listen to Dave Perkins
The Music
From the artist's statement:
Dave Perkins is an artist whose journey crisscrosses the map of American music. Perkins' work as a guitarist includes playing bluegrass and swing with fiddle-great Vassar Clements, Texas renegade-country with Jerry Jeff Walker, singer-songwriter pop with Carole King, Americana with Guy Clark, psychedelic blues and jazz with violinist Papa John Creach, reggae with Mystic Meditations, alt-rock with Chagall Guevara, and industrial hard-core with Passafist. Then, there were numerous other high points, such as accompanying Ray Charles on his "3/4 Time" video. Dave’s discography as a guitarist is substantial; featured here are his solo recordings.
Dave Perkins music is available on all the major streaming platforms
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Powderhead
Coming November 2025
The Southern backwoods homestead, Powderhead, was the stage from which the actors in Flannery O’Connor’s The Violent Bear It Away exploded into my imagination. Along with William Faulker’s Sanctuary and Cormac McCarthy’s Blood Meridian, the gothic sensibilities of The Violent Bear It Away inspired the songs of this album.
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Local Life
June 2023
Seven years in the making, Dave Perkins’ Local Life is a collection of short stories set to music—music that takes flight in a range of altitudes and directions. While each song tells its own story, Local Life overall is an archaeology of emotion. This is me digging in my past uncovering where loss, heartbreak, and standing at the threshold of non-being (cancer) shape the world I know. Tucked in between those thorny themes are reflections on dear people and sacred places that have contributed to my sense of self and brought sweetness to a troubled soul.
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Fugitive Colors
March 2017
Raw but elegant guitar architecture. Lyrics that conjur spirits of the past. A voice unique to him. These are the defining characteristics of Dave Perkins’ Fugitive Colors, an eclectic collection of songs that seem to bridge the boundary lines of multiple genres of American music. One early listener described Fugitive Colors as “genre-free.” Thanks to Perkins’ individualistic guitar approach to song construction, the question is blurred as to where, if in any of the well-worn locations, this album belongs. Americana? Contemporary folk rock? Alternative rock? Singer-songwriter?
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The Innocence
October 1987
Released in 1987 by A&M Records and What? Records, The Innocence was Dave Perkins’ first label release after his journeyman years as guitarist for a number of outstanding American music makers. The album drew much interest for its combination of Southern music sensibilities with Anglophile New Wave and Post-Punk. Prominently featured on the album is Perkins’ rhythm guitar playing, performed mostly on a 1962 Stratocaster as opposed to his old Gibson Les Paul. Perkins’ guitar style here is percussive with a slash and burn abandon.
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Pistol City Holiness
April 2009
. . . high-velocity, southern blues-rock . . .a seismic mixed-breed of tradition and post-mod
Described by critics as a blues-rock masterpiece, Pistol City Holiness is Dave Perkins’ return to his first love. “The blues was the first music to capture my imagination,” says Perkins. “It grabbed me because it was something other—alien—and, yet, at the same time, deeply familiar. I’ve never gotten over it. I’ve worked in a lot of different styles of music, but my approach to each one was and will always be shaped by the blues.” Reflecting on the creation of Pistol City Holiness, Perkins says, “I wanted to make an album that brought back the excitement I felt when I first heard Muddy Waters, Cream, Fred McDowell, and Peter Green. “ A brew of musical energies, Pistol City Holiness blurs boundary lines between styles, and makes an artistic statement that speaks to the variety and depth of Perkins’ experience—musical and otherwise—all while keeping the blues as the emotional, musical, and spiritual center.
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Deadline
February 2012
When it is suggested that the Deadline soundtrack has him following in the footsteps of some very notable guitarists, Perkins responds, “I admired John Hammond’s work on Little Big Man. Same with Lanois and Sling Blade. Ry Cooder’s Paris, TX and The Long Riders go without saying.” Perkins says that the film’s setting in the deep South offered a particular enticement to his signing on for the project. “The region’s rich music history allowed me to cover a lot of stylistic terrain. The soundtrack is something of a travelogue of where I’ve been musically.” In building a bridge between Deadline’stwo cultural locations— the shiny new urban South of cities like Atlanta and Nashville and, also, the rural South where traditions linger—Perkins’ primary tools are his guitars. They cover Appalachian and Delta ground and, on the other extreme, the modern and experimental. It is in the department of songs, however, that Perkins’ score rises above its first function as sound for picture. “To Be Redeemed” is nothing less than a contemporary civil rights anthem that reaches beyond the issue of race to voice the cry of many Americans—the currently in-the-news 99%—who are speaking out because they fear for their future. -

Live/Still alive
September 1979
Cassette only. Recorded in 1979, Side One is live at Kenny's Castaways in Greenwich Village, NYC. Side Two features song demos recorded for Atlantic Records. Playing on the album is the Dave Perkins Band that won the hearts of many as the band played up and down the East Coast and South between 1978 and 1983.
