Press
Here is the article published in the Door County Pulse July 28, 2008:

Check out the newpaper article that has been written about Eric in Door County Living in 2007:
www.doorcountyliving.com/ericlewis
What began as a gig playing in the orchestra pit at American Folklore Theatre in 1999 turned into repeat visits to the county in various other contexts, at different venues and with many locally and nationally-known musicians. Included in the mix are talents such as AFT co-founder Doc Heide, other AFT favorites like Chris Irwin and Claudia Russell, and Tennessee musicians like Tommy Burroughs, Jimmy Davis and Andy Ratliff. In creating such a pattern, Eric has become an ambassador of music between two states, and the name “Eric Lewis and Friends” is now a staple in the Door County arts scene. As a young boy in Tennessee, Eric was used to hearing his mother play the guitar and sing Bill Monroe and Hank Williams tunes. Eric’s grandfather, too, loved this music, and he played the banjo. Then during one trip to the nursing home where his grandfather eventually lived, an orderly walked in while Eric’s grandfather and mother were playing together. The orderly asked if he could play a song, and Eric had never heard anything like the rock and roll that he pounded out right there on the guitar. Eric was 12 years old when that orderly became his first guitar teacher and sparked his interest in rock. After learning guitar, Eric went on to play several other instruments, including trumpet so well that he earned a marching band scholarship for college. However, Eric’s passion always stayed with the strings. When he was in his early 20s, he was in a traveling rock band. He played electric guitar and had hair down to his waist. Remembering those days makes Eric laugh as he offers sage advice, “If you’re ever going to do that stuff, do it when you’re young.” He loved the wild shows, but the rock and metal music, which Eric describes as “one-dimensional,” soon got old. Another style of music called instead, in the form of Gram Parsons’ twangy folk. After hearing a Gram Parsons recording, Eric returned to the music of his roots. He began playing acoustic instruments in bands that focused on bluegrass, folk and country. Now, able to move fluidly among guitar, pedal steel, dobro, fiddle and mandolin, Eric has found his niche in combining musical styles. “In order to be considered a serious musician in Memphis, you have to play in at least five bands.” Eric’s ability to navigate among genres and instruments makes it easier for him to keep up with such expectations. He calls Memphis “one of the hardest places in the world to play.” The general public is so used to hearing great music all the time that any performer can become the wallpaper. But Eric says, “These are just the facts of playing in a city full of great musicians.” This same environment is what drives Eric to work as hard as he can at his art; as he says, “I get to play with a lot of talented people.” But even though Eric loves to live and work in Memphis, he looks forward to a different kind of response from the public when he visits Door County. Eric continues to release new recordings; he and Tommy Burroughs will celebrate their new CD, “Walk the Road with Me,” in Door County this summer. And Eric continues to bring new talent and new sounds to the county for such events as the annual Camp David concert, which he has been planning for months. (For more information on Eric’s shows and recordings, visit his website: www.fuzzyfingers.com.) With all that he brings with each visit, Eric is a true musical ambassador between Memphis and Door County. As he says, in thinking about this unique relationship, “I have friends all over the country, but Door County is another home."
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