Travis Morrison
(born December 16, 1972) is an American musician from the Northern Virginia suburbs of Washington, D.C., United States. As of July 2009 Morrison has retired from making music.
|
TRAVIS MORRISON TICKETS
|
Fairfax life and William and Mary
After picking up various instruments around age 12, Morrison stuck with guitar and began forming bands throughout his high school days at
Lake Braddock Secondary School in
Fairfax County, Virginia. The problem he kept running into with his high school bands was keeping a drummer. It didn't help that his mother didn't want him to ever play the drums due to all the noise it would make in the house. He was on Lake Braddock's Math Team and claimed to be "pathetically happy" upon defeating the math team of
Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology one year.
[1]
After "getting out of Fairfax" he attended
The College of William and Mary in
Williamsburg, Virginia for three years before dropping out to pursue a band. He worked at the campus radio station
WCWM, which he claimed was "worth tuition right there." At WCWM he became well versed in many types of music, "from John Coltrane to German art rock." He continues to have wide ranging musical taste to this very day, having claimed to enjoy everything from
Britney Spears,
Gladys Knight,
XTC,
Fugazi,
Ludacris and
go go.
The Dismemberment Plan
In 1993, Morrison formed
The Dismemberment Plan with old Lake Braddock friends. Despite his mother's initial reluctance, the band practiced in bassist Eric Axelson's basement frequently and began playing shows. By 1995 they released their debut album
!
on D.C. based
DeSoto Records. After original drummer Steve Cummings left the band, he was replaced by Joe Easley and the band's lineup would remain that way throughout their existence. Morrison was the
guitarist and vocalist for The Plan from their formation in 1993 to their final show at the
9:30 Club in D.C in 2003. The band released four LPs and two EPs and gained a large following for their energetic live show, mostly due to Morrison's "booty-shaking" moves onstage. Their final two studio albums
Emergency & I
and
Change
were some of the most revered rock albums in the late-90s and early-2000s. Despite this, the band continued to work freelance jobs on the side to support themselves, Morrison taking up various computer and graphic design jobs.
Solo
In 2004, Morrison moved to
Seattle, Washington and began working closely in the studio with both
Ben Gibbard and
Chris Walla of
Death Cab for Cutie, a frequent tourmate of The Plan. Morrison then began doing a nationwide tour of a solo show with just him and an acoustic guitar. The shows consisted of him doing mostly covers of songs varying a wide variety of genres (from
Spoon to
Fiddler on the Roof
and beyond). He also began playing some songs he was working on for a solo album. Around this time, he posted up
mp3s of songs he was working on for his solo album as well as a cover of Ludacris's
What's Your Fantasy
which was listed as a "must download" in
Entertainment Weekly.
In the summer of 2004, Morrison had moved back to the D.C. area and in September 2004 he released his first solo album,
Travistan
, through
Barsuk Records. The album was co-produced by
Chris Walla.
Travis Morrison Hellfighters
In September 2004 Morrison assembled a band to play his solo songs live. Consisting of Brandon Kalber (bass, keyboards),
Saadat Awan (drums), David Brown (percussion), Kristen Forbes (keyboards and backup vocals) and Morrison on vocals and keyboards. At first the band's live show consisted of three synths, percussion and drums but Morrison stated "none of us could play keyboards very well, so it was kind of hard after a while."
Over time, Forbes left the band, the band introduced guitar & bass to their live sound and the band would begin touring as
Travis Morrison Hellfighters
. Travis and the Hellfighters continued to tour for the album and demoed new songs together. By the summer of 2005, the band had come into their own and were playing shows of entirely new material, only playing the occasional
Travistan
song. Travis and the Hellfighters have finished a new album, titled
All Y'all
, that was released on
August 21,
2007 and is currently streaming on Travis' website
[2] and was produced by Travis's former bandmate, Jason Cadell
[3].
