- Billie Davis
Infobox musical artist
Name = Billie Davis
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Background = solo_singer
Birth_name = Carol Hedges
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Born = birth date and age|1945|12|22Woking ,Surrey ,England
Died =
Origin =London ,England
Instrument =
Genre = Pop
Occupation =singer
Years_active = 1960s
Label = Decca
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URL =
Notable_instruments =Billie Davis (born 1945) is a British female singer of the 1960s, who is probably best remembered for the British "hit" version of the song "Tell Him" in 1963 and a minor hit, "I Want You to Be My Baby", in 1968.
Early career
Billie Davis was born Carol Hedges in
Woking , Surrey on 22 December 1945. Her first name was probably chosen because she was born three days before Christmas. Her performing name was apparently suggested by impresarioRobert Stigwood and was derived from those of blues singerBillie Holiday and the entertainerSammy Davis Jr . [See sleeve notes to "Tell Him - Billie Davis - The Decca Years" (LC5084, 2005)] .In her teens Carol Hedges was an engineering secretary before she started her recording career. After winning a talent contest in which she was backed by
Cliff Bennett 's band, the Rebel Rousers [ [http://shopping.yahoo.com/p:Billie%20Davis:1927505186:page=biography;_ylt=AlrMOjYOasfdvFKH.2_xW3RUvQcF;_ylu=X3oDMTBudjI1N2xwBF9zAzg0MzkzMzAwBHNlYwNhcnRmZWF0] Cliff Bennett & the Rebel Rousers were best known for their records, "One Way Love" (1964) and "Got To Get You Into My Life" (1966).] , she cut some early demonstration records withthe Tornados for producerJoe Meek . However, her first commercial success, under Stigwood's guidance, was "Will I What?", released in August 1962 [August 1962 was, in the event, the same month that the Tornados' "Telstar" was released (on the 17th).] , on which she performed as a foil toMike Sarne , rather asWendy Richard had done on Sarne's chart-topping "Come Outside". This reached number 18 in the British sales charts in September 1962 ["Rock File 4" (ed Charlie Gillett & Simon Frith, 1976)] ."Tell Him"
In February 1963 Davis had her biggest success with an infectious "cover" version of
the Exciters ’ "Tell Him", a song byBert Russell (sometimes known as Bert Berns) that was successfully revived in the late 1990s byVonda Shepard (born, coincidentally, in 1963) for the AmericanFOX television series "Ally McBeal ". Davis' recording reached number ten in the British charts and was followed by "He’s the One" which just crept into the "top 40" in May 1963 ["Guinness British Hit Singles" (15th edition, 2002)] .etbacks
In 1963, the year in which popular music was transformed by the rise of the
Beatles , Davis left Decca records, with which she had had some financial disagreements. In September of that year, returning from a concert inWorcester [Dave Thompson (2005) "Cream"] , she suffered a broken jaw in a road crash in the West Midlands in whichJet Harris , former guitarist of the Shadows, received head injuries. The reporting in the press of her association with Harris, a married man, earned Davis, still only 17, some unwelcome publicity at a difficult time and may have been one of the factors which held back her career. Despite the high regard in which many held her as a performer, she never achieved the fame of such contemporaries asCilla Black orSandie Shaw .tyle
Davis was an early propopent of many of the fashion styles for which the 1960s are remembered: bobbed hair, long boots of the kind popularised by
Honor Blackman in early episodes of "The Avengers" and leather mini-skirts. She was said to have beaten the latter for “percussive effect” when recording [Simon Goddard, January 2005 (notes for "The Decca Years", 2005)] . The biographer of the "supergroup" Cream has described her as "astonishingly photogenic" [Dave Thompson (2005) "Cream"] .Late sixties and beyond
Returning to Decca in the late 1960s Davis made some fine recordings, including of
Chip Taylor 's "Angel of the Morning ", on which she was backed by, among others,Kiki Dee andP. P. Arnold , who recorded the song herself and had the bigger hit in 1968. Davis' final "chart" entry was aNorthern soul version ofJon Hendricks ' "I Want You to Be My Baby", originally recorded byLouis Jordan in 1952, which reached only number 33 in October 1968 ["Guinness British Hit Singles" (15th edition, 2002)] , although sales were affected by an industrial dispute at the manufacturing plant [Billie Davis, quoted in notes for "The Decca Years" (2005)] . This record was still played quite often on British radio stations in the 21st century.Davis left Decca in 1970, but continued to record into the 1980s and was popular, in particular, with audiences in the Spanish-speaking world. In 2006 she was re-united with Jet Harris for a series for concerts. A retrospective collection of her recordings for Decca was released in 2005 ["Tell Him - Billie Davis - The Decca Years"] .
Notes
Video links
* [http://www.glasgowmods.co.uk/2008/03/30/billie-davis-watcha-gonna-do/ Glasgow Mods presents Billie Davis]
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