Who was the female funk artist who married Miles Davis?

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Quick quick, I need an answer! my gf's in a record store and I know that her smusic is going to be the ideal gift for my funk loving friend. She had a song that goes 'I cannot get more funky than this".

moley (moley), Wednesday, 7 September 2005 03:17 (twenty years ago)

Geez this is a poor description, please accept my apologies, but time is of the essence.

moley (moley), Wednesday, 7 September 2005 03:18 (twenty years ago)

betty davis. she rules.

j blount (papa la bas), Wednesday, 7 September 2005 03:18 (twenty years ago)

what he said!

haitch wolf gave me haitch (haitch), Wednesday, 7 September 2005 03:18 (twenty years ago)

Awww Blounty I kiss you. She rules so hard it's draconian.

Incidentally I googled "female funk artists" and, for shame, there were only 6 hits.

moley (moley), Wednesday, 7 September 2005 03:21 (twenty years ago)

Betty Davis is fantastic.

Last Of The Famous International Pfunkboys (Kerr), Wednesday, 7 September 2005 03:32 (twenty years ago)

He was a biiiiiiiiiiiiig FREAK!

rogermexico (rogermexico), Wednesday, 7 September 2005 04:29 (twenty years ago)

You have inspired me to find her stuff on slsk. I don't know why I never thought to listen to her til now. Ciz I R Dum, probably.

Austin Still (Austin, Still), Wednesday, 7 September 2005 04:40 (twenty years ago)

You will be rewarded.

rogermexico (rogermexico), Wednesday, 7 September 2005 04:40 (twenty years ago)

strangely, I am downloading her first three albums it from a person who has 23 lps by durutti column shared.

I've never heard durutti column, either, but somehow I don't associate them with Betty Davis.

Austin Still (Austin, Still), Wednesday, 7 September 2005 04:42 (twenty years ago)

You cannot get less funky than Durutti Column.

moley (moley), Wednesday, 7 September 2005 04:47 (twenty years ago)

tutti frutti column

renegade bus (Jody Beth Rosen), Wednesday, 7 September 2005 04:59 (twenty years ago)

The Durutti Column's pretty fantastic, though -- although definitely devoid of funk. Actually, wait, Donald Johnson did the drumming for a few Durutti Column songs that appeared as bonus tracks on LC, and he was a funk drummer -- so "Self-Portrait" IIRC is about as funky as they got. Still not very funky.

The few Betty Davis tracks I have are pretty great, "They Say I'm Different" being my favourite of those.

Ian Riese-Moraine: Let this bastard out, and you'll get whiplash! (Eastern Mantr, Wednesday, 7 September 2005 16:25 (twenty years ago)

Kim Carnes

pappawheelie II, Wednesday, 7 September 2005 16:32 (twenty years ago)

I have the second Betty Davis LP (They Say I'm Different), and while her style and delivery are admittedly uncanny, I find her somewhat lacking on the songwriting department - few of the actual songs are really that memorable, it's mostly her persona that you remember. Is the first LP any better, should I check it out?

Tuomas (Tuomas), Wednesday, 7 September 2005 17:06 (twenty years ago)

Incidentally I googled "female funk artists" and, for shame, there were only 6 hits.
If you had had the word "angular" in there, you might have gotten some more hits.

k/l (Ken L), Wednesday, 7 September 2005 17:13 (twenty years ago)

Is the first LP any better, should I check it out?

Well, it has "If I'm in Luck I Might Get Picked Up" and "Anti Love Song," so in a word... yes.

babyalive (babyalive), Wednesday, 7 September 2005 23:27 (twenty years ago)

though I really like both LPs.

babyalive (babyalive), Wednesday, 7 September 2005 23:28 (twenty years ago)

ihttp://photos1.blogger.com/img/99/2267/1024/differenttwo.jpeg.1.jpg

ken taylrr has gone off the internet because of you (ken taylrr), Wednesday, 7 September 2005 23:31 (twenty years ago)

oh, come on!

ken taylrr has gone off the internet because of you (ken taylrr), Wednesday, 7 September 2005 23:31 (twenty years ago)

ah well, here's a diff one

http://www.soulwalking.co.uk/%A5Artist%20GIF%20Images/Betty-Davis-1975-2.jpg

ken taylrr has gone off the internet because of you (ken taylrr), Wednesday, 7 September 2005 23:32 (twenty years ago)

Tuomas OTM

Matos-Webster Dictionary (M Matos), Thursday, 8 September 2005 03:17 (twenty years ago)

I'm In Love With Betty Davis
In past efforts to collect 70s soul and funk, I’ve come across a couple compilations with contributions from Betty Davis like “He Was A Big Freak” and “Anti Love Song.” I always made a note to look into her, but her albums were out of print at the time. An article in the February 2005 MOJO reminded me to track her stuff down, and I found her albums at Dusty Groove.

