* En anglais uniquement
Possessor of a cutting and immediately identifiable tough tenor tone,
Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis could hold his own in a saxophone battle with anyone. Early on, he picked up experience playing with the bands of
Cootie Williams (1942-1944),
Lucky Millinder,
Andy Kirk (1945-1946), and
Louis Armstrong. He began heading his own groups from 1946 and
Davis' earliest recordings as a leader tended to be explosive R&B affairs with plenty of screaming from his horn; he matched wits successfully with
Fats Navarro on one session.
Davis was with
Count Basie's Orchestra on several occasional (including 1952-1953, 1957, and 1964-1973) and teamed up with
Shirley Scott's trio during 1955-1960. During 1960-1962, he collaborated in some exciting performances and recordings with
Johnny Griffin, a fellow tenor who was just as combative as
Davis. After temporarily retiring to become a booking agent (1963-1964),
Davis rejoined
Basie. In his later years,
Lockjaw often recorded with
Harry "Sweets" Edison and he remained a busy soloist up until his death. Through the decades, he recorded as a leader for many labels, including Savoy, Apollo, Roost, King, Roulette, Prestige/Jazzland/Moodsville, RCA, Storyville, MPS, Black & Blue, Spotlite, SteepleChase, Pablo, Muse, and Enja. ~ Scott Yanow