Bass
Bassist Chris Davidson grew up in the Seattle area and lives in Ellensburg, WA. While pursuing a degree in Ethnomusicology, Chris studied jazz and classical bass at the University of Washington. Chris performs jazz, Western Swing, rock, bluegrass and country as a bassist and vocalist around the Pacific Northwest.
Mandolin
Chris Davidson picked up the mandolin in 2012 and dove into the music of Bill Monroe, Kenny Baker, Sam Bush and other bluegrass legends. Influenced by his jazz background and a keen interest in fiddle music, Chris performs bluegrass, country and jazz on mandolin and vocals around the Pacific Northwest.
Guitar
Chris Davidson picked up guitar in 2007 to learn the classic country songs he grew up with on the radio. Today his playing style is shaped by Bluegrass, Country, Swing and Celtic genres, as well as songwriting and solo arrangements. Chris performs solo and with various bands around the Pacific Northwest.
Ethnomusicology
For those of you not familiar, Ethnomusicology is the study of music in its social and cultural contexts. When I learned about this major at the University of Washington I could hardly believe that it brought together so many of my strongest interests. UW has an outstanding Ethnomusicology program and while I was a student I was fortunate to study Trinidadian steel pan (steel drums) with Ray Holman and take an array of fascinating world music classes ranging from North India to Ghana. I worked with professor Shannon Dudley to complete my capstone project tying in my work with coffee farmers in Colombia, which was an extraordinary opportunity to combine several of my life’s passions in one body of work. If you’re interested, check out Los Caminantes de Monserrate on YouTube to see and hear original music from the coffee farming community of Monserrate, Huila, Colombia.
Coffee
And that brings us to coffee. I don’t have much to share about how music and coffee have overlapped in my professional life, but I’d be remiss if I created a “Bio” page and didn’t include a few words about my primary career for over 25 years. The relationships I’ve developed with coffee producers, roasters, buyers, baristas and everyone in between are invaluable to me. My first trips to Guatemala in 2005 to study Spanish and train baristas led to me pursuing Spanish language proficiency, which was enormously helpful in my work as an importer for 16 years. During that time I formed close friendships all around the world, some of which still feel like family. I always had a guitar or mandolin with me on those trips and whenever music entered into our coffee conversations, it added something unique and wonderful.
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