceless with the black little dude watching Ed with his arms crossed like saying " what the hell are you doing playing the blues?"

  • @stevestarr6395
    @stevestarr6395 10 месяцев назад

    A great tribute to the great Jesse Ed Davis! 🤙🏽

  • @meb2126
    @meb2126 2 года назад +1

    Thank you!

  • @LiveLocalTexasMusic
    @LiveLocalTexasMusic 2 года назад

    Thanks so much for this! Wow, JEDIII is a hero of mine. Can’t wait for this BOOK! 🙏🏻

  • @TonyMowatt
    @TonyMowatt 3 года назад +3

    Nice. Thanks.

  • @valeriebuffalohead5663
    @valeriebuffalohead5663 Год назад

    so love this

  • @tattome62
    @tattome62 2 года назад +1

    Awesome story!

  • @kevinokeeffe8089
    @kevinokeeffe8089 Год назад

    Jesse Ed was an awesome guitarist for many people including John Lennon and Gene Clark. He was awesome

  • @noelmajers6369
    @noelmajers6369 9 месяцев назад

    I Spy a George Harrison poster from All Things Must Pass above Douglas's left shoulder. Jesse didn't play on that but he did perform at George's later Concert for Bangladesh at Madison Square Gardens. Connections !

  • @bradparker9664
    @bradparker9664 10 месяцев назад

    Congratulation on an excellent presentstion!

  • @sadielampduo3762
    @sadielampduo3762 9 месяцев назад

    Going to play a show now ,
    heavy on the Blues

  • @patboudotlamot
    @patboudotlamot 2 года назад

    excellent ¡ bel hommage

  • @daviddawson1718
    @daviddawson1718 Год назад +1

    I always liked lod "Indian Ed", gentlemen who never got his due.

  • @busterbiloxi3833
    @busterbiloxi3833 2 года назад

    Great guitarist.

  • @blakewhittington4336
    @blakewhittington4336 10 месяцев назад +1

    Dude could play

  • @MundoMusical
    @MundoMusical 2 года назад +1

    You were chosen Mijo-------

  • @jenslund6152
    @jenslund6152 9 дней назад

    You got a fine thing there, MOTETY! You have to fall in love with that, and so i did, with Him & Taj! Spoke that guitar boy, spoke that guitar! Keep your chrome heart shining in the sun, Buffalo Soldier!!! Regards Jens DENMARK! Excuse my Kioa! :0)

  • @MamaGrooveMe
    @MamaGrooveMe Год назад +1

    Douglas, I'm super excited for the movie and book on Jesse Ed, any thoughts on when they may be coming out?

    • @douglasmillerhistory
      @douglasmillerhistory Год назад +1

      Hello Ben: We're looking at sometime during the second half of 2024 for publication of my book. That feels both far away, and like it might as well be tomorrow! I'm glad you're excited. The project has come a long way since this early preview. The complete story is extraordinary.

  • @archolino
    @archolino Год назад

    💞

  • @zincdoc
    @zincdoc 2 года назад +3

    I AM THE PREPPY-LOOKING GUY IN THE LOWER RIGHT CORNER OF THE CONTINENTALS PICTURE - CHRIS FREDERICKSON from OKC. Eddie was our soul man and music leader from '57 to '63. Our drummer was Johnny Ware, who played for Emmy Lou Harris for 15 years. Our bass man was John Selk, who played bass for Donovan for 15 years. Eddie called me in the mid 60s and invited me to quit Harvard and come play keyboards/bass for the group he was forming out in Cali. I said "no" and sold all of my instruments the next day. The music died.
    Still miss him.

  • @timotto8342
    @timotto8342 2 года назад +2

    This Guitar Cat's story is almost as interesting as his Guitar licks!

