Steven J. Morse is a rock guitarist and guitar virtuoso, best known for his position as guitarist in the Dixie Dregs and Deep Purple. His career has encompassed rock, country, funk, jazz, classical, and fusions of these genres. In addition to a thriving solo career, he enjoyed a brief stint with Kansas and has been working with Deep Purple since 1994.
Morse was born July 28, 1954 in Hamilton, Ohio. His father was a minister and his mother a classically trained pianist; both psychologists. The family moved to Tennessee, then Ypsalanti, Michigan where Morse spent his childhood. Although familiar with piano and clarinet, he became interested in guitar and his real musical career began. He worked briefly with his brother Dave in a band called The Plague until the family moved to Augusta, Georgia. Enrolled in Richmond Academy, he met bassist Andy West and together they formed the nucleus of Dixie Grit, adding keyboardist Johnny Carr, guitarist and vocalist Frank Brittingham with Dave Morse drumming. However, this effort was shortlived, since covering Led Zeppelin, Cream and the like limited their ability to get higher-paying dance gigs. West and Morse continued to play as a duet billed as the Dixie Dregs until Morse's expulsion from school in the 10th grade for refusing to cut his hair enabled his enrollment at University of Miami's School of Music.
During the 1970s, The University played host to a number of future influential musicians, including Pat Metheny, Jaco Pastorius, Bruce Hornsby and others. Andy West soon enrolled and with Morse collaborated in a lab project entitled Rock Ensemble II, along with drummer Bart Yarnall, keyboardist Frank Josephs and violinist Allen Sloan. Rehearsing and performing Morse's compositions at school brought some attention to his credibility as a composer and player. The group compiled a recording used for promotional efforts in 1975. This recording was eventually released as The Great Spectacular in 1997.
Their first effort for Capricorn, (Free Fall), established Morse as an important newcomer to the fusion genre not only for his compositional skills but for his consummate musicianship. Considered a pivotal jazz fusion piece in a genre gone cold, his tunes are bright, complex and fresh. Critically acclaimed, the album showed little commercial promise and in 1978, What If was released. Widely considered The Dixie Dregs' finest work, Morse's playing had matured into something a bit more than what defined fusion at the time. Southern rock, classical, folk and country elements combined to form a cohesive and complex pastiche of passionate and highly listenable music. Though supported by a tour, record sales remained flat but gained Morse and the boys an invitation to perform at Montreux Jazz Festival July 23, 1978. The recorded performance was released the following year on Night of the Living Dregs. Capricorn went bankrupt in late 1979, and the Dixie Dregs were stranded without a label.
Enter Arista Records, who signed the band to record three albums in 1979. Production control was handed to Morse and Dregs of the Earth was released in May, 1980. All eight tracks were written by Morse and the album peaked at number 27 on Billboard's Jazz Album Chart. Arista became increasingly concerned about Dixie Dregs' album sales and pressured the band to change their name to simply The Dregs in an attempt to address the band's visibility in the public eye. Unsung Heroes brought eight additional Morse compositions forward in early 1981, but the name change did little to address Arista's worries. The Dregs were compelled to add lyrics to their next effort, appropriately titled Industry Standard (1982), an apparent reference to executive and management oversight of the creative process. Despite this, Morse's compositions on Industry Standard are often considered more akin to his evolving solo work than Dregs collaborations and the album stands out to critical and public praise. Industry Standard was voted Best Guitar LP by readers of Guitar Player magazine in their annual reader's poll that year. Additionally, Morse was voted Best Overall in the same poll, an honor that he would enjoy for five consecutive years (which ended his eligibility by retiring him into their "Gallery of Greats", a distinction shared only by Steve Howe of Yes.)
In 1986, Morse joined Kansas. While with the band, they released two albums, Power (1986) and In the Spirit of Things (1988). Morse left the band after touring behind the latter album. He again played with the band for part of their 1991 tour.
From late 1987 to early 1988, Steve worked as a commercial airline co-pilot [http://www.stevemorse.com/interviews/198803guitarplayer.html.
In addition to playing with Deep Purple, in 2003, together with Jimmy Barnes, Bob Daisley, Lee Kerslake and Don Airey, Steve formed Living Loud.
Guitarists | American rock guitarists | Rock guitarists | Deep Purple | American rock musicians | Rock musicians
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