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Richie grew up in Chicago in the Jeffrey Manor neighborhood located on the southeast side of the city near the old steel mills along with an older brother (Andrew Davis) and sister. As a pre-teen Richie constantly listened to music on his transistor radio to the local Chicago radio stations WVON, WCFL, WLS, and WGRT listening to a large variety ...
The Willows were an American doo-wop group formed in Harlem, New York, in 1952.The group was an influential musical act that performed into the mid-1960s and had a Top 20 R&B hit with "Church Bells May Ring", a song which was covered with greater commercial success by The Diamonds.
Richie Davis – electric guitar (3), guitar (7) Simbret Dorch – background vocals (3) Michael Francis – acoustic and electric guitars (6) Simon Fryer – cello (6) Bruce Gaitsch – guitars (12) David R Hetherington – cello (6) Tim Jessup – synthesizer programming and guitar (13) Bobby Kimball – guest vocals (4) Audrey King – cello (6)
Tracy Krueger’s death is the second blow dealt to the Wisconsin basketball community this week, which lost Ritchie Davis, of the Wisconsin Playground AAU basketball program, a day earlier.
Richard Curtis Davis (born December 24, 1945) is an American former defensive back who played for the Montreal Alouettes of the Canadian Football League (CFL) in 1970. He was part of their Grey Cup championship team. Davis was selected by the Detroit Lions but was cut and came to Canada. Playing 11 games with Montreal in 1970 he had six ...
Richard Davis (bassist) (1930–2023), American jazz double bass player; Richard Davis (techno artist) (born 1952), American techno music pioneer with the group Cybotron; Richie Davis (musician) (born 1957), American R&B guitarist and bandleader; Richard F. W. Davis (born 1966), American musician, record producer and songwriter, pop and rock
The producer's 1989 album "Back on the Block" — featuring a wide mix of musicians including Ice-T, Miles Davis and Chaka Khan — won the Grammy for album of the year in 1991. "I live with his ...
Texas Woman's University (TWU) is a public coeducational university in Denton, Texas, with two health science center-focused campuses in Dallas and Houston. While TWU has been fully co-educational since 1994, it is the largest state-supported university primarily for women in the United States .