Tuesday, January 30, 2007

Happy 2007!

The Tar Heels hoopsters are doing fairly well these days, both in the Dean E. Smith Center and in Carmichael Auditorium. It's shaping up to be a fun spring!

Here's an article someone recently wrote about me:


Mike Ferry: Music Man

1/12/2007
Ideas fly at Mike Ferry from all angles. They enter his head when he’s driving, when he’s fishing in the pond behind his house, making lesson plans, watching television, teaching, or even standing in line at Starbucks.
“The best ideas often come when you least expect them,” he says. “I can’t stop them sometimes. Occasionally, they’re so good that I frantically find a pen and paper before I lose them. There’re times when it’s overwhelming, but I’d rather be drowned by ideas than be in a desert.”
Ah, the life of a songwriter.
For most of his waking hours, you’ll find Ferry at his day job as a Middle School history teacher, class advisor, and coach of Cub soccer and basketball at Collegiate. While his attention is always focused on the task at hand, though, the musician in him is never far from the surface.

As a 4-year-old, he began classical violin lessons after he saw a picture of young musicians in his hometown Greensboro News & Record and expressed an interest. He started piano instruction when he was 10 and developed a passion so strong that for several years he dreamed of making music his life’s work.
As high school seniors in 1995, he and five friends – a drummer, two guitarists, a bass player, and a lead vocalist – created Weekend Excursion, a pop rock band.
They soon headed off to college – Ferry to UNC-Chapel Hill and the others to Appalachian State – but they met whenever their schedules allowed and gigs within reasonable driving distance presented themselves. Their senior year, armed with an impressive repertoire of original work and covers, they began touring heavily throughout North Carolina. After graduation, they hit the road full-time.
As their popularity increased, especially among the college-aged crowd, they often drew as many as 1,000 fans in some venues around the state. They were even commissioned to provide background music for Dawson’s Creek (on the WB Network), The Real World (MTV), and, most recently, Scrubs (NBC).
“Based on our popularity, we though it would be our career,” he said, “but outside North Carolina we were anonymous.” In 2001, Ferry left Weekend Excursion to get married and enter the real world. Two years later, facing the harsh realities of earning a living through music, the group disbanded, The old friends keep in touch, however, and even gather occasionally as they did December 22 in Raleigh to do reunion shows.
Now, Ferry’s days are no less full than they were a few years back when he dreamed of rock stardom. He’s at Collegiate, it seems, from dawn ‘til dusk, and he juggles family life – he and his wife Jenny Nuckols Ferry '96, a Collegiate Middle School Latin teacher, have two sons, Joseph (4) and Jack (1½) – with graduate work in the interdisciplinary studies program at Virginia Commonwealth University. Several times a month, he plays in various Richmond locales with The Atkinsons, an alternative country group.
About a year ago, he began a record label – Emerald Heel Music – and late last summer released an album entitled A Feather for which he did all the writing, performing (keyboard and violin), and vocals. He calls his style “geek rock for people who laugh” and describes it as a blend of The Beatles, Randy Newman, The Cars, and a group called They Might Be Giants. Check it out on www.mikeferrymusic.com. Navigate the website, listen to his offerings, and even type in your thoughts.
With his myriad responsibilities, Ferry finds little time during the school year to create as he’d like, so he fields his ideas, collects his thoughts, and saves them for a rare quiet moment. “I’m constantly bombarded by the rough draft of songs,” he says. “Hours, days, weeks, months, or even years later when I take these disjointed ideas and make them into coherent compositions, it’s really exhilarating.” — Weldon Bradshaw


See you later,

Mike