Multi-instrumentalist, songwriter and vocalist Aaron Davis has spent half of his life in Kentucky, the latter half in Wyoming, and another lifetime carving out a humble existence as an independent recording and touring artist in the country’s least populated state. Aaron is chiefly known as co-founder of alt-country/alt-folk band Screen Door Porch, for his eclectic solo shows and the accompanying project Aaron Davis & the Mystery Machine, and as studio engineer-producer-session player at his own Three Hearted Recording Studio in Hoback, Wyoming. In 2021, he was one of two songwriters in the state to be awarded a Performing Arts Music Fellowship from the National Endowment of the Arts and Wyoming Arts Council—“a merit-based honor for an artist’s work in their field.” That spurred Davis’ tenth release, Catalyst, voted #6 Album of the Year by Wyoming Public Radio listeners.

    Aaron (vocals, banjo, harmonica, mandolin, guitars—acoustic, electric, resonator, lap steel) works the lesser-worn corners of the American musical fabric through an unconventional lens. Slide banjo? A detuned guitar made of metal? You bet. How about his unorthodox fingerstyle and “a particularly standout approach that mixes poetry, groove and roughness” (Lonestar Time). From “searing slide guitar” (Country Weekly) echoing gritty Southern blues to a patchwork of story folk and acoustic roots, pensive alt-country, and improvisational 70s-influenced rock, Davis has been described as a “truly phenomenal songwriter” (Americana UK) with “a combination that goes down as smoothly as top-shelf bourbon” (The Austin Chronicle) and “the lyrical prowess of Wilco’s Jeff Tweedy and the instrumental chops of a weathered bluesman” (Buckrail.com).

    The range of Aaron’s original material has been chronicled across eleven albums with four different bands amongst solo ventures and side projects. The 2021 EP, Catalyst, prominently features The Mystery Machine and material written during the pandemic lockdown. Wyoming Public Radio described it as, “The Band vibe going throughout.” Aaron’s 2019 album, The Meander, billows and breathes with both minimalist compositions and ensemble intricacy, showcasing over a dozen regional musicians that Davis has toured and collaborated with including Wyoming hero Jalan Crossland. Self-taught on every instrument he plays, Aaron continues to develop a musical vocabulary through experimentation with tunings, song structure, storytelling and colorful depictions of the characters in his songs.

    Alongside his wife and musical partner Seadar Rose, Davis’ decade with Screen Door Porch (2007-2017) was a prolific and significant era. The band became a national touring act, establishing their “grooving electrified porch music” as a household name in the region, eventually announcing a hiatus in 2017. They released four studio albums—Screen Door Porch (2010), The Fate & The Fruit (2012), Modern Settler (2015), and Pay it Forward (2017)—reaching an international audience via the Top 25 of the Europe’s Americana Radio Chart and numerous “Best Albums of the Year” lists from New York City to Oregon, United Kingdom to Italy and beyond. According to Vanguard Records executive and critic Bill Bentley, “Screen Door Porch transformed roots music into something much larger—a down home good time vibe,” while The Austin Chronicle noted that the duo “lends an easy Western flair to their more prominent native influences of North Carolina and Kentucky, a combination that goes down as smoothly as top-shelf bourbon.”

    As a solo artist, Aaron’s songs have landed in various projects including films, commercials, documentaries, podcasts, network television, spoken word projects, even yoga conferences. He has been fortunate to share bills with many of his heroes—Wilco, Willie Nelson, Jason Isbell & the 400 Unit, Buddy Guy, Sam Bush, Brian Wilson, James McMurtry, Steve Earle, Hayes Carll, and Grace Potter. This has led to theater, club and festival stages including South by Southwest, Treefort Music Fest, Targhee Bluegrass Fest, Magic City Blues Fest, JacksonHoleLive, Sawtooth Music Festival, and the first and only Wyoming band (SDP) to record sessions at Paste Magazine’s Daytrotter studio.

    In a full-page article “Touring, the Wyoming Way,” The New York Times pointed out Aaron & Seadar’s “entrepreneurial gumption in founding the multi-act WYOmericana Caravan Tour, a traveling concert circus.” The grassroots tour collective of Wyoming songwriters has made waves across the Mountain West for eight years (2013-2017, 2020-22), featuring as many as a dozen musicians on stage. The award-winning documentary WYOMERICANA depicts the inaugural tour in 2013, which unites and exposes top-notch original acts in Wyoming. Screen Door Porch’s contributions from both a musical perspective and as proponents of the broader Wyoming musical community were recognized by state government, which selected the band to be ambassadors to the state’s music scene through a national ad campaign and short film.

    Davis is also a freelance writer and photographer, founder of juke joint blues band Boondocks, curator-founder of the intimate concert series Songwriter’s Alley, and makes records with folks in the log cabin space of Three Hearted Recording. Recent studio collaborations as a recording, mixing, and mastering engineer include Nikki Sixx, Coyote Queen, Abby Webster, Jason Tyler Burton, Coyote Queen, The Minor Keys, Isaac Hayden, Micah Maly, and Quinn Cerovski.

    As a writer and photographer—currently with Jackson Hole Buckrail (2017-) and formerly as the weekly music columnist for Planet Jackson Hole (2005-2017)—Aaron has been fortunate to interview and photograph some of the greatest artists of our time: John Prine, Taj Mahal, Dr. John, Bela Fleck, Maceo Parker, Del McCoury, Michael Franti, John Perry Barlow, Mickey Hart, Warren Haynes, Wayne Coyne of Flaming Lips, Robert Cray, Nikki Sixx, Lyle Lovett, Buddy Guy, Ruthie Foster, Grace Potter, Mark Farina, Ray Benson, Jalan Crossland, and scores of colorful local bands. In addition to writing about music, Aaron has contributed several cover stories, news pieces, travel and outdoor narratives, and photo essays as well as reviews of albums, concerts and movies. His pieces have also appeared in Jackson Hole Review, The Oregonian, The Business Journal, Jambase.com, The Statesman Journal, and Cascade Policy Institute.

    Listen to Aaron Davis on Spotify

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