Mike Garrigan
Mike Garrigan is a singer-songwriter from Greensboro, North Carolina.
Biography
Garrigan grew up in Fayetteville, North Carolina[1] and attended the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, where he performed in local coffee houses as a vocalist and guitarist.[2] He is best known as the former frontman of the rock band Collapsis, which, in 2000, reached the #28 slot on the Billboard Modern Rock charts with the hit song "Automatic". He was also the second and final lead guitarist for the North Carolina-based band Athenaeum, replacing Grey Brewster for their second album and continuing until the band disbanded in 2004. With former Athenaeum members, Garrigan formed a new band called the "Mike Garrigan Four" (formally known as mg4), which released an EP in 2004. Since then he worked as a solo artist, while continuing to play occasional shows with Mark Kano, lead singer of Athenaeum.[3] In 2006, he released Live at the Evening Muse, a CD/DVD of a solo acoustic show he recorded at a venue in Charlotte, North Carolina in June 2005.[4] Several of his solo albums have been partially supported through Kickstarter, including the 2011 release The Return of Spring.[5]
Discography
- As leader
- Building a Hole (1994)
- The Lessons of Autumn (1996)
- The Promise of Summer (2002)
- Live at the Evening Muse (2006) (CD/DVD - live)
- The Gossman Passion (2006) (a contemporary Christian rock opera)
- Voyage of the Malamander (2010) (Kickstarter project)
- The Return of Spring (2011)(Kickstarter project)
- Pillar of the Sun (2012) (Kickstarter project)
- The Echoes of Winter (2015)
- With Collapsis
- The Chartreuse EP (1998)
- Dirty Wake (Universal Records, 1999)
- With Athenaeum
- Athenaeum (Atlantic Records, 2001)
- With mg4
- Gravity Affects Me (2004)
References
- Future looks bright for band teetering on verge of big time. Fayetteville Observer, October 31, 1999.
- Mike Garrigan interview, Internet Archive
- Mark Kano and Mike Garrigan to play The Evening Muse. Creative Loafing, July 17, 2008.
- Review of Live at the Evening Muse. Ink 19, March 13, 2006.
- Review of The Return of Spring. Alternative Addiction.