Margo Davidson

Margo Davidson
Wells - Davidson Band, circa 1979. Davidson is third from left.
Wells - Davidson Band, circa 1979.
Davidson is third from left.
Background information
Born(1957-09-28)September 28, 1957
OriginSimcoe, Ontario
DiedMay 17, 2008(2008-05-17) (aged 50)
GenresRhythm and blues, blues, rock, pop
Occupation(s)Musician, advocate for the homeless
Instrument(s)Saxophone, percussion, vocals

Margo Isabella Davidson (September 28, 1957 – May 17, 2008) was a founding member of The Parachute Club, for which she was saxophonist, percussionist and vocalist.[1] and an advocate for the homeless.

Early life and education

Davidson was born in Simcoe, Ontario and attended Simcoe Composite School[2] where she developed her musical talent. She was a diabetic from childhood. Davidson's father died in 1971; she had one brother and two step-siblings. Her brother David, a trombonist, was also involved in music, as a high school music teacher and performer.

Davidson initially played both piano and saxophone, and was a member of the Simcoe Composite School band. She formed her first music group, a jazz quartet, while a high school student, and played semi-professionally in the Simcoe area.

Musical career

Davidson arrived in Toronto from Simcoe in 1975, following graduation from Simcoe Composite School. She briefly attended the University of Toronto, and commenced playing with local bands. With Toronto female singer Robin Wells, with whom Davidson had been associated in a previous band, Davidson co-founded The Wells-Davidson Band in 1978, playing rhythm and blues and rock music. The band was one of a minority of bands led by two women. It was managed by Harbourfront Centre music programmer Derek Andrews.[3] The drummer for the band was Arthur Fogel, who later became a concert promoter and executive with Live Nation Entertainment.[4] At that time, and through the 1980s, Davidson was also notable as one of very few female saxophonists playing professionally, predating such artists as Candy Dulfer, Katja Rieckermann and Colleen Allen. In terms of the Toronto music scene of the late 1970s, she was a contemporary of Dianne Heatherington, with whom she played on occasion. She also recorded with the Foxrun Band on their album You're Invited. Davidson later joined Kid Rainbow, a band established by Toronto singer-songwriter Gary O'Connor as a means to promote his songs. She also played in a stage version of The Rocky Horror Picture Show that toured Toronto and area venues. Both The Wells-Davidson Band and Kid Rainbow met with a degree of local success.

In 1982 Davison was invited to form The Parachute Club, along with former Mama Quilla II members Lorraine Segato and Lauri Conger, as well as Steve Webster, Billy Bryans, Julie Masi and Dave Grey.[5] Davidson was a saxophonist,[6] percussionist and vocalist with The Parachute Club between 1982 and 1989, during which all of the band's recordings were made. The band, best known for their hit single "Rise Up", started out playing locally,[7] and later toured across Canada, as well as in the United States and Germany.[8] As a member of The Parachute Club Davidson was the recipient of two Juno Awards for Most Promising Group of The Year in 1984 and for Group of the Year in 1985. Davidson's role with The Parachute Club was primarily as a musician and harmony vocalist, though she is also the co-writer (with John Oates, Lorraine Segato and Lauri Conger) of "Love Is Fire", the lead single from the band's third album, Small Victories.[9] The album was less successful that their previous one,[10] and Parachute Club eventually broke up in 1989 (it was reconstituted in 2005 and continues to perform).

Davidson was briefly a member of the well-known Toronto band Bratty and The Babysitters, in 1988, when the future of The Parachute Club was uncertain, playing a mix of various musical genres.[11] Bratty and the Babysitters disbanded in 1989, the same year that The Parachute Club formally disbanded for the first time, though the latter's last public performances became those at Toronto's Ontario Place in July 1988.[12][13]

Advocate for the homeless

After the initial breakup of The Parachute Club, Davidson, with the exception of the occasional guest performance, left the music business and spent the balance of her life working with organizations dedicated to assisting the homeless.[8] Davidson became a creative writer[8] and a director of St. Clare's Multifaith Housing Society, based in Toronto. She was also an outreach worker at Eva's Phoenix, a transitional housing project dedicated to life skills and homeless youth.[14]

