Our tenth tour of Switzerland was the greatest yet! We had standing-room-only crowds at almost every show, and sold a record number of the new CD, What A Scene!. 11 of the 13 gigs were return engagements. That's a wonderful thing, but it means that we do have to learn a new turn at least every few years. This time we added five new original songs, Markus added a cool new organ to the mix, and Speedy started zyedcoing it up on the washboard! We also did a recording session and booked three festival dates for the summer.
The Charlie Morris Band started 2007 with their eighth tour of Switzerland, a 15-date outing dubbed the Swiss Milkmaid Tour (ask Speedy about the origin of the name). We did 15 dates, including several old favorites and two new clubs, the Bierhaus in Sempach and Harry's New York Bar in Montreux. As always, we had lots of laughs and ate and drank lots of good stuff. We also shot some video, which we'll probably get around to releasing in a few years.
In July, we dropped in at the Montreux Jazz Festival for a seven-night stand. We held court at Harry's New York Bar in the Raffles Montreux Palace Hotel. This ritzy little spot is right across from the festival's main stages, in the hotel where most of the performers stay. Joining us on this gig was the fabulous singer Tiza B, who peeled the paint with her renditions of some of our favorite R&B and Soul classics.
Speaking of R&B and Soul classics, who should stop in at Harry's but Steve Cropper and Duck Dunn, the godlike figures who played on and co-wrote many of those same classics These guys turned out to be very friendly and ready to have some fun! We drank some wine and jammed away for most of the night. Various other distinguished guests showed up to keep things interesting, including the excellent sax player Aaron McDonald, and Claude Nobs, the legendary director of the festival.
Oh, and Charlie also did a couple dozen gigs in Florida (Orlando, Cocoa Beach, Ft Myers) and one in Tennessee (Brackins Blues Club in Maryville). He also spent a lot of time at Panda Studio, working on 3 or 4 new CDs and indulging in madcap antics and zany hi-jinks with George Harris.
Charlie started the year off with a 12-date tour of Switzerland, called (for obscure Charlesque reasons) the Big Foot Tour. Keyboardist Markus Baumer joined the Swiss band, and did a fine job.
In April, Charlie popped over to England for an appearance on the main stage of the Burnley Blues Festival.
Charlie released a new CD, Live at the Gator n Chips, which was recorded on the 2005 tour of the UK. Charlie did two CD-release parties, one at Chuck's local, the Ka-Tiki on Sunset Beach, and one at the fine Blues club the Smokin' Dog (alas, now defunct), as well as several radio interviews to promote the new platter.
In Summer 2006, Charlie made his second appearance at Brackins Blues Club in Maryville, Tennessee. He also did a passel of Florida gigs - for a while the gig hound was doing seven or more gigs per week - Bow wow!
In September and October of 2006, Charlie did a 14-date UK and Switzerland tour. It was a return to the scene of the crime, as the new live CD was recorded in the UK on last year's Fall tour. This time the gator travelled with us in the form of a guitar strap, which was much less dangerous for all concerned (although a couple of people did get bit).
The first leg of the tour was in England, where we played three pubs and a festival. At the Banbury Festival, the band played a set on the main stage, and Chuck did a solo set on the acoustic stage.
Next we crossed the creek to Switzerland to play several club dates, a private party that paid tribute to our mentor Rock Bottom, and a live radio broadcast on the Radio Paradiso show, where we played Mr Miracle and a new song, Can't Do Nothin, and did a short interview en Francais. The tour ended up with a 20th anniversary party for La Spirale, the top Jazz club in French Switzerland.
In November, Chuck and the band played at the Power to the People concert at Skipper's Smokehouse, which featured 30 bands! We played a new song, I Don't Know My Neighbors Anymore. An acoustic version of this song was released on the new CD, Power to the People, which features 15 songs of protest and political punditry by various artists. A full band version of the tune will be on Charlie's next album.
The year began with a lengthy winter tour of Switzerland and Germany, including the Mettman Blues Festival in northern Germany. With typical infantile humor, the boys dubbed this the That's What She Said Tour.
The boys did a long and grueling tour of England and Scotland, which they dubbed the Gator n Chips Tour, because an alligator from Florida, which had imbibed a little too much tequila at one of Charlie's gigs, somehow managed to stow away on the plane, and followed them all through the UK. The boys finally managed to trap the rambunctious reptile (or soused saurian), battered him and fried him, and served their British friends a transatlantic treat! This was a marathon tour of 22 gigs, including the Great British R&B Festival in Colne and our second appearance at the Orkney Blues Festival.
