There’s a hallowed hall, deep within the recesses
of the heart, where an amazing truth resides: The power in your life can only
be experienced when broken open and shared with the people who come into it.
Back in 2005, Mike Farris cracked open the hallway
door when, for the first time since the age of 15, he was clean and sober.
Recording what would become the critically acclaimed Salvation in Lights (2007), a resurrected Mike eagerly anticipated
the future. But with two ruptured discs, back surgery and the death of his
beloved manager Rose McGathy all within a few weeks of the record’s release, a
rolling fog settled in. And with it, denial.
Nevertheless, Mike’s career was picking up steam.
He won an Americana Music Award for New/Emerging Artist in 2008, followed by a
Dove Award in 2010. His live performances at Bonnaroo, SxSW, Hardly Strictly
Bluegrass Festival, and others—were drawing rave reviews. Revered artists like
Rodney Crowell, Buddy Miller, Patty Griffin, and Marty Stuart were struck by
his incomparable voice, and Mike opened shows for Patti LaBelle, Mavis Staples, Blind Boys of
Alabama, Ricky Skaggs and Bruce Hornsby.
By 2010, having released the
award winning SHOUT! Live followed by
an EP for Nashville flood relief efforts, Mike launched a Kickstarter campaign
to fund his next record, an independent release. His fans generously funded the
project.
Serious invitations kept coming: first, to the Rock And Roll Hall of Fame’s 16th
Annual American Music Masters concert honoring Aretha Franklin, then TEDx
Nashville, and then to the inaugural
Austin City Limits Hall of Fame with Double Trouble.
Mike’s spirited, soul-gospel
fusion had found an enthusiastic audience, but denial has a way of biting back.
Compared to his former life, he thought he was fine, but truth be told, Mike
had become addicted to pain medication. The new album
would have to take a back seat to a gut-check, life-changing recovery. Mike
went to rehab and finally began excavating the root causes of his addiction
with the help of support groups at AA and NA. An isolator by nature, he struggled
laying all his burdens on the table to complete strangers, but gained
encouragement through the stories of others. Each honest step led to fertile,
hopeful ground.
What eventually emerged from that fertile ground is
Shine For All The People, the
evolution of true sobriety, of finding a new identity as a servant, first as a
man but also as an artist. “I’d been working on the record
before my recovery, and then there was a pretty huge delay,” explains Mike, who
recently signed with Compass Records. “I had to back up, take time to grab the
ground, to re-acclimate, to learn how to live now, truly sober for the first
time since I was a kid.”
This new normal included getting back to the
process of creating new music, but there was a distinctive trajectory shift in
Mike. “So many avenues of music flow through me, 100s of
years of music, the music that I grew up with—from Blues, Rock, R&B and
gospel—there had always been this pressure to try to force it into a box that
would sell somehow. It’s crazy and overwhelming at times, the weight of trying
to meet expectations and make a living, but this time, that all fell away. I
know now that this gift only exists to encourage people in their struggles, and
if there’s any power in it, it’s not from me.”
Set for release in September 2014, Shine For All The People pushes beyond
Salvation in Lights in that it
reveals hope not in any glory to come, but in the failures and suffering of the
present. “My music has always been first and foremost for the
downtrodden, the wayward...people who’ve had to go up the rough side of the
mountain. Even when it’s upbeat and inspiring, there’s always been an element
of pain, because truth be told, we’re all flawed. Not everybody knows it, but
we all are.”
From the opening Cuban/St. Louis blues horns of
“River Jordan,” originally written and performed by Blind Willie McTell, to the
divine salvation of J.B. Lenoir’s “Jonah & the Whale,” to the determined
stance of the Rev. C.J. Johnson’s “Something Keeps on Telling Me,” a
chorus/mantra that Mike fleshed out into a song in the months after rehab…one
listen, and it’s clear there’s something mystical in the waters here.
“When
I first heard the Rev. C.J. Johnson’s version, I could feel the air in that
church get still, no music, only the sound of feet on the floor and hands in
the air,” Mike says. “I got such strength from it, I knew I wanted to add part
of my story. With his words as the chorus, and with Brigitte DeMeyer helping me
out, the song serves as a compass for anyone who has lost their way.”
Mary Gauthier’s soul-stirring “Mercy Now,” one of
the first songs Mike chose for the record, is clearly foundational to the
whole. “The song just mystically appeared before me a few months before my Dad
was diagnosed with lung cancer,” he says. “Not only did it play a major roll in
just helping me deal with the year that followed, including his death, but
brought comfort to my entire family.”
Like other choice cuts on Shine For All The People, the songs simply arrived at the appointed
time, Mike says. “There was a time when I carried all the songwriting on my
shoulders, but then the ego gets in the way of what it should be. These days, I
don’t have to write everything. I just open the door and these songs show up...
songs I need to hear in my struggle, songs I know people need to hear in
theirs.”
Whether rearranging songs of centuries past or
infusing new lyrical life to half-songs, it becomes clear that Mike’s vocal
gift is simply the surface of a very deep well. Full-tilt originals include
“Real Fine Day,” a poetic account of the birth of Christian Blue Sky Farris
that features some killer Kenny Vaughn guitar hooks—“easily one of the top
three days of my life, that day,” Mike says, and “Power of Love,” an
unforgettable, high-energy soul groove and already an audience favorite.
Shine For All the
People bears
witness to the determination of putting one foot in front of the other and to
the power of music to get you there. “I’ve discovered that falling is a divine
thing,” Mike adds. “It’s part and parcel of being human. The important thing is to keep the faith
and keep moving on and on. Daring to be courageous enough to share our deepest
burdens with each other is the greatest gift we can give."