Guitarist

NICK JONAH DAVIS

- Words Glenn Kimpton

THE LATEST ALBUM FROM DERBYSHIRE GUITARIST NICK JONAH DAVIS, WHEN THE SUN CAME, WAS RECORDED IN A CHURCH AND RELEASED JUST BEFORE LOCKDOWN – AND IT COULD WELL BE HIS FINEST YET. WE FIND OUT ABOUT THE RECORD’S ORIGINS, WHILE DISCOVERIN­G MORE ABOUT NICK’S INFLUENCES, INSECURITI­ES AND EXPLORATIO­NS INTO “WEIRDNESS”...

When fingerstyl­e guitar and lap-steel whiz Nick Jonah Davis isn’t teaching guitar, playing on other artists’ recordings or working as part of the District Musicians organisati­on, he makes albums that explore the art of solo acoustic instrument­al music. When The Sun Came is his fourth album and his most refined and fully realised yet, leaning more heavily on his Weissenbor­n guitar to produce a set of beautifull­y played, intricatel­y written pieces, self-recorded in his local Atlow church.

Because of the record’s long gestation period, it’s refreshing­ly free of current anxieties. “It’s a strange time to release an album,” Nick says, “but I’m glad the recording was finished by early 2020. I had it all in the can, as they say, before lockdown happened, which means the actual creative process wasn’t informed in any way by the pandemic, which is really good, because it feels like part of a sequence that has been going on for a longer time. Some of the tunes on the record have been bubbling for eight years.”

The patience surroundin­g the writing and release of When The Sun Came comes across in the music, and as well as significan­t complexity, there is also an openness and freshness to each of the 10 tracks. “I think if you’re going to make a solo guitar record, it’s a saturated niche and you need to look yourself in the eye and say that it’s a valid contributi­on to that field of endeavour,” Nick says. “I need to be able to think this is worth someone’s time and if they like this kind of thing they will listen to it and there will be something worthwhile in it. I guess as part of the process of making solo guitar music I’ve really immersed myself in it and tried to understand it a lot, and I think that has meant I’m always looking for some weird little corner that I haven’t seen anyone else go around. But that takes a long time...”

PRIMITIVE LISTENING

When asked about albums that have had an influence, Nick namechecks Jack Rose’s Kensington Blues. “It’s a very obvious choice for a contempora­ry American primitive guitar record,” he says, “But what was compelling about that one was I was really interested in outsider and avant-garde music, and I was listening to a lot of strange stuff, and somehow Jack Rose bubbled up in the middle of that weird realm of music that I was investigat­ing. When I heard Kensington Blues, it was the first time within that context that I thought I could do something with it. It felt like it was beckoning me and saying, ‘You could do this as well.’ I remember seeing Jack play in a church in Leeds opening for A Hawk And A Hacksaw – they were incredible, but there was this scruffy guy wandering out with a couple of acoustic guitars and just blowing my head wide open. I wanted to go and find this person and ask, ‘What the fuck were you just doing and how the hell did you do it?’ I didn’t do that… but Kensington Blues was the touchstone for that feeling of ‘this is very peculiar because I can understand this, but it’s also accepted in this field of outsider music that I love listening to.’”

Nick learned from that epiphany and, as self-critical as he often is, it’s clear that When The Sun Came is a record that brought out something unique in him. “What I’ve tried to do with this one is make sure everything on there feels like it’s mine,” he explains. “I’m 11 years into solo guitar now and this [particular] album feels like the least derivative of its influences. I’m relentless­ly critical of what I do – I listen back to stuff and always hear the problems, but I think that’s the same for anyone doing creative work. There’s a really interestin­g book called The Natural Classical Guitar [Lee F Ryan, 2006] that has this very 70s yogainfuse­d approach to playing and it says if you play a piece with 700 notes and you fluff three, then the 697 you nailed will mean nothing. Ah man, those fluffs! One of the hallmarks of someone who is bedded into their practice is what happens when they make a mistake live. What do you do now? Are the wheels wobbling for miles afterwards, or is it more like, ‘Okay, a mistake, now, on.’ You’re going to make mistakes and some will be appalling, but some will be beautiful.”

CHURCH SONGS

When The Sun Came was recorded in a peaceful church space. Nick explains how this environmen­t impacted the experience of making the album and how it differed to previous sessions: “When I’ve recorded before, I’ve gone in with other people, which has been great, but I haven’t had much budget and I’ve tried to do as much as I can in as short a time as possible,” he says. “You end up asking a lot from the person recording you and you have to get it done quickly. When I listen to my earlier recordings, there’s a sense that I’m rushing. I didn’t want to rush this one, so I decided to put my budget into upgrading my own recording equipment. And then the village let me use the church for free, as long as I accepted that visitors would wander into my sessions if they wanted to.

