arts&life music/on the cover Ramblin’ Man Gets Grounded PHOTO BY ALLAN BARNES GARY GRAFF SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS Ethan Daniel Davidson talks about his new album, his dad and philosophy. 28 July 27 • 2017 S tanding on stage at Third Man Records in Detroit’s Cass Corridor, Ethan Daniel Davidson gazes over a micro- cosm of his life. In front of him, Orthodox rab- bis share floor space with hip rockers; Detroit Pistons alumni rub elbows with members of the city’s business and philanthropic community. Their common ground tonight is Davidson’s music — specifically, his seventh and latest album, Crows, which came out mid-June. With a guitar slung over his shoulder and a potent band of Detroit-area musicians behind him — including his wife, Gretchen Gonzales Davidson, a veteran of the groups Slumber Party and Kill Rock Stars — jn Davidson is comfortably in one of his elements, and perhaps the purest of the 47-year-old’s many and varied endeavors. “It’s sort of become a hobby with a capital H, I guess, rather than a profession,” the father of three says earlier while on a busi- ness trip to Chicago. “My life has changed so much, being involved in all of my dad’s sort of stuff after he died, having kids. There just isn’t the kind of time for it [ full time]. “But what hasn’t changed is the healing properties of the music. That was always the thing for me, anyway. The music was a salve. It was medicine. And I feel good about it in a way that I didn’t for most of the past 10 years.” Davidson has always done music by choice, of course. The son of the late Detroit Pistons and Guardian Industries owner William “Bill” Davidson did not necessarily have another path handed to him, but options were certainly there for a career in the business and financial realms. He studied at Hillel Day School as well as Lahser High School, the University of Michigan, Harvard and the University of Chicago, and there were expectations. “People would say to me, ‘You’ll follow his footsteps and do what he did,’” Davidson says, and his father encouraged him to study finance and accounting. But there was an even greater appetite to forge his own path. “When you live under the shadow of a really big tree, you’ve got to get out from under that, otherwise it’s going to be impos- sible for you to grow,” Davidson explains. “I think there were people over the years who said, ‘This Ethan guy is kind of a jerk ’cause he went off and did his own thing.’ But you have to dif- ferentiate yourself from your parents. It doesn’t matter if your father is Bill Davidson or Bob Smith. I think you’ve got to get out there and find out who you are and what you’re capable of. I would rather earn stuff than just walk into it.” Music became Davidson’s passion during high school, when he began playing guitar and joined the Lahser High School rock band — where he continued on page 31