Anthony Scott Flippen
was born in Orlando, Florida to Lynda,
a school teacher. Little is known about his biological father. He was adopted
by Steven Stapp, a dentist who
married Scott's mother, and decided to take his stepfather's last name.
However, upon realizing that his initials would spell out the word "ass,"
he took his middle name as his first and took the name he is now known as, Scott Alan Stapp.
Stapp and guitarist Mark Tremonti had been classmates in
high school and friends at Florida State University. They formed a band in 1993
originally known as Naked Toddler, which
later became Creed. Creed became among
the leaders of the post-grunge movement of the late 1990s and early 2000s. The
band launched its career with three consecutive multi-platinum albums, one of
which has been certified diamond and has sold over 28 million records in the
United States and over 40 million albums worldwide. Creed was recognized as the
Rock Artist of the Year at the 1998 Billboard Music Awards. "With Arms
Wide Open" won a Grammy Award for Best Rock Song in 2001. Stapp's debut
solo album, 2005's The Great Divide, also
sold more than two million copies. Creed disbanded in 2004, citing tension
between Stapp and the other members, reunited in 2009, and seems to be on
hiatus now.
Stapp published a memoir, Sinner's Creed, in 2012. The book detailed many of his struggles,
including those with drugs, alcohol and suicidal depression. Bouncing back
sober and more spiritual than ever, Stapp released his second solo album, Proof of Life, in November 2013.
The present tour is billed as "Scott Stapp, the Voice
of Creed," so the foregone conclusion was that his new show would include
a hefty amount of Creed songs. At Irving
Plaza tonight, the theme seemed to be about waking up to survival. Stapp opened
with a solo song, the autobiographical "Slow Suicide", in which he
sang "I can't let this life pass me by, in a blink of an eye it ends."
He followed that with the Creed song, "What If," the solo song
"Justify" and the Creed song "My Own Prison." So it went
all night, with Stapp rhythmically alternating solo and Creed songs. Stapp's
vocals still bore an intense masculinity in line with the Doors' Jim Morrison and Pearl Jam's Eddie Vedder, but without the studio precision perfected on Creed
albums. This time around, his vocals were more fragile. The lyrics to the older
songs revisited Creed's trademark soul searching element and newer songs were often
more conclusive, proclaiming victory over life's hardships. In "Break Out,"
Stapp sang "I'm gonna break out, I'm gonna break free." Two of the four
encore songs, "Crash" and "Dying to Live," seemed to refer
to his new choice to live after a near suicide when he jumped off the 10th
floor balcony in a Miami hotel. The music did not break new ground however, in
that it was driven by Creed's classic hard-rocking power-balladry and
Christian-infused testosterone. This time around, however, Stapp was staffed by
a backup band, and the stage was all about him, not a band that created music
together. This was not necessarily good or bad, but with seven Creed songs in
the set, Stapp struggled to redefine his solo identity.
Visit Scott Stapp at www.scottstapp.com.

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