Artist: Grace Morrison
Hometown: Wareham, Massachusetts
Latest Album: Maybe Modern
What’s your favorite memory from being on stage?
There are so many! I remember the very first time I was onstage with my guitar. I was 13, and had been playing for maybe six months. I had a seafoam green electric guitar (because that’s what Billie Joe from Green Day played) and I played āWho Will Save Your Soulā by Jewel. I recall the terror before I began, and then this āhard to put your finger onā zen that came over me as I got into the song and was blinded by the lights. That moment is what got me hooked. Shortly after I remember performing in a local coffeeshop and James Spader walked in (I only knew that he was famous because people told me) and threw $20 in the tip bucket. I still have it. Then there was my little stint singing backup for Eddie Money. He had a cup of water on stage during rehearsals, and my guitar pick flew from my fingers directly into his cup of water. I may have been a tiny bit nervous he’d notice and get mad at meā¦ he did not notice.
But most recently, I felt completely elevated at my album release show. Since 2020 Iāve played exclusively solo after years playing in bands. When we recorded my new record, the drummer John Chipman suggested we hold the album release show in Austin at the Saxon Pub. Iād been sick so I was pretty concerned about my voice before we started playing. But then I started strumming āBroken Things.ā And Rich Brotherton started playing guitar. And I swear, when the chorus hit and the full band came in it was like being high. I hadnāt had that feeling playing music in a LONG time. Every worry went away. All that existed was that moment in that song. It was like my favorite lyric from Walt Wilkinsā āTrains I Missedā — āthe moments I find myself right where Iām supposed to be.ā Performing for me is like a constant search for THAT feeling.
What other art forms — literature, film, dance, painting, etc. — inform your music?
READING!!!! I was having a conversation with my publicist Rachel about what weād do with a million dollars. She was thinking about adventures. I just said, āThere are SO MANY books I want to read.” It’s possible she thought I was kidding, or that that was a bit but itās the truth. There isnāt much I love more than reading. Iāve probably read every book on King Henry VIII because Iām a nerd (my motto is ārevel in your nerditude.ā Iāve got shirts that say it!). Reading not only gives me any adventure I could want, but it helps my brain quiet. Itās after reading that I write my best music whether it’s due to the quiet it gives my mind, or the inspiration of a feeling or story. And for me itās the best way to find words. I think words or phrases or ideas Iāve read get buried in my brain, and I view songwriting like being a coal miner. I go into my creative mind with my little hard hat and see what I can chisel out.
Which elements of nature do you spend the most time with and how do those impact your work?
Iām a cranberry grower and brown-thumbed gardener. Harvest, in late fall, is the most exhausting thing I can think of. I love those bone-tired days. We harvest as a family, and weāre all out on the bogs picking up bags and putting them down for hours. Thereās something about manual labor that can get you out of your own way. So often youāll go to write a song and because you expect perfection from yourself itās hard to get a word on the page — youāre judging things before they get started. The monotony of harvest doesnāt allow that critical part of your mind to exist. Itās too busy picking cranberries. Iāve written some good songs during those harvest days. I think Willie Nelson has a similar opinion on writing while you drive. My brown-thumbed gardening is similar. I say brown-thumbed because I cannot for the life of me get lupine to grow. Itās the flower I want so apparently the flower I can’t have. But I love getting my fingers in the dirt. Digging holes and planting bulbs. I always find myself singing while planting — āGarden Songā and āWaters of Marchā mostly. It bring me back to the simple joy of songs.
How often do you hide behind a character in a song or use āyouā when it’s actually āmeā?
I canāt think of a song Iāve written where Iām hiding behind a character. Music has always been the one realm in which Iām not afraid to be myself. I spent most of my life being timid, never ever telling people what I really thought or felt, with the exception of music. I think it saved me. We all need a place to say āno, that doesnāt work for meā or āyou really hurt me when you did xyzā or āyou are the sexiest thing Iāve ever seenā or āIām better without youā so thank God for song. I HAVE done the opposite. Since, as mentioned, I am a nerd — I worked at a Renaissance Faire. And I got into character. Like really into character. It was there that I started thinking about writing modern songs about ancient things. I wrote an album of songs about King Henry VIII and the women in his life. And I very definitely allowed myself to sing as the ghost of Anne Boleyn.
Since food and music go so well together, what is your dream pairing of a meal and a musician?
Easy. A charcuterie board and Lori McKenna. My friend started a new business in 2020 – āTaylor Made by Taylorā custom charcuterie boards. The excitement of her delivering a board was one of the things that got us through the pandemic. And something about eating charcuterie makes me feel classy. Much like listening to Lori McKenna. Iāve written with her, and sheās such a classy, down to earth, genius songwriter. I get lost in every one of her songs. Youād probably need a martini or glass of wine in this dream listening scenario Iām imagining. And her song āOld Men Young Womenā would have to be included. And this one time I wouldnāt put an ice cube in my wine. Because, you know, Iām trying to be classy.
Photo Credit: Cindy Ko