Davy Knowles has known what he wanted to do with his life
since the age of 11.
I
was in the car with my dad, and he put on a cassette of Dire Straits'
'Sultans of Swing,'" explains the 21-year-old guitarist, singer and
songwriter. "I just fell in love with the music then and there. That
track changed my life, and I realized, 'I really want to be able to do
that.'" Hailing from the Isle of Man, the tiny kingdom in the middle of
the Irish Sea, might have posed a challenge to that childhood epiphany
for a lesser talent. Instead, Davy just borrowed his father's acoustic
guitar and painstakingly learned to play "Sultans of Swing" by ear.
As a teenager, he mined his father's record collection to learn all he
could about 'the blues' and he discovered
John Mayall's Bluesbreakers, Eric
Clapton, Peter Green and Rory
Gallagher, to name a few. Then I began reading guitar player magazines
and started seeing who the people I was influenced by had listened to,
which is how I learned about Blind Willie Johnson and
Robert Johnson Davy explains.
He played in bands throughout his school years - usually as the "kid"
among older players - and, ultimately, formed Back Door Slam with his
school mates. The band's debut recording Roll Away, which featured Adam
Jones on bass and Ross Doyle on drums, was released by Blix Street
Records in June, 2007. Knowles wrote all but one of the tracks on the
record, which became a Top 5 staple on Billboard's Blues chart.
Ironically, now young(er) guitar players are reading about him in the
way he did about his heroes. Nick Anderman of the Village Voice wrote:
"Davy Knowles, the lead singer, guitarist and songwriter, is talented
like very few bluesmen these days. He shreds like a young Robert Cray
and wails like the love of his life was just hit by a truck," while
Shane Harrison of the Atlanta Journal Constitution said: "If this were a
more just world, the band's startlingly talented guitarist, singer and
songwriter Davy Knowles would already be a star."
Such acclaim continued as the band played clubs, concerts and festivals
and shared billings with George Thorogood, Buddy Guy, Kid Rock & Lynyrd Skynyrd, The Who and the legendary jam
band Gov't Mule. They also appeared on
television's CBS Early Show and Jimmy Kimmel Live as well as on NPR's
World Cafe and Voice of America's Border Crossings.
After parting company with his band mates Jones and Doyle early this
year, Knowles began to record the follow up to Roll Away. Scheduled for
release by Blix Street this summer, the recording is produced by
Grammy-winning singer-songwriter-guitarist Peter Frampton, who also
features on the album.
Despite the thousands of miles he's already logged on the road - 300+
dates in 18months to support their debut CD in America - Davy's anxious
to get back out there to play. "You should play music because you love
doing it," he says, "If you can hang in for the long haul, you're doing
what most people can't, and you're incredibly lucky."
He's begun to call America "home," but there's a hint of wistfulness
when he speaks about the Isle of Man, a feeling addressed in the title
song of Roll Away: "It's a beautiful place and I feel lucky to have
grown up there - but you can't forget that there's also a world out
there beyond it."
And for Davy Knowles, the next stop is the world.