  • @claudemayers
    @claudemayers Год назад

    not enough volume for your title song and other songs. Notwithstanding that, how do you get those files/pics/vids onto the viewer's computer screen? Saw Jesse Edwin Davis one night at Ungano's a little club in NYC on the west side, gone now. He was playing with Taj Mahal with the original band and Jimi Hendrix was elegantly eating dinner at a table on a small dais with a few other folk wearing his signature bandana (laced w LSD that night, as he was rumored to do), and my favorite musician of all-time, for me, walked in with his big drummer Frosty. Lee Michaels was with him. They had just played at the Fillmore East and come on ova to check out Taj et al. I walked up to Lee trying to instigate a cosmic jam between him and Frosty, Jimi, Taj and band and especially Jesse Edwin Davis. WOW!!!! this could the finest wildest all-time music I may ever see!!!! I was thinking. Potential!! Lee played keyboards and sometimes guitar and had an unbelievable voice with massive range. I'm looking into Lee's eyes from a foot or two away and FRosty is looking at me with grumpy disapproval. I asked Lee if he ever played with Taj Mahal, hoping he'd jump at what was a suggestion I was offering up. Lee answered me. He said "No, have you?"
    Yeah, he was a bit loaded that night. But wouldn't that have been something? Ungano's was a fleeting spark of a venue where I also saw Jack Bruce live, playing some of the hottest juiciest rockin' bass riffs I ever heard to John McLaughlin on guitar who could not keep up and usually with each riff waited for himself to catch into the riff, but mostly he couldn't -- anyway -- nice info here. Didn't know the Rod Stewart Tonight's the Night guitar. Did you publish this yet? How much American Indian do you have in you? Watch for anothe post I placed on a Bobby Whitlock's interview segment. Bill Graham DAvis -- are you saying this was later/soon the Bill Graham of the two Fillmores East and West?

  • @albertopick3585
    @albertopick3585 2 года назад

    Great docu! Nothing is said if he ever went to a Residential School. Weren't all Natives obliged to attend?

    • @douglasmillerhistory
      @douglasmillerhistory 2 года назад +3

      I'm glad you liked the presentation. I've come a long way with the book project since this early preview. By the time JED was born in 1944, compulsory attendance by Native American children at off-reservation boarding schools had been phased out. This was partly in response to the 1928 Meriam Report, which drew attention to the abject conditions of the boarding school system, and 1930s New Deal Commissioner of Indian Affairs John Collier's condemnation of boarding schools as venues for forced assimilation. Jesse's parents attended boarding schools and public schools, but Jesse only attended public schools in Oklahoma City, and then the University of Oklahoma.

  • @petejp1
    @petejp1 2 года назад +1

    looks great, when will the book be published?

    • @lauragaron148
      @lauragaron148 2 года назад +2

      Not until 2024. Doug is hoping to publish it September 2024 to mark the 80th anniversary of Jesse's birth. Fingers crossed!

    • @petejp1
      @petejp1 2 года назад +1

      @@lauragaron148 ok cool

  • @carlosvasquezvasquez2845
    @carlosvasquezvasquez2845 Год назад

    ✌️👍😉🇺🇸

  • @deaconwolf
    @deaconwolf 3 года назад +1

    Is Mr Miller an Indian? Native?

  • @xxcelr8rs
    @xxcelr8rs 2 года назад +4

    Great guitar player, let the music do the talking. Seems like every PBS/NPR story. Race this race that. Is it even a thing to anyone not obsessed with categories or little boxes to put people in? Listen to the music, that is where the man tells his own story.

    • @Hiwatt100W1
      @Hiwatt100W1 2 года назад +2

      Agree with you. Jesse Ed Davis was so understated- he just knew how to fit the song without stepping on it. In the clips that I've seen of him, he goes straight into the amp, no pedals. His solo on Dr, My Eyes is one of the most beautiful that I've ever heard. Just perfect.

  • @daviddawson1718
    @daviddawson1718 Год назад

    That ain't how you spell Ouachita.

  • @mechcavandy986
    @mechcavandy986 7 месяцев назад

    Dude, grow some mutton chops, and you’d be a dead ringer for Duane Allman.

  • @deaconwolf
    @deaconwolf 3 года назад +5

    I asked "If you were "Indian? Native... I have a specific reason: you do not tell truths in what you have written! As usual, as to any Indian peoples story, white men particularly and white society as a whole knows nothing of our people, shouldn't even be telling it as, from what I hear here is your conjectures and reasons of who & what Jesse was. I know Jesse's relatives and am Kiowa, from the same tribal area Jesse was from. I notice of how quickly Oklahoma City/Norman attempts to co-op all that was Jesse Ed Davis. You need to stop with your ideas of Davis and go do some real research among Jesse' own people. Though honestly, you need to just stop! Let Indian people tell their own stories by their narrative. Leave us to our own conjecture and reason. White people do nothing for tribal people in relating things they have no connection to by understanding or, truth. Leave our heroes and leaders to us to tell of ourselves .

