Career
He has put out three studio releases as well as a one live record as Mike Farris and the Roseland Rhythm Revue, as well as a charity European Parliament as Mike Farris and the Cumberland Saints. His music is diverse but tends to be rooted in early American gospel and blues. Farris"s parents divorced when he was eleven years old.
He began using drugs and alcohol from an early age, and almost died from an overdose before he was 21 years old.
He recovered and went on to form the group Screamin" Cheetah Wheelies in 1990. They released three major-label albums and had sustained success on the United States. rock charts in the 1990s.
After their breakup, Farris sang with SCW, Peaceful Knievel and for a time fronted Double Trouble, the backing band for Stevie Ray Vaughan. Farris became a practicing Christian and rejected drugs and alcohol, and released his first solo album, "Goodnight Sun", in 2002.
He released his second solo album in 2007, ""Salvation in Lights"", on INO/Columbia Records.
In 2008 Farris performed at SXSW and the Creation Festival. The live album “Sunday Night ” was recorded at the Station Inn in Nashville, Tennessee, on October 12, 2008, but was a digital only release. On April 14, 2009, Farris released SHOUT!, as Mike Farris & the Roseland Rhythm Revue, featuring the McCrary Sisters.
The album was recorded over four nights at his Station Inn residency.
In May 2010, after a disastrous flood in Nashville, Farris and a group of Nashville musicians recorded a charity European Parliament entitled The Night the Cumberland Came Alive.