Death

For much of her life, particularly in her later years, Davidson was affected by depression and alcoholism. Davidson died in her Toronto home on Saturday, May 17, 2008. Her funeral and interment were in Simcoe on May 23, 2008, and she was interred at Oakwood Cemetery, Simcoe. Her cause of death was not publicly disclosed, and Davidson left no publicly acknowledged partner.[8]

Discography

Singles

Release date Title Chart peak Album
Canada
RPM
July 1983 "Rise Up" 9 The Parachute Club
1983 "Alienation"
1984 "Boy's Club"
October 1984 "At The Feet Of The Moon" 11 At The Feet of the Moon
February 1985 "Act Of An Innocent" 61
June 1985 "Sexual Intelligence"
October 1986 "Love Is Fire" 24 Small Victories
February 1987 "Love And Compassion" 81
May 1987 "Walk To The Rhythm" 90
January 1988 "Big Big World" 93 Non-album single

Albums

With The Parachute Club

  • 1983 The Parachute Club (Current/RCA)
  • 1984 At The Feet of the Moon (Current/RCA)
  • 1985 Moving Thru the Moonlight (Current/RCA; remixes)
  • 1986 Small Victories (Current/RCA)
  • 1992 Wild Zone: The Essential Parachute Club (BMG; Reissued 2006 by EMI International)

Other

References

  1. ^ " The Parachute Club". AllMusic, Biography by John Bush
  2. ^ Simcoe Composite School Website
  3. ^ "Transcript from CBC's METRO MORNING", Global Cafe, October, 2003; Archived at the Wayback Machine]
  4. ^ Peter Robb, Arthur Fogel's year of living famously. Ottawa Citizen, May 19, 2014. Retrieved 2014-06-22.
  5. ^ "The best Toronto band. Ever.". Toronto Star, May 14, 2011
  6. ^ "Parachutes Drop In". Imprint, January 20, 1984; Vol. 6, No. 24. by Nathan Kudyk.
  7. ^ "Rain didn't dampen Parachute Club spirit". Toronto Star - Toronto, Ont. Vit Wagner Jun 23, 1987 Page: E.4
  8. ^ a b c d Michael Badawoy, Margo Davidson, Juno Award Winner, Dies Archived 2009-07-27 at the Wayback Machine, CD 98.9FM Radio, May 23, 2008.
  9. ^ Small Victories at AllMusic. Retrieved 2012-04-27.
  10. ^ "Parachute Club floats new ideas". Toronto Star - Toronto, Ont. by Craig MacInnis Jul 19, 1988 Page E.4
  11. ^ "Biography of Bratty and The Babysitters". Canadian Pop Encyclopedia. Archived from the original on 2012-07-11.
  12. ^ Dillon, Charlotte. Biography of Bratty and The Babysitters at AllMusic. Retrieved 2012-04-27.
  13. ^ "Biography of The Parachute Club". Encyclopedia of Music in Canada.
  14. ^ See St. Clare's Multifaith Housing Society Annual Report 2003 Archived 2011-04-28 at the Wayback Machine at p. 6.
  15. ^ Canadian Pop Encyclopedia, Biography of Darkstar[usurped]; www.jam.canoe.ca.
  16. ^ One song, "It's Christmas", a single included as a bonus track on the CD reissue. See Don't Believe A Word I Say, With Bob Segarini Archived 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine; www.fyimusic.ca. Blog entry of August 19, 2009. Davidson's performance appears to be otherwise uncredited.
  17. ^ Saxophone on "Alphabet Town". According to a 2001 interview with Gerry Cott, his opportunities in Canada came about via Current Records, which was also the label for The Parachute Club, and CBS Records. See "Interview with Gerry Cott". Archived from the original on July 29, 2012.; www.cyberspace7.btinternet.co.uk.
  18. ^ Horns on "Insatiable", a track not previously released.
  19. ^ Composed of licensed recordings previously issued by blues labels such as Alligator, Stony Plain and Blind Pig. Davidson appears on "Red Hot Mama", by Paul James, from his Rockin' The Blues album, originally released by Stony Plain in 1989.