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Chagall Guevara - Chagall Guevara
Much has been said about Chagall Guevara, this album in particular. For my money, Rolling Stone Magazine said it best when its review of the album turned the phrase “Not since The Clash . . . “
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Chagall Guevara - Halcyon Days
Three new tracks fill out this collection of songs from the Chagall Guevara storage vault—movie soundtrack cuts, UK B-sides, unpublished demos, and compilation album cuts. The title track finds CG making music for the post-punk surf crowd.
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Chagall Guevara - The Last Amen
Recorded live at Nashville’s 328 Music Hall, the album captures Chagall Guevara at the peak of its powers. The band was distracted that night by an unruly audience. Many tried and several succeeded in getting access to the stage where swan dives into the shoulder-to-shoulder crowd were judged and awarded with various levels of applause. One such diver disrobed behind the amp line before his glorious leap into the void. I remember his face as he dove—a dumb smile under glazed eyes.
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Passafist
Vintage guitars and amplifiers coupled with computer-driven “industrial” drums and bass support songs that display dark humor and sly wit. An intense slab of noise that will make you think while you’re banging your head against a wall.
Dave Perkins is an artist whose musical journey crisscrosses the map of American music.
Biography
“When I was 13, I put down $35 at a pawnshop on Philadelphia’s South Street and took home a Harmony arch-top guitar (painted sparkle gold). When I bought the guitar it was not with aspirations of becoming a great player. It was more about self-expression and trying to write songs.
A decade and several guitars later, however, I developed enough skill that folks began to see me as a “guitarist.” Since then, I have enjoyed the privilege of recording and/or performing with a number of America’s great popular music makers. Bluegrass and swing with fiddle-maestro Vassar Clements, Texas renegade-country with Jerry Jeff Walker, singer-songwriter pop with Carole King, alternative rock with Chagall Guevara, Americana with Guy Clark, blues and jazz with violinist Papa John Creach, reggae with Mystic Meditations, and industrial hard-core with Passafist—those are just a few of the memorable episodes in my musical story. There were also the occasional odd jobs, such as accompanying Ray Charles on his “3/4 Time” video.
After two decades of professional music making I grew restless. Attempting to scratch an intellectual itch acquired by a voracious appetite for reading philosophy, I entered graduate studies at Vanderbilt University. The result was a Masters degree in Theology and a Ph.D. in History and Critical Theories of Religion. I went on to administrate a program and to teach for twelve years at The Divinity School of Vanderbilt University.
Despite my love of the world of ideas, the siren song of music making called once again. In July 2021, I returned to my first love–songs and guitars. The story continues!”
