He is also the writer of the graphic novel The Brides of Mister X and Other Stories[4] which
Rolling Stone called "one of the 50 best non-superhero graphic novels".[5]
In 2021, New Haven published Morgan's autobiography Rock Critic Confidential as a hardcover coffee table book containing over fifty years of Morgan's writing and photography.[6]
In 2022, New Haven published Alice Cooper Confidential the second volume of Morgan's autobiography.[7]
Writing
Creem
Morgan became the de facto Canadian editor of rock music magazine Creem after he was recruited by its editor,
Lester Bangs, in the spring of 1974.[8][9]
Morgan's first published record review, of
David Bowie's 1965
Pye Records single "
Can't Help Thinking About Me", was published in the August 1975 issue.[10] Morgan's writing then went on to appear in every issue of Creem until the magazine's demise in November 1988.[11]
In 2003, at the request of photographer Robert Matheu, Morgan renewed his relationship with the magazine by writing reviews and interviews[12][13] for Matheu's new Creem website every month for five years until its demise in 2008.
Other writing
1960s
Morgan's first published writing appeared in the November 1965 edition of the Brown Junior Public School magazine Brown News and Views. Morgan had two poems printed: "The Sun" and "ELEVEN DAYS."[14]
1970s
After being discovered by Bangs but prior to his first publication in Creem, Morgan graduated from
Northern Secondary high school where he served in his final year as President of the Student Council.[15] Morgan then spent the balance of 1974 honing his craft as a rock critic and rock photographer for
York University's weekly newspaper Excalibur where he reviewed and photographed concerts by
Elton John[16] and
George Harrison.[17]
During this time, Morgan was the host of The Air Pirates Show on York's
campus radio station
CHRY-FM.[19]
From 1975 to 1978, Morgan was the editor of a free monthly Canadian rock magazine initially titled Cheap Thrills then StageLife and finally Roxy. All three incarnations were published by Concert Productions International, which was a major promoter of rock concerts and tours in North America run by
Bill Ballard and future
Rolling Stones concert promoter
Michael Cohl. In addition to editing the magazine, Morgan also wrote for it extensively both under his own name[20] and that of the more vociferous
alter ego he created in April 1975, "Machine Rock".[21][22][23]
Six months later, Tee Vee Records in Canada released a compilation album titled Machine Rock: 23 Original Hits.[24] Ballard and Cohl briefly considered suing Tee Vee for damages until they found out that Morgan had not registered his alias as a trademark.[25]
During this period, Morgan was also the staff
copywriter for
CBS Records Canada, for whom he wrote back cover
liner notes for an album of
baroque music by
classical guitaristLiona Boyd. After reading them, however, Boyd demanded that Morgan's notes be deleted before the album was released, exclaiming: "You can't print this! He makes me sound like a rock star!"[26]
In 1977, Morgan's poetry was published in
Rolling Stone magazine (Our Lady of Perpetual Motion)[27] and Bakka magazine (Neuromantics I-V).[28]
During the 1980s, Morgan was a contributing writer for
Wayne Green's magazine Digital Audio and Compact Disc Review. In 1986, several of his reviews were reprinted in Digital Audio's Guide To Compact Discs which was published by
Bantam Books.[30]
During the early 1990s, Morgan was the host of Cyberphonics on
community radio station
CFCR-FM in
Saskatoon, which featured a five-minute spoken word segment, The Nuclear Hoedown, where he voiced the Jazz Geek and The Kapusta KidSaskatchewan.[35]
In 1992, Morgan was asked by
Rob Bowman to name the
Lou Reed anthology that he was assembling with Reed for
RCA Records. Morgan named the three disc box set Between Thought and Expression, after his favorite
Velvet Underground song "Some Kinda Love". In return, Bowman thanked Morgan in his booklet liner notes to the anthology.[36]
In 1997, Morgan's Creem interview with
William S. Burroughs was translated into Spanish and reprinted in Barcelona's AVUI newspaper.[37]
2000s
Between 2004 and 2009, Morgan wrote an award-winning[38] weekly newspaper column for Detroit's
Metro Times titled Jeffrey Morgan's Media Blackout.[39] In 2010, the column relocated first to
rocksbackpages.com and then to Morgan's own website.[40]