In 2005, Charlie also did a couple of dates in Knoxville, Tennessee, as well as a full schedule of Florida gigs, including road trips to the International House of Blues in Orlando and Lou's Blues on the East Coast.
This year's winter tour was called the Pack n Bitch Tour, for reasons which will be familiar to any touring musician, and included 19 dates in Switzerland and Germany.
In September, we made our first tour of the UK (the Cheap Scotch Tour), wending our way through England and Scotland all the way up to the Orkney Islands Blues Festival.
Since 1998, Chuck and the boys have done a yearly Crescent City Crawl to New Orleans, including various gigs in the Panhandle, Alabama, Mississippi and Georgia.
In 2003, Charlie released Still got 'em, his second CD on BluesPages. These nine original tunes, recorded at Panda Studio in Clearwater, run the gamut from a solo acoustic number to several full-production cuts with a horn section and all the trimmings. Heavy-hitting guests such as Sandy Atkinson, Sugar and Spice and TC Carr round out the fun. The best compliment to this one came from Tampa Bay Musician, who said, "While many people go to endless lengths to get that 'classic' sound, Charlie shows us how on this CD."
Charlie has done a band tour of Switzerland every winter since 2001, following in the footsteps of the great Rock Bottom, and using some of the same local musicians. Is it cold over there? You bet your bippy! But since when have musicians been known for having a sense of timing?
In 1998, Charlie released his first Blues CD, called Bluer Than Thou. The ten self-penned selections (plus one by pianist Gary Doyle) include such future classics as Mr. Miracle,, Can't Stop Cleanin' and No Mo' Money.
In 1992, Chuck went to Europe to seek fame and fortune (or at least, slightly more appreciative audiences and slightly better money), and became a lifelong Europhile. He met his wife, Denise Bonjour (aka The Tigress) in Davos (she wasn't his wife at the time, but later became so). Since then, Charlie and his band have played all over Switzerland, as well as in the UK, Holland, Germany and Norway.
Charlie has played at the Hotel Eiger in Grindelwald every year since 1994 (both solo and band gigs). He's appeared at various luxury hotels, including the Ermitage-Golf in Gstaad, the Schweizerhof in St. Moritz, and another Schweizerhof in Zermatt. He's also done most of Switzerland's top Blues clubs, including the Mahogany Hall in Bern, INOX in Baden, and Le Chat Noir in Geneva.
Leaving the sea, our jolly tar returned to St. Pete and began to play around town as a solo and as a member of various bands. Over the years, he's done not only Florida's best blues clubs such as The Ringside, Skipper's Smokehouse, the Bamboo Room and the Bradfordville Blues Club, but also some of her famous luxury hotels, including the Don CeSar, Tradewinds, and Bellevue Mido, as well as the Ocean Reef Club in Key Largo. Not to be modest about it, Charlie has played every gig that matters in the St. Pete/Tampa area, and quite a few of the other kind as well.
During the 90s, Charlie spent a good bit of time teaching guitar at Seminole Music in St. Petersburg, and recorded a solo CD of original music.
Charlie spent a couple of years with a dance band called Cheers, traveling around Florida and throughout the Caribbean on various cruise ships. Charlie has also played several ships as a solo artist, and as a member of house showbands.
Chuck has paid his lounge-lizard dues in full, having accompanied several Elvi, several sets of Blues Brothers and other typical forms of lounge life. At one point, he even played in a place called the Starlight Lounge.
Charlie Morris attended Eckerd College in St. Petersburg, graduating in 1984 with a Bachelor's degree in Music. With fellow students Alan Craig, Devin Rice (future St. Pete Mountain Boys), Sue Finger and Dave Bawel (later Dave Fury), he formed a band called Lotus, which gigged steadily on the Florida circuit and released an album of original music in 1984.
Inspired by the Beatles, Charlie picked up the guitar around age 15. His greatest musical influence was his older brother, Bruce Morris, a guitarist and serious Blues fan. As Charlie has pointed out many times over the years (yeah, yeah), all modern popular music is descended from the Blues, so a good grounding in same is essential for any musician who wants to play with soul. Charlie considers himself very fortunate to have learned this from Bruce right at the start. Bruce also inspired Charlie's lifelong love of travel.
Charlie Morris was born in Miami in 1963, and grew up in Georgia and Tennessee. He's been writing songs, and playing various instruments, since he was 6 years old. As a kid, he played classical piano, inspired by the immortal Schroeder.
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