Although he now calls Canada home, Maple Blues Award
winner David Vest is an authentic, Southern-bred boogie-woogie piano
player and blues shouter. Born in Alabama in 1943, David grew up in
Birmingham, not far from Tuxedo Junction. He played his first paying gig
in 1957, and by the time he opened for Roy Orbison on New Year's Day
1962, he was a seasoned veteran of Gulf Coast roadhouses and honky
tonks.At the age of 17, David went on tour with Jerry Woodard
and the Esquires, some of whom later became key members of the Muscle
Shoals Rhythm Section and the Muscle Shoals Horns. While still with
Woodard, he jammed with Ace Cannon, Bill Black's Combo and the Jimmy
Dorsey Band in clubs along the Florida Panhandle, where fellow Alabaman
James Harman would soon make his mark.He had seen Carl Perkins,
Jerry Lee Lewis, and Johnny Cash in the 1950s. He saw Bo Diddley, Jimmy
Reed, and John Lee Hooker in the prime of their careers. Sam Cooke,
Clyde McPhatter and Hank Ballard, too. About the time he turned 21 he
found himself onstage backing Big Joe Turner, who said that David Vest's
playing made him feel like he was back home in Kansas City.He
had also worked the southern gospel circuit, appearing on programs with
the Statesmen and the Blackwood Brothers. His first recording featured
the last song written by Alton Delmore. David himself wrote the first
songs ever recorded by Tammy Wynette, as detailed in Jimmy McDonough's
bio of the country legend. He also dated a sister of the Louvin
Brothers, toured with Faron Young (who threatened to kill him), backed
Red Foley in a show where all the stars got robbed, worked in a theatre
with Fannie Flagg and became the first American artist to record an
album in Romania, after his appearance at the Sibiu Jazz Festival.Later
David would receive the "direct laying on of hands" from piano legends
like Big Walter The Thunderbird and Floyd Dixon. He would tour
extensively with Jimmy T99 Nelson and Miss Lavelle White. Katie Webster
told him, "I knows it when I hears it."From 2002 through 2006,
he shared lead vocals and frontman duties in the Paul deLay Band,
culminating in his performance on an award-winning live CD, which
reached the Top Ten on Billboard's national blues chart. During his
years in Portland, David won five Muddy Awards from the Cascade Blues
Association, including Best Keyboard Player.After deLay's
untimely death, Vest joined forces with Kenny 'Blues Boss' Wayne and
various other pianists, including Ann Rabson, to form the supergroup
Northwest Pianorama. DAVID VEST
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