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・ Little Saint Marks River
・ Little Saint Nick
・ Little Saint Patrick River
・ Little Saint Roch River
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・ Little Salisbury, Virginia
・ Little Salkehatchie River
・ Little Salkeld
・ Little Salkeld rail accident
・ Little Salkeld railway station
・ Little Salmon Creek (Mendocino County)
・ Little Salmon River
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Little Sammy Davis
・ Little Sammy Sneeze
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Little Sammy Davis : ウィキペディア英語版
Little Sammy Davis

Little Sammy Davis (born November 28, 1928) is an American blues musician based in New York's Hudson Valley. Although his musical career began in the 1940s, he was not widely known until the mid-1990s when he began working in radio, singing, playing live on tour, and recording studio albums.
==Early life and career==
Born in Winona, Mississippi and raised in a one-room shack, Davis learned to play the harmonica at the age of eight. He eventually left home and settled in Florida, where he continued to play the blues in the Miami area while working in orange groves and saw mills to make ends meet.
Throughout the 1940s and 1950s, Davis traveled with medicine shows and played with blues musicians like Pinetop Perkins, and Ike Turner. He spent a total of nine years on the road with Earl Hooker, including with the short-lived band of Hooker, Ike Turner, Pinetop Perkins and Albert King, ending when the two titans of blues guitar came to blows, thus breaking up the band. Sammy and Earl recorded four sides for Henry Stone's Rockin' label in 1952 and 1953 (as Little Sam Davis).〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Little Sammy Davis )
In the late 1950s, Davis lived in Chicago, Illinois, performing with Muddy Waters, Jimmy Reed and occasionally fronting Little Walter's band, The Aces when Walter did not show. At some point, word had let out that "some guy looks and plays" just like Walter and people THINK he IS Little Walter". One night as Sammy performed on stage accompanied by Hooker, he spotted a policeman at the back of the club. Walter and the officer waited for Sammy to get through with his set and when Sammy got off of the stage, he was arrested on the spot. To quote Sammy:"Walter was a good guy and told me that yes, you do indeed sound just like me but you can't be going around letting people think you ARE me". Sammy was locked up, spent a night in jail before Walter dropped the charges, leaving Davis and Walter friends for the rest of Walter's all too short and tragic life.
He later married and settled in Poughkeepsie, New York, where he was "discovered" by local musician Dan DelSanto of The Arm Bros. Dan had been looking around locally for blues players for his friend, local folklorist Pete Lowry - during which time he recorded a session for Lowry's Trix Records at Sam's apartment in 1971 that resulted in one "45" single ("Someday Blues"/"Sam's Swing") being released. Sam also played harp on some of the recordings for Trix by Eddie Kirkland in 1972 at a studio in Mink Hollow, NY. After the sudden death of his wife in 1972/73, Davis basically stopped playing and dropped out of the music scene for the next two decades in spite of efforts by Little Eliot Lloyd, Lowry, a.o. to keep him playing. Eventually, no one knew if Sammy was alive or dead, or even where he was... some said back to Mississippi, maybe Florida.〔 He had disappeared.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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