Houston Davis
Houston Davis was an American composer, arranger, teacher of music, dance band drummer, and later in his career, a justice of the peace in Hinds County, Mississippi.
Career
Growing up and early career
As a child, Davis was born and raised in Tahlequah, Oklahoma. His father, Edward Samuel Davis was a barber. Davis played snare drum in a community marching band in Tahlequah, Oklahoma. His father played bass horn. Davis went on to study music at Northeastern State University in Tahlequah, Oklahoma. During college, Davis also led his own dance band. Northeastern's music faculty included Henri S. Minsky, a violinist who was director of bands.Around 1936, Davis began playing drums with the Wally Stoefler Orchestra, and stayed with the group until about 1940. Stoefler's press releases often singled out Davis as "that famous Oklahoma drummer." At some point in his career, he then taught high school music and band.
Davis moved to Mississippi in 1942. In the latter 1950s, he wrote a number of political songs, but, was mostly composer and arranger for hire, as was advertised in a brochure published around 1960:
Songwriting career
Davis wrote campaign songs for Mississippi Governors Ross Barnett and Paul Johnson. He composed "Go, Mississippi", which, in 1962, became the official state song for Mississippi. He also composed country songs, such as "I'm Broke", "Girls Don't Wear Dresses Anymore", and "Crop Duster".Non-music career
- In 1972, Davis was elected justice of the peace in Hinds County, Mississippi.
- Davis ran as an independent for mayor of Jackson, losing to Russell Carlos Davis, a Democrat, in the June 5, 1973, general election. Russell Davis was mayor of Jackson from 1969 to 1977.
- He wrote fiction for a national magazine.
National recognition
- July 15, 1933: Ripley's Believe It or Not!, Davis received recognition for having held a drum roll in 1938 for 6 hours, 30 minutes, 20 seconds. The former record had been set by a member of Sousa's band.
- Davis was admitted to ASCAP in 1965.
Selected works
- "Caracas"
- "Got a Rock In My Shoe"
- "I Wonder How Much You Love Me"
- "Put On The Coffee, Sarah"
- "There's A Star Shining Bright"
- "Yolanda and Joe"
- "Rose of My Heart"
- "I'm Sending You A Kiss On A Star"
- "Think Of You"
- "A Tootin' Tune From A Hootin' Distance"
- "Heartbreak"
- "I Do, I Do, I Do"
- "Sand Castles"
- "That Cozy Little Cabin"
- "When God Made You"
- You Can't Hold His Hand While You Still Hold My Heart"
- "I Want To Write A Song For The Hit Parade"
- "I'll Be Blue, When I Paint The Town Red"
- "Gotta Go, Baby"
- "Go, Mississippi"
- "Go, Mississippi"
- "Roll With Ross, He's His Own Boss"
- "Little Carrol's Last Stand"
- "All I Want Is A Few Kind Words"
- "Baby Sitting"
- Eatin' High On The Hog"
- "I Jes' Wanna Stay In Bed"
- "I Worry"
- "Share With Another"
- "Wife And Mother-In-Law
- "Asleep In Jesus"
- "Bells"
- "Carren of Key West"
- "Oh! I Wish I Was"
- "How're You Feeling"
- "Silver Moon Waltz"
- "Southern Charm"
- "I Missed You In My Dreams Last Night"
- There Ain't Gonna Be No Mason–Dixon line No More"
- "Big Bad Bee"
- "One Of These Days"
- "Add Another Heart To Your Collection"
- "All Mississippi Is For Your, Barry"
- "Blue Mood"
- "Dirty Cotton Picking Machine"
- "HR7152"
- "I Can Never Be Lonesome"
- "I Love You"
- "I Will Always Whooop It Up For Mississippi"
- "King Lyndon"
- "My Little Ole Door"
- "1994"
- "Sandy"
- "The South Bend Polka"
- "Springtime In Georgia"
Brief biographies of song collaborators
- Tom L. Spengler, Jr., in 1957, was manager of Godwin Adv. Agency, Jackson, Mississippi
- Sammy Graham led a band in Mississippi
- Diamond Record Co., Inc., was an affiliate of Trumpet Records. Diamond was formed as Diamond Record Co., Inc., in 1950 when a white woman named Lillian McMurry and her husband Willard purchased a hardware store on Farish Street in Jackson, MS., then a location on the boundary between the city's white and black business and entertainment districts.
Selected discography
; Original recording
- Delta Records 133
- "Go, Mississippi"
- "Roll With Ross"
- "Little Carrol's Last Stand" †
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General inline citations
- "Roll With Ross"