
---Matt's Bio courtesy of http://www.mattmorris.net --
BIOGRAPHY
What is it that separates Matt  Morris from so many other recording artists?  When you peel back all the layers  - the diverse moods, styles and topics he sings about - there is one common  denominator: They reflect Matt's dedication to living and writing about a  meaningful life.
In an increasingly rushed and rude world, in which politicians and talk radio hosts hurl epithets and insults, where honest disagreements are shouted down by dishonest rhetoric, Matt Morris gives voice to our best instincts. “We’re looking for a way to make it better/Looking for a way to change the weather,” he sings in “Live Forever” from his new album When Everything Breaks Open on Tennman Records. On the album, Matt embraces the personal and political, the romantic and the spiritual, in a way that recalls Stevie Wonder’s 1970s streak of masterworks.
He can build epic emotional epiphanies such as “Forgiveness” and “Eternity,”  and switch gears with the rhythmic “Money.” He is bold and fearless with sarcasm  on “The Un-American,” where Morris holds up a mirror to the demagogues of  divisiveness and asks: “What if you’re the un-American?” The dynamic singer is  also at home with the ambitious “Don’t You Dare”, on memorable love songs like  “Just Before the Morning,” and shows his compassion with his message in “In This  House.”
When Everything Breaks Open was produced in Austin, Texas, and in  Los Angeles by Charlie Sexton and Tennman label founder Justin Timberlake - two  names you wouldn’t intuitively expect to team up in the studio. “Charlie and  Justin can be seen as representative of different sides of my music,” Morris  says. “There is an earthy, rooted, sometimes melancholy side to some of my  writing that is in line with Charlie’s personality and approach. There is a  playful, high-energy, soulful side that speaks to who Justin is, as a person and  producer. The two people are very different from one another, but they both have  impeccable instincts.”
Morris has known Timberlake since the early 1990s, when the two were child  co-stars of that era’s edition of “The All New Mickey Mouse Club.” Morris was on  the show for four seasons, from 1991-1995. Even before what was popularly known  as MMC, Morris was a stage savvy performer. His father is country artist Gary  Morris, former Broadway actor and once one of country’s biggest stars. His  parents divorced when he was young; he lived with his mother in Denver, but on  summer vacations, he would often join his father not just on the road, but on  stage.
In addition to Timberlake, Morris’ friends and contemporaries from the show  included luminaries such as Christina Aguilera, Britney Spears, Keri Russell,  Ryan Gosling, and JC Chasez. While many of his cohorts leveraged their Disney  Channel exposure to successful pop and acting careers, Morris craved teenage  normality, and the family headed back to Denver. “At 15, all I really wanted to  do was hang out, get my learner’s permit, and not work” Morris says. “I didn’t  want to be a celebrity; I wanted to be a kid."
During the summer between his Junior and Senior years in high school, Matt  worked as a volunteer health activist for the non-profit organization,  Amigos de las Americas. He worked in a remote village in Paraguay,  South America, teaching hygiene to locals and assisting with sanitation. Matt’s  experience with Amigos was a precursor to the work he would do as a  partner artist with the Flobot’s non-profit, FightWithTools.org, an organization  committed to providing support on many levels to communities in need.
Morris reunited as a collaborator for some of his fellow Mouseketeers as they  pursued their music careers. Morris and Aguilera co-wrote five songs on  her Stripped album, including the hit “Can’t Hold Us Down”; they also  wrote Kelly Clarkson’s hit, “Miss Independent.” Morris teamed up with Timberlake  to craft “The Only Promise That Remains” – a duet performed by Timberlake and  Reba McEntire for the Reba Duets album.  The pair also wrote “(Another  Song) All Over Again” produced by mega-producer Rick Rubin, for Justin’s  2008 FutureSex/LoveSounds.
“To write for another person is to channel that person’s artistic vision,”  Morris says. “I work to become aligned with their intentions, and allow my words  to speak as close to their perspectives as possible. I think that’s why it is so  easy for me to write with Justin, and why my time with Christina yielded so many  songs. I know them; we have a shared context.”
Morris’ own music occupies a time and space entirely different from the songs  he has collaborated on. In 2003, Matt released the DIY album, UnSpoken,  and over the last couple of years has toured with Grammy award winners The  Indigo Girls and Joan Osborne. In 2008, he performed at the Bonnaroo Music  Festival, which spawned a five song EP - Backstage at Bonnaroo and other  Acoustic Performances.
All these years of work paved the way  for When Everything Breaks Open, which was conceived in a Middle  Eastern restaurant in New York City. “Justin had just performed on “Saturday  Night Live” for the first time, and I was there to support him and watch the  show. At dinner after the show, he told me he was going to start a label of his  own, and that he wanted to sign me as his artist. He said he was going to help  me share my music with the world, and I believed him.”   
On When Everything Breaks Open, Matt Morris has grown from an award-winning songwriter to a multi-talented recording artist with one of the most ambitious albums of 2010
 
 
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