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2 years ago
Thrill Is Gone
David Gerald and his band, Bob Bennett on Bass, Why Lou on Drums and Mike Rupprecht on Keys. Performing 'Thrill Is Gone'. This live version is avai...
4,329 views
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2 years ago
Red House
David Gerald and his band, Bob Bennett on Bass, Why Lou on Drums and Mike Rupprecht on Keys. Performing 'Red House'. This live version is available...
3,623 views
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2 years ago
Cold Shot
David Gerald and his band, Bob Bennett on Bass, Why Lou on Drums and Mike Rupprecht on Keys. Performing 'Cold Shot'. This live version is available...
1,350 views
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2 years ago
She Caught The Katy
David Gerald and his band, Bob Bennett on Bass, Why Lou on Drums and Mike Rupprecht on Keys. Performing 'She Caught The Katy'. This live version is...
3,767 views
1DavidGerald
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2 years ago
I'll Play The Blues For You
David Gerald and his band, Bob Bennett on Bass, Why Lou on Drums and Mike Rupprecht on Keys. Performing 'I'll Play The Blues For You'. This live ve...
7,791 views
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About David Gerald
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1DavidGeraldLatest Activity
Oct 18, 2009Date Joined
Apr 25, 2007About this user
David Gerald, the son of Mississippi born and raised parents, grew up to the sounds of the blues and R&B music in his hometown, Detroit. Hes the 11th of 11 children, 6 of whom were born and partly raised in Mississippi. Because segregation and racial discrimination were so bad in Mississippi, my dad moved the family north to Detroit when he was 33, so we'd have a better chance at the American dream. He reminisces about that til this day, says Gerald.Gerald started playing guitar at the age of 16 influenced by Prince and 80s rock guitarists. He rediscovered the blues and listened to the music of Albert King, ZZ Hill, B.B. King, and Stevie Ray Vaughan to name just a few.
I was lucky enough to have a neighbor who was a guitarist and gave me scrap guitars. I would piece them together and build 'Frankenstein' guitars, says Gerald. They were horrible to play and sounded bad, but I had to play music. It was and is my destiny. I finally scraped up enough money to buy an old amp and I was happy.
Gerald performed in many local blues, R&B and rock bands cutting his guitar and vocal chops live and in person. Finding it hard to keep a band together, Gerald learned to play guitar, bass, keys and drums. Using two antiquated cassette recorders he would overdub each part individually until the song was completed. The end result sounded horrible, and the songs would not end up in the same key they started in. But it got my songs recorded, says Gerald. This was the beginning of his songwriting, most of which were pop and rock tunes during the 80s. Around the age of 24, he began experimenting with computers to write and compose music, which he has done to this day.
Gerald, now in his 40s, has his own band playing locally and regionally in Michigan. Earlier this year he opened the 'Triple Threat Of Blues' show for Bobby Rush and Mel Waiters in Jackson, Michigan performing at the State Theatre. Gerald has performed several times at the two major festivals in Michigan; Detroit Riverdays Festival, (International Freedomworks Festival) and Chrysler Art, Beats and Eats Festival. Recently David was listed as #1 on the ReverbNation blues charts for Michigan blues artists.
David Geralds debut album, Hell And Back, contains five studio originals and five live arrangements of well known tunes including Thrill is Gone, Red House and Cold Shot.