* En anglais uniquement
There can be many differences between two jazz horn players with almost identical names.
Charlie Davis plays trumpet;
Charles Davis blows a range of reed instruments, but is best known on baritone saxophone. This is only the beginning of the details that make their careers so contrasting. If a record collector created a jazz section featuring only records that feature one of this
Davis pair, it would still be a high-quality and surprisingly diverse assemblage, also spilling over into the pop side of the counter thanks to the studio session activities of the trumpeter. That would be another of the differences between these two players: the saxophonist has made many more records than the trumpeter, but only occasionally performs on a recording that is anything other than pure, 100 percent commercially undiluted jazz.
Based on the West Coast,
Charlie Davis has on the other hand become involved in a potpourri of studio calls, showing up on recordings by British folk-rockers, soul and disco singers, and New Orleans rockers. He has played on gospel and symphony dates and by the mid-'90s was the trumpeter to call if
Mark Isham was already busy. In terms of the type of jazz mentioned previously, the trumpeter's artistic peak is perhaps his involvement with the reinvigorated
Woody Herman band of the early '70s. Like many talented West Coast musicians, he also spent some time squinting at the charts in the big bands of
Stan Kenton. Affiliations with modern iconoclasts such as
Sun Ra,
Cecil Taylor, and
Steve Lacy would all be on the part of
Charles Davis the saxophonist; on the other hand,
Kenton represents about as far out as the trumpeter has gotten, except for perhaps an appearance with the studio hotshot blowing band
Flim & the BB's. One genre that both
Charlie Davis and
Charles Davis share an interest in is Latin. ~ Eugene Chadbourne