Hometown: Athens, Ga.
Band members [L-R]: Nic Goodson - guitar; Ken Will Morton - vocals, guitar; Kyle Harris - bass; Brandon Hicks - drums
Fun fact: Morton likes to visit Civil War battlefields and dig up bullets. “I'm rapidly becoming a Civil War buff,” he says.
Why they're worth checking out: A top-notch songwriter with some serious guitar chops, Morton—aided and abetted by his new band the Wholly Ghosts—puts on raw, energetic performances that are often riveting.
For fans of: Bruce Springsteen, Paul Westerberg
Ken Will Morton still recalls his first musical experience like it was yesterday: “I remember my sister's mangy, asshole boyfriend teaching me chords on the guitar,” he says, laughing.
But Morton won't deny that he owes a lot to his sisters ex-boyfriend, no matter how mangy. Since then, the raspy-voiced, Georgia-based rocker has been in several rock and punk bands, and now has a burgeoning solo career in his sights. “I started taking charge of my own songs,” he says of the transition from side-guy to frontman. “And maybe in my old age I've toned it down a bit.”
Morton's forthcoming album, King Of Coming Around (due Feb. 2006), cleverly blends rootsy rock, blues and country elements, and the Wholly Ghosts offer some significantly rocked up accompaniment in the wake of 2004's moody, melancholy In Rock'n'Roll's Hands. “There's better players and a clearer focus of songs,” Morton says of the new album. “Before, I was going through all kinds of personal crap.” While his earlier, rough-around-the-edges take on the singer/songwriter genre was an impressive solo debut, Morton feels more at home fronting a rock ’n’ roll band
As for the new album's title, “Every time people think I'm down for the count, I end up coming around,” he says. “It's sort of a ‘Haha, I'm still here’ sort of thing.”
Morton's tastes are as broad as his musical history, ranging from Muddy Waters and Hank Williams to AC/DC. Lately he's been listening to early American songs recorded before music was an industry. “The people who were doing it back then were doing it for the purest of reasons,” he says.
Morton's reasons for making music are pretty pure, too. “It's the only thing I'm comfortable in my own skin doing,” he says. “I can't shake the muse.”
(To catch the latest news and tour dates for Ken Will Morton & the Wholly Ghosts, visit www.kenwillmorton.com)

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