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Craig
Morgan
Biography
Very
few people have pushed life to the limits that Craig Morgan
has. An EMT (emergency medical technician) at 18, a paratrooper
at 20, and a member of the nation's most elite armed forces
a few years later, he is someone who has always packed a great
deal of life into every moment-and learned to appreciate each
one as well. "When you've been where I've been and done
what I've done," he says with a laugh, "ordinary life
becomes paradise. And that's where I feel like I'm living."
Both
the rigors of his past and his appreciation for home and family
contribute strongly to each groove of Craig's debut CD, Craig
Morgan. They also give his writing and his singing an uncommon
depth.
Produced
by Buddy Cannon and Norro Wilson, Craig Morgan explores life
and love in situations both highly personal and universal, and
each bearing a fresh perspective. In "Something To Write
Home About," the singer's infatuation is expressed not
to the woman but to his parents, anchoring love's earliest moments.
In "302 South Maple Avenue," house, family, and life
all merge to create a legacy every listener can relate to. "It's
Me," brings an inspired zaniness to the manifestations
of new love. Throughout, Craig sings with passion and believability
born of experience.
"Every song on this album is true-to-life," he says,
"and I'm convinced that everyone from the bank president
to the department store clerk will be able to relate."
Craig
has an incredible life to look back on. He was raised in Kingston
Springs, Tennessee, where he supplemented high school football
and soccer with a deep and abiding love for the outdoors.
"My friends and I would load up our three-wheelers and
leave home on Friday evening to go hunting or trapping,"
he says. "We'd come back Sunday night. In between, we'd
just pitch a tent when we were tired, sack out, then get up
and do it again."
Except
for a few talent shows in high school and some youthful dabbling
in song writing, music was something Craig listened to, not
something he performed. His mother did everything from cleaning
houses to running a nursery. Craig's father was also a musician.
As
with many small-town kids with big-city dreams, Craig wanted
to leave his rural roots behind him as soon as possible after
high school.
"I
had spent my whole life in the country," he says, "and
I wanted to do something else." That first something else
was emergency medical technician training in Nashville. His
first job was on a rural ambulance where he'd grown up, and
from the moment he was called to his first traffic accident,
the experience taught him a great deal about life, and about
himself.
They
were lessons that would serve him well as he followed what he
saw as a bigger calling. "I'd seen the advertisements for
the Army," he says, "and I saw it as an opportunity
for adventure beyond my country home." The motivation,
he says, wasn't that different than what had driven him on weekends
as a teenager.
"I wanted to shoot guns, run through the woods and wear
camouflage clothes. Friday I decided I was going to do it, and
on Monday I was being processed. They asked if I wanted to be
airborne, and I said, 'Absolutely.' I thought that meant I was
going to be flying planes."
Turns
out he was jumping out of them, which suited him just fine.
"It's pretty intense," he says with a grin. "It's
as big an adrenaline rush as you can get in that little amount
of time."
There
was one drawback to this new world he found so challenging and
exciting, but even if it had a silver lining. "I missed
home very, very much," he says. "That was the toughest
thing about the early days. Still, it wasn't until I joined
the military that I realized just who I was and what I was about,
and how much I liked being what I was, which was country."
He
would carry that pride in his heritage throughout an impressive
and sometimes harrowing military tour. In Korea, he trained
at Rock Ranger School, a nine-and-a-half-week program where
the attrition rate was so high Americans are no longer allowed
to take it.
"You
run virtually non-stop with a 35-pound rucksack," he says,"
eating very little. I've been to the point where I've been delirious,
where I'd pass out, wake- up and couldn't move. You just find
the place in your mind and your heart to get away from the pain."
Back in the States, he became air assault qualified, and became
a rappel master and a jump master. He was part of Operation
Just Cause, which saw the U.S. in Panama during the ousting
of Manuel Noriega.
After
Panama, Craig helped train elite combat units and monitor the
utilization of Air Force equipment in Army operations. He also
continued to push himself and others.
"I've
made jumps with 65-pound rucksacks and walked for 50 miles to
an objective," he says with a smile and shake of his head.
"I once took my troops on a forced march with equipment
around the entire Fort Bragg perimeter. It took us two-and-a-half
days.
In
both training and in combat missions, he learned what he was
made of. It was in the midst of his military career, though,
that he discovered the musician inside himself. Early on, he
was taking part in a banquet honoring the military's very first
airborne unit. As he learned of the group's history, he decided
to write a song about them. His superiors liked it so much that
he was made part of the program. From then on he would have
a reputation as a singer.
In
Korea, he won a number of singing and song writing contests,
and opened a Korean show for Sawyer Brown. His interest in writing
and singing continued in the States, and his father, who recognized
his talent, took him into the studio to record demos of some
his own songs.
Upon
completion of his enlistment, he decided to go for it musically.
He was hired to sing demos for other writers and publishing
companies in Nashville. Craig currently writes for Sony Tree.
That's how he supported his family along with a whole host of
other jobs; including a sheriffs deputy, a plainclothes department
store security officer, a construction worker, and a WalMart
employee. He also spent eight months on stage at the Country
Tonight Theater in the tourist Mecca of Pigeon Forge, Tennessee,
honing his energetic stage show.
"When
I'm on stage, so is everyone in the audience, because I work
to make them feel like they're right there with me. I'm very
emotionally interactive. I have a very active show, and I work
my band to death," he adds with the glee of someone who
enjoys pushing those around him as hard as he pushes himself.
His stamina was apparent during a recent radio tour, a marathon
of travel and radio station visits that has been known to wear
out even the most physically fit artists.
"I'm
used to sleep deprivation," he says with a laugh. "If
I get at least four hours a night, I'm usually good to go. Everyone
was telling me how tough it was going to be, and I said, it
just can't compare to what I've been through and some of the
things I've done. I'm so grateful to do what I do for a living
and on Saturday when we finish up I'm just as excited as I was
on Monday when we started."
His
sense of adventure and his love of adrenaline have not wavered
either. He took part recently in the Mark Collie Race against
Diabetes in Nashville, starting dead last and winning the race
against some of the music industry's best drivers. He called
it an even bigger adrenaline rush than skydiving, and quipped,
"It was an opportunity to drive fast and not have to worry
about a ticket."
Craig
is nothing if not a dedicated family man. He was first introduced
to his wife by his mother at a time when he was stationed at
Fort Campbell, Kentucky. "I fell in love with Karen the
instant I met her and we've been in love ever since." Meeting
Karen and falling in love with her was Craig's inspiration in
writing his debut single, "Something To Write Home About."
Craig's wife and children share his love of the outdoors. When
there is a break in Craig's crowded schedule they might slip
off together to a favored destination like the Smoky Mountains
or Florida's St. George's Island.
He
treats everything as a potential source of joy. "I don't
take anything-not one instant of the day-for granted,"
he says. "I celebrate every moment, and when something
really cool happens, I'm as thrilled as I can be."
As
a family man, he makes time for fishing with his sons, spending
time with his daughters and will always be available for those
less fortunate. Craig puts all the lessons he's learned along
the way to work in his life.
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