Alana Davis

Alana Schofield Davis (born May 6, 1974) is an American singer-songwriter. Her father, Walter Davis Jr., was an African-American pianist who played alongside such jazz greats as Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie. A record deal with Elektra Records produced Davis' first two albums; Blame It on Me, which was chosen as one of Time's five best albums of 1997, and 2001's Fortune Cookies, which featured production by The Neptunes and Ed Tuton. She released videos of the songs "32 Flavors" and "Crazy." Davis achieved a radio hit with the single "32 Flavors" from her debut album.

Read full article on Wikipedia →

Collector Notes

0 notes

Loading notes…

Quiz

Generating a question from this article…

Loading latest news…

Discussion

Sign in to join the conversation.

Loading…

Against the dead internet

Bots wrote the feed. Models ate the web. Wikipedia is one of the last human-made commons left — support the real internet.

Donate to Wikipedia →