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Davie Poe is a songwriter’s songwriter. He refers to himself as “a songwriter of a certain age”. As a young man in Dayton, Ohio he got his first taste of success by winning a talent competition and using his prize (free studio time) to record what would become his first radio hit. That was back when a young musician might dream of a big record contract. He sings in a new song “Now I’m part of history, when the music cost money but the water was free.” 

He has covered a lot of road since then and logged a lot of miles as a performing solo artist, producer, songwriter, collaborator, lecturer, and creative thinker. 

David Poe is a kind of Zelig-like figure who appears where you least expect him, and somehow manages to fit right in wherever he shows up. At the same time, his songwriting and singing are distinctive, personal and cultivated. Talking to Poe, one is reminded that at their best, songwriters are our popular philosophers. Rather than creating a diversion from everyday life, they illuminate the human struggle, and elevate the human experience. 

David might be confused for a rock and roll guy, but what he does defies genre. He’s a songwriter who is dedicated to writing authentic music and “carrying the torch” of those who came before. He tells me “the song doesn’t need to be true, it just needs to be honest.”

His plain spoken manner has a way of underselling the depth of his ideas. He tells me, for example, that “a culture that declares art to be disposable will get disposable art.” But he says it casually, with a smile on his face.

We spoke recently about his philosophy on songcraft, collaboration, art and commerce, New York in the 90s (he worked at CBGBs Gallery for years) and why his new motto is “don’t hate fun”.

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