I should have tried harder before, because I was really missing out. I just assumed Davis was just a minor figure, certainly no better than the sometimes lascivious, sometimes feminist funk of Laura Lee, Millie Jackson, or James Brown acolytes Vicki Anderson, Lyn Collins and Marva Whitney. But Betty Mabry Davis is in a class of her own. Her coolness transcends them all. When she met Miles Davis at the age of 22, she’d already cut a couple singles, worked as a model, club promoter (Step-Down Cellar on 90th Street), and written a song for The Chambers Brothers (“Uptown To Harlem” for their landmark 1967 album, Time Has Come Today). During her relationship and marriage to Miles Davis from ’67 to ’69, she introduced him to Jimi Hendrix (Miles was paranoid that she was sleeping with him – perhaps she did but like a true pimp she’ll deny it to her grave), Sly Stone, and made a huge impact on his fashion sense, not to mention appearing on the cover of Filles De Kilimanjaro, which featured a tribute to her in “Mademoiselle Mabry.” While Miles was working on Bitches Brew, Davis cut an album with a dream-team band consisting of Wayne Shorter and Tony Williams from Miles’ band with Miles producing, and Billy Cox and Mitch Mitchell. Afraid of Betty’s success, Miles insisted the album be shelved. Now that the misogynist motherfucker is stone cold dead, it’s high time this album is exhumed from the vaults and released.

Betty’s career didn’t really start until she divorced Miles, and her good friend Jimi was dead. In 1970 she recorded eight songs with the Commodores which were shelved, and moved to the UK in 1971. Marc Bolan (T. Rex) helped her out in seeking a recording contract, but she returned to the U.S. and hooked up with Michael Carabello of Santana in San Francisco. Assembling members of Santana (including future Journey member Neil Schon!), Sly & the Family Stone and Tower of Power, Davis recorded a monster of an album for the Just Sunshine label, and introduced the world to her alter ego that’s part ass-kicking Cleopatra Jones, and part wise-cracking pottymouth influenced by Frank Zappa’s Mothers of Invention. She turned the tables on jive-talking pimp characters with lyrics like, "If I'm in luck I might get picked up ... I'm fishin' and I'm trickin' and you can call it what you want." And in “Anti Love Song” she sings, “You know, I could make you crawl/And just as hard as I’d fall for you/You know you’d fall for me harder.” More often her voice would jump between shrieks and feral growls that are truly frightening. The band played hard and tight, on an album that would rival anything by Funkadelic. 1974’s They Say I’m Different was even better, with the cover featuring Betty rockin’ an Amazonian space-Egyptian outfit. Every song was a highlight, from the catchy “Shoo-B-Doop And Cop Him” to “He Was A Big Freak,” where Davis tackles S&M, beating her lover with a turquoise chain. On the title track she gives props to early influences, Robert Johnson, Bessie Smith and Chuck Berry. Nasty Gal (1975) was just as great, including the powerful kiss-off to the media, “Dedicated To The Press.”

With big stars like MeShell NdegeOcello, Macy Gray, Kelis and Missy Elliot owing so much to Betty Davis’ pioneering work, it’s a shame she hasn’t enjoyed more fame and fortune, though she certainly gets respect from her peers. It looks like things will change, with the MOJO article, a rumored documentary on women of funk focusing on Davis, and a reissue of her three albums in the 2CD Talkin’ Trash: The Definitive Betty Davis on Aztec Music supposedly coming out soon.

Fastnbulbous (Fastnbulbous), Thursday, 8 September 2005 14:46 (twenty years ago)

Alannah Myles

Confounded (Confounded), Thursday, 8 September 2005 15:30 (twenty years ago)

The original user I was downloading the betty davis stuff from went offline, so now I'm stuck with the slowest connection in the world (0.4 kbps) trying to get the last two songs on the self titled album.

Little help?

Austin Still (Austin, Still), Friday, 9 September 2005 13:41 (twenty years ago)

Her voice and stance reminds me of Jennifer Herrema.

Old School (sexyDancer), Friday, 9 September 2005 13:43 (twenty years ago)

one year passes...
Are the reissues remastered/mixed/etc? Or are they straight dupes?

BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Friday, 20 April 2007 00:39 (eighteen years ago)

Betty Davis Rules.

Brigadier Lethbridge-Pfunkboy, Friday, 20 April 2007 00:46 (eighteen years ago)

"No Good At Falling In Love" is an unbelievable track.

mrlynch, Friday, 20 April 2007 05:22 (eighteen years ago)

three years pass...

whoa, creepy miles davis cameo cameo at 1:54:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A2eU2CG3WN8

bows don't kill people, arrows do (Jordan), Thursday, 4 November 2010 17:36 (fifteen years ago)


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