    • @deaconwolf
      @deaconwolf 3 года назад +1

      @@lauragaron148 His telling of Jesse's life are consistent with what I stated in my comment: when relating of another's true circumstances you certainly DO NOT suppose by conjecture or opinion "What?" you'd presume that person did and why? He continually states what Jesse and other family members did, without quoting any of those individuals or submitting in his writing the actual person's real viewpoint (ex: Jesse's) per relations AND close friends, and adds his own idea of it ...I heard that too many times within the narration to cause me to realize his own viewpoint of Jesse's reasons was being offered as fact. Jesse has ALWAYS been a hero around our homeland, too many know of him, his history and accomplishments to allow irreverent ideas not related to actuality to be set as truth. I still maintain that any Tribal persons story should be told by a tribal person...perhaps not so much a person of the same tribe, but certainly a tribal author. Too much of what our people are, what life means and its contribution to Why? any do what they do is always lost or left out...I contend that for the most part, it is deliberate. One will always take theIr own viewpoint over least researched information as to Native tribal people's. I see it recently most egregious to my people's true historical and ancestral identity. I also do not agree with the way ideas of Jesse and close family appears told from a "disconnected from fact" materialistic viewpoint. I see Jesse Ed Davis just now getting his due musically and his contribution to the development of present day Rock & Blues is long overdue. Truth bolstered by concise research and "personal" knowledge must be paramont. It should be told in complete reverence to his background, his being and his true reasons for pursuing them. I feel much in what I hear read by the author, again, is loaded with conjecture. You say the author has complete support of his family and I assume tribe, yet here in Kiowa country (Caddo, Kiowa and Comanche county's. OK) no one I know have heard anything of the book - except this RUclips video. I stick with my original disagreement with the author's writing: it should be, must be someone tribal doing the writing. I also see that too much recent attempts by OKC & Norman to co-op Jesse as "their own" is false. In 2013-14, "Oklahoma Today" magazine published an article recounting the long history of Oklahoma musicians and their contribution(s) to the many genre's of recorded music - "They left out Jesse Ed Davis! As well other tribal musician's and entertainers."

    • @deaconwolf
      @deaconwolf 3 года назад +2

      @@lauragaron148 I do not see how you can "surmise" I am angry... I simply state facts of What? has been going on most recent quite indignantly & openly, that "mostly" and more pervasively, white individuals seem to want to be the orators of my people's narrative. While it can be and is aggravating, my approach doesn't recognize an anger as much as a frustration with the idea that, in "my" opinion... White society just doesn't get it, and refuses too. Let my people, and I am certain I can speak for other races in an observational tone, let us write our own story! Authenticity is lacking in what I heard Mr Miller narrating. It was akin to having someone read an article out of context. As to your conviction, and I do not know Who? you are or "Your" relationship to the author nor the material, as you insist is researched... By whom, and Why? can't you reveal the sources of that research (family, friends and tribe), thereby justifying your defense of Mr Miller. He really never quite does in his narration. I contend I know as much of Jesse, some of what Mr Miller says & you in your last comment I say is wrong. Specifically to What and Who I know in Jesse's reservation "area" (Kiowas and Comanche have no reservation, it is a complex land area spread out among 3 tribes, also inclusive of, the Apache (one particular group of Apache). And I know as a point of your supposition and the author, that Jesse spent some time in that area. Jesse was at first and foremost an Indian (I try not to use Native American as that is NOT the cultural designation reference we tribal people gave ourselves - it is a white man's designation) So far, in going back listening to Mr Miller, I see no reason for me to beg anyone's pardon regarding the matters I brought up. Mr Miller fills his descriptive narrative, relative of Jesse to almost his own perspective. There are no quotes or description or answers of Jesse's life from those relatives and friends, nor Jesse...you say the author had already documented. If that is true, Why? the conjecture and resource of personal judgment in speaking to Jesse's life and his decisions. A good non-fiction narrative, especially regarding someone's real life history - should objectively contain the subjects real thoughts, imaginings, logic and concerns as well the subjects actions relating to those attributes of good story construction which will demonstrate to a reader the truth, and substance of the subject character. I will allow you your disconcerting feelings, re: my concerns, without trying to appear to constantly attack you. But you haven't related Who? you are in respect to Mr Miller and/or his book. However, my point still is prevalent to the whole reason I commented to begin with: I believe as I hear Mr Miller narrate Jesse's history, the lack of Jesse's own words and some real definition regarding his own feelings by way of witness - another's telling ...and not Mr Miller continually referencing his own ideas of the Why? of Jesse's anything - basically, his life story - still ingrains an assured reflection of What? another reveals of themselves rather than pointedly exposing Jesse's true reality and leading to his eventual destiny. As to some other Indian, being free to write Jesse's story... That assertion is quite revealing in itself. Mr Miller, and by you acting as his proxy in regard to my comments - and his writing the book - he really shouldn't be writing it as he has no connection: physically, emotionally, mentally and spiritually to our people, he does not know anything about Indians, our people and our ways! Being Indian was an integral part of Jesse Ed Davis.

