BETTY DAVIS (tribute page) profile picture

BETTY DAVIS (tribute page)

No, I don’t want to love you

About Me


A wildly flamboyant funk diva with few equals even three decades after her debut, Betty Davis combined the gritty emotional realism of Tina Turner, the futurist fashion sense of David Bowie, and the trend-setter flair of Miles Davis, her husband for a year. It's easy to imagine the snickers when a 23-year-old model married a famous musician twice her age, but Davis was no gold-digger; she turned Miles on to Jimi Hendrix and Sly Stone (providing the spark that led to his musical re-invention on In a Silent Way and Bitches Brew), then proved her own talents with a trio of sizzling mid-'70s solo LPs.

Born Betty Mabry in Pittsburgh, Davis began working as a model during the mid-'60s. She gained entrance into hipster musical circles very early on -- her first writing credit, "Uptown" by the Chambers Brothers, came in 1967, before she'd turned 20. One year later, she met Miles Davis in New York, and they were married by the end of summer 1968. Though their marriage didn't survive the end of the decade, Betty Davis was tremendously influential on Miles, introducing him to psychedelic rock and even influencing his wardrobe. Miles' 1968 LP Filles de Kilimanjaro featured her on the cover, and he wrote the final track ("Mademoiselle Mabry") for her.

Miles divorced her in 1969, explaining later in his autobiography that she was "too young and wild" for him. (He also suspected her of an affair with Jimi Hendrix, an allegation she denies.) By the beginning of the '70s, Betty Davis began work on a set of songs, and tapped a host of great musicians to bring them to fruition: Gregg Errico and Larry Graham from Sly Stone's band, Michael Carabello from Santana, the Pointer Sisters, and members of the Tower of Power horn section. Her self-titled debut album finally appeared in 1973, and though it made no commercial impact at all, it was an innovative collection with plenty of blistering songs. Even more so than a soul shouter like Tina Turner, Davis was a singer for the feminist era, a take-no-prisoners sexual predator who screamed, yelled, grunted, purred, and cooed her way through extroverted material like "Anti Love Song," "Shoo-B-Doop and Cop Him," and "He Was a Big Freak." Religious groups protested many of her concert appearances (several were canceled), and radio outlets understandably refused to play her extreme work.Davis hardly let up with her second and third albums, 1974's They Say I'm Different and 1975's Nasty Gal, but they too made little impact. Though she would've made an excellent disco diva, Betty Davis largely disappeared from the music scene afterward. An aborted 1979 session has been released on multiple occasions, once as Crashin' From Passion and also as Hangin' out in Hollywood. Biography by John Bush/AMG Photos from Joost/JB Collections

My Interests

Music:

Member Since: 4/28/2006
Band Members:
Betty Davis (reissue 2007)

This Is It! (2005)

Anti Love: The Best of Betty Davis (2000)

Crashin´ from Passion (japanese edition)

Crashin´ from Passion (1996)

Hangin´ out in Hollywood (1995)

Nasty Gal (1975)

They Say I´m Different (1974)

Betty Davis (1973)

This was a woman with the strength of a Black Panther, a woman in total control, a predatory feline fully aware of the power that her beauty and sexuality gave her over men. -John Ballon/musthear.com

Influences: Sly Stone, Jimi Hendrix...
Record Label: Just Sunshine, Island,
Type of Label: Major

My Blog

Betty interview

Here you can download the whole 22 min. radio showBetty Davis with Al Gee radio programWhat a lovely voice and sweet laugh_______________________________________________________ ______Rickey Vincent ho...
Posted by BETTY DAVIS (tribute page) on Wed, 06 Jun 2007 05:37:00 PST

Embraceable You

Embraceable You [18 May 2007] Funk's first feminist Betty Davis resurfaces.by Dan Nishimoto Spring 2007 has been an especially notable time to recognize women. Two major feminist art exhibition...
Posted by BETTY DAVIS (tribute page) on Fri, 25 May 2007 01:01:00 PST

A Funk Queen steps out...

A FUNK QUEEN STEPS OUT OF THE SHADOWS Betty Mabry Davis set the standard with her sassy '70s sound. Finally, she's getting her due. ...
Posted by BETTY DAVIS (tribute page) on Fri, 18 May 2007 08:09:00 PST

Betty Davis is back...

Betty Davis Is Back, Thanks to Seattle's Light in the Attic Reviving the records of the long-lost soul diva may be the label's most artful move. By Brian J Barr ...
Posted by BETTY DAVIS (tribute page) on Tue, 08 May 2007 04:41:00 PST

First official Betty Davis reissues!

Mastered from the original tapes (first time since the '70s!)Previously unreleased bonus tracksIce Cube, Talib Kweli, and Ludacris have rhymed over these tracksBetty recorded some of the fines...
Posted by BETTY DAVIS (tribute page) on Sat, 31 Mar 2007 02:43:00 PST

Go and buy Betty´s albums

If you don´t already have, go and buy all Betty´s albums, you won´t regret it.
Posted by BETTY DAVIS (tribute page) on Thu, 04 May 2006 01:02:00 PST