Experience Heath Davidson's guitar mastery with this collection of three instrumental tracks.
Heath Davidson is originally from eastern Oklahoma. He moved to Nashville in 2005 where he had a successful career as a lead guitarist, bassist, and band leader for over 15 years. During his time in Nashville he played guitar and bass for many artist both signed and unsigned sharing stages with major acts Montgomery Gentry, Neal McCoy, Deirks Bentley, Toby Keith, and many more.
In January of 23' Heath officially launched a new branch of his career as an artist. When asked what prompted this shift he said "when I moved to Nashville in 05' I wanted to make a living playing country guitar. I was successful with that. But over the years Nashville's music community frowned more and more on traditional country music and the artists singing those songs all but disappeared. Soon I realized that if I was going to be able to play the stuff I wanted to play I had to sing it myself. Luckily for me I had the opportunity to play behind truly amazing country artists which is where I went to school (so to speak) as a country singer for all practical intents and purposes. The big artists like Haggard, Singletary, Hank Jr., Neal McCoy, Joe Diffie, Paisley, and many others in that vein influenced me how to really "do it" every time I walked on stage. So I did it and I'm happy for it."
Heath Davidson's "Premium Country Music" show is an interactive, dynamic, nostalgic and exciting experience for patrons and staff alike performing 50 years of country music by request by artists like: George Straight, George Jones, Waylon Jennings, Merle Haggard, Willie Nelson, Neal McCoy, Joe Diffie, The Eagles, Joe Nichols, Alan Jackson, Jason Aldean, Luke Bryan, Buck Owens, Vince Gill, Kenny Rogers, Conway Twitty, Garth Brooks, Little Texas, Alabama, Shenandoah, Keith Whitley, Johnny Cash, Diamond Rio, Hank Jr., Craig Morgan, Big and Rich, John Anderson, Sammy Kershaw, Restless Heart, and many others. The best part about his shows is that you will never see the same one twice because the audience determines his setlist and obviously every audience is different.