    • @maxroyle6750
      @maxroyle6750 3 года назад +4

      Get your head out of your ass-I met Ed(as he introduced himself to me) in 1969, got to know him, and was the finest individual I have ever met-period. Not a bitter individual like you. The Native Americans have had 'it' worse than the African Americans- if that's possible-their land was stolen, people brutalized, slaughtered, degraded...and on & on. A horrible part of history. His SPIRIT will endure.

    • @deaconwolf
      @deaconwolf 3 года назад

      @@maxroyle6750 So your whole critique of my replies is based on a social slur surrounding the claim your having met Mr Davis "once!?" It also gives you the right of ownership in "knowing" the complete struggles of MY people as ALL tribal peoples of the Americas have experienced similar? You degrade yourself AND Jesse's legacy by indicating your superior notion of relationship due to association or, reflecting your desire to be the source of complex information due to a once upon a time meeting? I stated my views from a understanding of both ancestral American Indian history, personal tribal knowledge AND respectful family consideration of Jesse Ed Davis' life. I never met him, though through family and associative friend (Jesse's) conversations I regard a better knowledge base of his talents, hopes and dreams reflective of his purpose, desires and personal production in the music business than your emotional attack on me conveys. And yet, I only speak for the rightful enlightened reporting of a tribal hero who helped craft both the introduction of what would become Classic Rock, modern blues and the realization of Jesse's importance to Indian history and music literature. Both of which should be treated with more respect and recognition than your attempt at a latitude for simplistic inane pronouncements geared toward an expression of hate by way of emotional retort! In other words, if you really have something to say regarding my complaints of cultural assimilation, misinformed informational relation signifying ones OWN opinion rather than concrete research and personal narrative delivered of not only Jesse's reality but also his and all tribal narratives - then you should really try to not allow yourself to add to the current historical flow of any misdirection going on in the revival of tribal peoples need to rectify any and all so-called historical telling of MY peoples heroes and consequentially, the re-mudding of such real truths in individual, family and tribal ancestral historical narratives ... that is gaining popularity in the new versions of Indian history. Indians should and must tell their tales in regard to Indians and not at the retelling of false and misleading stories made for entertainment and continuation of invented, even false narratives. Thank you Mr Royle for assisting me in clarifying my point, but also in demonstrating exactly what I mean about telling, saying, expressing an opinion out of a lack of real knowledge of the individuals lives in question. It really does help to know precisely, personally and honestly, what one is talking about. History, in many ways, reflecting any part of the real narrative must be corrected to reveal truth and give actual credit where credit is due. That starts by allowing those "reported" on to own their narrative without conjecture or assumptions.

    • @lauragaron148
      @lauragaron148 3 года назад +3

      @@maxroyle6750 Don't waste your time or energy responding to this guy; because he's just looking for attention and just wants to vent and dis Douglas's wonderful, well-researched presentation with people who actually knew Jesse.

  • @dr.jimofcolorado3452
    @dr.jimofcolorado3452 Год назад

    Gotta get JED's story into a movie...maybe get Reservation Dogs (Sterlin Harjo) star D'Pharaoh Woon-A-Tai might be great playing this great artist!!!