Stage and Studio
Whether it was one night on stage, or days, weeks, or months in the studio or on tour, Dave Perkins has enjoyed recording and/or performing with:
Jerry Jeff Walker, Ray Charles, Carole King, Vassar Clements, Guy Clark, Chagall Guevara, Papa John Creach, Willie Nelson, Passafist, Over the Rhine, Squeeze, Lucinda Williams, Buddy Miller, Amy Grant, Bobby Bare, David Allen Coe, Smash Palace, Dolly Parton, Donna Fargo, Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section, Paul Butterfield, Rick Danko, Shel Silverstein, Maria Muldaur, Russ Taff, Lenny Breau, Johnny Paycheck, DC Talk, Waylon Jennings, Steve Earle, Hunter S. Thompson, Kevin Ayers (Soft Machine), Mustafa Abdul-Aleem, Little River Band, Stephane Grappelli, Willie Nile, Clarence “Frogman” Henry, Steve Goodman, Vince Gill, Gary Tallent, Long Players, Andy Statman, Billy Joe Shaver, Jimmy Hall, Greg Trooper, Matt Wallace, Pam Mark Hall, Mystic Meditations, Joe Ely, Uncle Pleasant, Bridget St. John, Phil Keaggy, Shakin Apostles, Phillip Wilson, Keith Edwards, Newsboys, Pig Robbins, Randy Stonehill, Henry Paul Band, Jack DeJohnette, Leon Wilkeson, Bonnie Bramlett, Winters Brothers, James Talley, Kevin Max, Billy Cox, Gerry Groom, Taylor Sorensen, Orleans, Roger Miller, Joe English, Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Geneva, Ashley Cleveland, Kenny Greenberg, David Bryson, Bill Lloyd, Jack Joseph Puig, Odessa Settles, Doug Powell, Ultra-Fix, Charlie Daniels, Rick Nelson, Darryl Rhoades, Tracy Nelson, Leo LeBlanc, Jon Corneal, Steve Forbert, Johnny Neel, Wayne Perkins, Mylon LeFevre, Rev. James Cleveland, Joe Venuti, Byron House, Mickey Raphael, Pete Thomas, Phil Parlapiano, Michael Rhodes, Bruce Helford, Clark Pierson, Fran Breen, Margaret Becker, Will Rambeaux, Jimmy Hall, Fingers Taylor, Dan Huff, Michael Clarke, Jimmy Nalls, Gerald Emerick, Walter Eugenes, Rick Cua, Steve Taylor, Johnny Sandlin, Solid Senders, White Heart, Lost Gonzo Band, Mattie Groves, Ramsie Shick, Gary Rossington, Richard Price, Reece Wynans, Mel Watts, Jack Hall, Mike Duke, Greg Husted, Rob Frazier, Michael Saleem, Steve Camp, John Elliott, Martha Velez, Gerry Moore, Bill Pound, Dru Lombar, Pat Walters, Peter Levin, Phil Madeira, Little Kings, Silver Taylor, Don Heffington, Nathan East, Hayseed, Jimmy Thackery, DeGarmo and Key, Peter Case, Tonio K, Arthur Offen, TJ Klay, Reed Arvin, Say-So, Brian Sutton, Gene Eichelberger, Robin Eaton, Mike Frazier, The Stand, Bob Ludwig, Randy Goodman, OT Young, Tony Sarno, Dee Archer, Trees, Malcolm Harper, Mark Richardson, Mike Rayburn, Zane Campbell, Tom Pacheco, Jason Eskridge, Dave Olney, Al Kooper, Katy Moffatt, John Porter, Don Merlino, Jerry Dale McFadden, Bob Halligan, Gregg Gerson, Paul Griffith, Jeb and Jock Guthrie, RS Fields, Bobby Bradford Blues Band, Caldwells, George Grantham, Greg Jackson, David Humphries, Jerry McPherson, Geoff Moore, Ed Raetzloff, Chris Rodriguez, Scott Roley, Servant, Jerusalem, Bob Slawson, Chris Shadwell, Joe Walk, Craig Krampf, Dan Dailey, Chris Donohue, Bryan Owings, Bruce Summerfield, Kim Hill, Robin Crow, Cactus Moser, Antoine Silverman, Aaron Smith, Maxwell Wheeler.
The picture tells the story.
A photographic essay
Willie and Waylon
I was new in Nashville but got an invitation to accompany fiddle-maestro Vassar Clements to War Memorial Auditorium. I can’t recall whose show it was, but I found myself onstage during the encore with Willie Nelson, Waylon Jennings, and several other luminaries from the Outlaw Country scene. The encore became a show in and of itself. The photo was taken by high school senior Wade Jaynes who, as destiny would have it, became the bass player in Chagall Guevara.
Ray Charles
The room was ready for Ray Charles. So, too, the film crew, cast of extras, and Ray’s backing band of which I was a member for the upcoming three days. Ray’s country album, Wish You Were Here Tonight was soon to be released, and we were all gathered to shoot a music video for the album’s first single, “3/4 Time.” The three days proved monumental.
(excerpt from my forthcoming memoir)
Dave performance
The Cat Club (NYC). I was performing at the 1987 New Music Seminar. Bands were playing all over the city, and I was sharing the evening with They Might Be Giants, The Northern Pikes, and Pursuit of Happiness. Also in the photo is Greg Husted, the lone survivor of the Dave Perkins Band. New York was the DPB’s musical home from 1979-83. This Cat Club show was my first in the city in almost five years.
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Music
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Gallery
View the Art of Dave Perkins
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Library
Read the writings of Dave Perkins