“So instead of having two days to nail it, I had as long as I needed – I could just pack down and go back and forth from my house. If you’re in a church with no internet or anything, just your mics and guitars in a lovely sounding space, you just work with it and it was refreshing to think, ‘Maybe today will be rubbish, but if it is, I won’t use it,’ rather than ‘Today has to be amazing otherwise I’ve spent all this money for nothing.’”

There’s a sure sense of patience that permeates through the record, but the album also has its share of maverick music, with side B of the LP sounding slightly more experiment­al in places. “Yeah, I think I backloaded a lot of the weirdness onto the second side,” Nick says. “It’s easy to just say, ‘I’m going to be weird,’ and then stick some things on the guitar and be weird, but the point for me is that I need the listener’s trust before I get weird. I want them to think I can write

“AS PART OF THE PROCESS OF MAKING SOLO GUITAR MUSIC I’VE TRIED TO UNDERSTAND IT A LOT – I’M ALWAYS LOOKING FOR SOME WEIRD LITTLE CORNER THAT I HAVEN’T SEEN ANYONE ELSE GO AROUND...”

“WHEN I GOT A FYLDE, IT WAS ALMOST INTIMIDATI­NG –I HAD TO RISE TO IT. I’VE ALSO KNOCKED IT OVER A COUPLE OF TIMES, SO IT’S GOT SOME BASHES, WHICH HELPS, BECAUSE A GUITAR IS A TOOL OF WORK”

a compelling compositio­n and perform it well, and then when I go down the rabbit hole, they’ll come with me. If I start by whacking chopsticks under the strings and spanking the whatever, they’re going to think, ‘What’s this guy up to?’”

TOOLS OF THE TRADE

Aside from the black Fender Stratocast­er featured on lone electric piece The Muckle Master, there are three acoustic instrument­s on When The Sun Came. “The main guitar on this record is my Weissenbor­n copy,” Nick tells us. “It’s a relatively inexpensiv­e handmade instrument from a builder in Italy called Ermanno Pasqualato. I had encountere­d lap steel only through the John Fahey end of things, but then I remember sitting watching Jack Rose playing it and thinking maybe I can play slide, because before then I’d never gotten on with upright slide guitar. I never knew about lap steel then and it made me see how some slide playing could sound so amazing. So I ordered this guitar and it’s one of [Pasqualato’s] earlier ones, so it’s not an exquisite instrument, but for me it’s just perfect. It’s got monster sustain and really good personalit­y and it’s very playable. I think because it’s such a modest instrument, it’s really satisfying to find something within it that’s so compelling. It’s a beautiful guitar.”

For his fretted six strings, Nick has two very different regulars. “Another one on there is a custom Fylde Falstaff, which The Peacock Dance is recorded on,” he says. “That’s the other end of the spectrum to the Weissenbor­n, it’s exquisitel­y made and of the highest quality. When I eventually got a Fylde, it was almost intimidati­ng, to the point that it’s taken me a number of years to acclimatis­e to it being in my day-to-day life. I had to rise to it and I think I’m there now… I’ve also knocked it over a couple of times, so it’s got some bashes, which helps, because a guitar is a tool of work. It’s stunning and I love it and it’s the guitar I was playing for my dad when he was dying, because he loved it, too. The one on Delta Suey is my 90s Martin SPD-16K, which was an amazing gift from my wife. It has koa back and sides and a spruce top and it really changed my life, because before I had it I really liked playing acoustic guitar, but then I was like, ‘Oh, right…’

“I think the key to a great guitar sound is a greatsound­ing guitar and that Martin was the first greatsound­ing guitar I owned; all my previous records were done mainly on that one. I also mostly continue to gig on the Martin, because it’s frightenin­g taking the Fylde out into the world sometimes!”

When The Sun Came is out now on Thread Recordings

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 ??  ?? Nick’s album was recorded at his local village church in Atlow, Derbyshire. He says: “If you’re in a church with no internet, just your mics and guitars in a lovely sounding space, you just work with it”
Nick’s album was recorded at his local village church in Atlow, Derbyshire. He says: “If you’re in a church with no internet, just your mics and guitars in a lovely sounding space, you just work with it”
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? It’s important for Nick to gain the listener’s trust before experiment­ing musically. He says: “If I can write a compelling compositio­n and perform it well, when I go down the rabbit hole, they’ll come with me”
It’s important for Nick to gain the listener’s trust before experiment­ing musically. He says: “If I can write a compelling compositio­n and perform it well, when I go down the rabbit hole, they’ll come with me”
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