Mic Harrison & the High Score
Knoxville, TN      Rock / Country / Americana
    • Songs
    • Satan Lives In Arkansas
    • Sawdust
    • Callie
    • Mighty Good Wine
    • The Only Road
    • Long Time
    • Something To Let You Down
    • Journey's End
    • Back To Knoxville
    • Mandie McManus
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Status Productive band meeting last night. Excited about working on the next album.

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Artist Info

Members: Mic Harrison (guitar, vocals), Robbie Trosper (guitar, vocals), Brad Henderson (drums, vocals), Vance Hillard (bass, vocals)
You can also find us at: Myspace_16x16 Facebook_16x16 Artist website_16x16 Bebo_16x16
Label: Real Much Records
Manager: Jason Knight

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Bio

Born & raised in Bradford, TN Mic Harrison moved to Knoxville in 1995 to join The V-Roys. After 3 albums & several world tours the band broke up. Afterwards Harrison polished up & released recordings he made in 1993 for his solo album Don't Bail. He then formed The Faults who released their self-titled debut in 2001. That band was short-lived & after they split Harrison joined Superdrag. When they went on hiatus in 2003 he returned to his solo career releasing his second solo album, Pallbearer's Shoes. His third album, Push Me On Home, credited to Mic Harrison & the High Score, consisting of guitarist Robbie Trosper, drummer Brad Henderson & bassist Vance Hilliard, appeared in 2007 followed by On The Right Side Of The Grass in 2008.

About

It's a Wednesday night at Toot's a smoky bar in one of the most working-class areas of Knoxville. Mic Harrison and members of The High Score are pumping money into the jukebox. The Music that pours out afterwards consists of Conway Twitty, CCR, Jerry Lee Lewis and Roger Miller. If these guys could drink this music they would, but tonight beer will have to suffice.

 

After, Mic scrawls down the titles of the group's new album and High Score bassist Vance Hillard looks it over and comments "This ain't white collar music."

 

Definitely not. But it is music that anyone who's ever held down a job and relied on music for spiritual release can relate to. Harrison's new album "On The Right Side of The Grass" is about the kind of characters who know that any day that you can look forward to a soft bed rather than a dirt nap is a blessing. When Harrison sings about having nothing but "a pocket full of sawdust" the former sawmill employee knows exactly what he's singing about. The subject of "He Gets High" is that guy everyone has worked with at least once: the man who "never missed a day of work" and never spent a day completely sober either -- "he gets high, but he gets by."

 

Were the payoffs of pure fun not so rewarding, Mic Harrison and The High Score might not be one of the hardest working Americana acts on the road.

 

For every winter spent thawing the van windshield with a handheld hair dryer just one or two electrons away from blowing the van's fuses, for every plywood stage that collapsed during a show, for every wrong turn or lost piece of equipment, there is a show where both the band and audience feel that musical glow and for a couple of hours everything is right with the world.

 

Harrison grew up in a small West Tennessee town called Bradford and played in a high school band with buddies Carl Bell and Jeff Abercrombie (future members of the band Fuel) and Jeff Bills (who went on to co-found the V-Roys). When the V-Roys needed a replacement for departing member John Paul Keith, Harrison was the first person to get a call. With both Harrison and Scott Miller contributing songs and lead vocals, the band became a favorite of singer-songwriter Steve Earle who made the group his first signing to his E-Squared Records. With the group Harrison recored two acclaimed studio albums and one live disc. After the break-up of the V-Roys in 1999 Harrison recorded one record with the Faults and then joined power-pop greats Superdrag.

 

When Superdrag split up in 2003, Harrison concentrated on his solo work. His 1999 album, "Don't Bail," had been made as a side project, but for 2004's "Pallbearer's Shoes" Harrison was able to focus all his attention on his own music. And, by the time "Push Me On Home" arrived in 2007, Harrison had permenantly combined forces with the High Score (Robbie Trosper, Brad Henderson and Vance Hillard) - a band on their own and perfect partners in crime if ever there were.

 

Good times, hard times, Bonnaroo and Mucklewain, honky tonks, spilt beer, dead deer and misadventures at a certain place called Claremont in Atlanta (don't ask) all followed. Sometimes it's a wonder that Mic Harrison and the High Score have managed to stay on the right side of the grass at all.

 

Listen to this music and you'll be glad they did.

 

Wayne Bledsoe Host of WDVX-FM's "All Over the Road"
Knoxville News Sentinel music critic


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