The final Hellfighters lineup (as of 2009) was:
- Travis Morrison
- David Brown
- Brandon Kalber
- Vince Magno
- Thomas Orgren
Retirement
As of July 2nd 2009, Morrison's official website states that he has retired from making music, stating that there will be no more shows, records or bands: .
Trumpeter of D.C. Culture
Morrison is notable for being very vocal about the culture of the Washington, D.C. area. Morrison has always insisted on touring with fellow D.C. acts, both with The Plan and solo. Despite releasing
Travistan
on
Barsuk Records, he remains supportive of D.C.-based
DeSoto Records. In his lyrics he makes mention to the area (see below), the liner notes to
Change
feature photos taken around Washington, D.C., notably of The Uptown Theatre. The logo for
Travistan
resembles the flag of the
District of Columbia. He's a very active fan of Washington area sports, mainly the
Washington Wizards. He placed a link on his website to an online petition to change the name of the
Washington Nationals to the
Washington Grays in honor of
the old D.C.
Negro Leagues team. Both with The Plan and solo he frequently played and continues to play shows at D.C. live venue staples
Black Cat,
Fort Reno and the
9:30 Club. He has kicked around the idea of doing a tour of the outlying suburbs of D.C since he once lived in
Lorton, Virginia and knows how difficult it can be to get downtown for a show.
Recently around D.C. he has also done volunteer work with We Are Family D.C., a non-profit organization and returned to his William & Mary days by DJing with
WMUC at the
University of Maryland, College Park. He has also sung in several D.C. area church choirs, including a recent season with the
National Cathedral.
In 2005 through most of 2007 Morrison lived in the
Capitol Hill neighborhood of Washington, DC with his girlfriend and worked for the website of the town's most famous paper,
The Washington Post heading their advertising programming and production department. He moved to Brooklyn in late 2007.
D.C. lyrical references
Morrison frequently refers to D.C. area locations and themes in his songs. References include:
- The song "13th and Euclid" (!
) is named after an intersection in Northwest D.C.
- in "Fantastic!" (!
): "I wouldn't go so far as to call it escape, but I'll head my way up I-95"
- in "The Ice of Boston" (The Dismemberment Plan is Terrified
): "...and I say 'oh fine, mom; how's Washington?!'"
- The song "The City" (Emergency and I
) is about D.C.
- in "Spider in the Snow" (Emergency & I
): "And as I would walk down K Street to some temping job, as winter froze life out of fall, I must have been having a ball."
- in "Ellen and Ben" (Change
): "The Ocean City girls on the boardwalk, singing oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh"
- In "My Two Front Teeth Parts 2 & 3" (Travistan
): "In front of the Gap at the corner of M and Wisconsin" - the song illustrates a Georgetown mugging, in which the narrator loses his two front teeth, as a metaphor for the September 11, 2001 attacks [4] ("The second I saw, but the first was sucker-punch city.")
- In "Get Me Off This Coin D" (Travistan
): "You named a town, after me now, and no one there can vote" (from the perspective of George Washington, the last of a series of songs commemorating the four presidents on common United States coinage)
- In "Hawkins' Rock" (All Y'All
): "Drivin' down I-95, son" and "Drivin' down I-81, yeah"
- In "I Do" (All Y'All
): "swimming through the heat of a D.C. dawn"
Discography
The Dismemberment Plan
- "Can We Be Mature?" single (1994)
- !
(1995)
- Give Me the Cure
compilation (1996)
- Ooh Do I Love You
compilation (1996)
- The Dismemberment Plan Is Terrified
(1997)
- Fort Reno Benefit
compilation (1997)
- "What Do You Want Me to Say?" single (1997)
- The Ice of Boston
EP (1998)
- Emergency & I
(1999)
- Dismemberment Plan/Juno
split EP (2000)
- Change
(2001)
- A People's History of the Dismemberment Plan
(2003)
Solo
Travis Morrison Hellfighters
References
- Nude as the News:
- Travis Morrison Hellfighters
- Pitchfork: Dismemberment Plan Members Form New Band
- Fortunate Son