In 2008, Morgan wrote the introduction "What Is and What Will Always Be" for the hardcover book Sonic Boom: The Impact of Led Zeppelin.[42]
In 2009, Morgan told the story of how Bangs discovered him in Curse You, Lester Bangs!!! which appears in the hardcover book CREEM: America's Only Rock 'n' Roll Magazine published by
HarperCollins.[8]
Also in 2009, Morgan wrote a feature review of the
Queen album Hot Space for the hardcover
Voyageur Press book Queen: The Ultimate Illustrated History of the Crown Kings of Rock.[43]
In 2012, a previously unpublished
contemporary concert review of
The Rolling Stones performing at
Maple Leaf Gardens in
Toronto on
July 15, 1972, which was written by Morgan "the very next day in the heat of the moment",[45] was published in
Portuguese in the limited edition hardcover book Rolling Stones em Portugal.[46] Morgan's review was illustrated with a previously unpublished photograph of the Stones playing
Cobo Hall in
Detroit, taken by Robert Matheu the night before on
July 14, 1972.[47]
In 2013, Morgan wrote a feature review of the first
Rush album
Rush for Voyageur's hardcover book Rush: The Illustrated History.[48]
In 2014, Morgan wrote the liner notes for the album Wicked by the 24th Street Wailers.[49]
Also in 2014, Morgan was interviewed by
Punk Globe Magazine about his writing and photography [50]
In 2015, Morgan was interviewed by North Toronto Post magazine about his student days at Northern Secondary including his tenure as Student Council President, his rock photography, and his career as a rock critic and biographer.[51]
In 2017, Morgan was interviewed by Hard Rock Daddy's Inferno of Rock Report about his career as a rock critic and photographer.[52]
2020s
In 2020, Morgan wrote the introduction "Call Me Crazy" for the hardcover book Headquartered: A Timeline of The Monkees Solo Years.[53]
Also in 2020, Morgan signed with New Haven Publishing Ltd. in the United Kingdom to write his memoirs.[54]
In 2021, New Haven published Morgan's autobiography Rock Critic Confidential as a hardcover coffee table book containing over fifty years of Morgan's writing and photography.[6]
In 2022, New Haven published the second volume of Morgan's autobiography Alice Cooper Confidential.[7]
Alice Cooper
In 1992, Morgan began writing the authorized biography of
Alice Cooper, which would take him seven years to complete.[55] His finished biography, titled Alcohol and Razor Blades, Poison and Needles: The Glorious Wretched Excess of Alice Cooper, All-American, appears in the box set The Life and Crimes of Alice Cooper which was published by
Warner Bros. on April 20, 1999.[56]
In 2003, the International Journal of Academic Psychiatry cited Morgan’s authorized biography in their paper "From Alice Cooper to Marilyn Manson: The Significance of Adolescent Antiheroes".[57]
In 2011, the
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum further cited Morgan’s authorized biography as "Recommended Reading" about Alice Cooper, alongside Alice’s own 1976 autobiography Me, Alice.[58]
In 2012, Morgan appeared with Cooper and record producer
Bob Ezrin on the
BBC World Service radio documentary The Bizarre and Influential World of Alice Cooper.[59]
In 2021, Cooper wrote the afterword to Morgan's autobiography Rock Critic Confidential which was published by New Haven on June 28, 2021.[60]
In 2022, Alice Cooper Group bass guitarist
Dennis Dunaway wrote the afterword to the second volume of Morgan's autobiography Alice Cooper Confidential which was published by New Haven on September 15, 2022.[61]
The Stooges
In 2008, Morgan and collaborator[62][63] Robert Matheu began co-writing the authorized biography of
The Stooges. Their finished biography, titled The Stooges, Yes appears in The Stooges: The Authorized and Illustrated Story which was edited by Morgan and published in hardcover by
Abrams on October 1, 2009.[3]
After reading the biography,
Iggy Pop wrote Morgan: "Jeffrey, you're a smartass--watch it!"[64]
Between 1975 and 1978, Concert Productions International published many of Morgan's photographs in their rock magazines, often without credit, including portraits of Bowie, Reed, and
Freddie Mercury.[70]
In May 1978, Creem published Morgan's portrait of
Amanda Lear.[71] In 2013, Morgan exhibited the photo on his website.[72]
Also in 1978, Morgan received a Photography
Grant from the
Ontario Arts Council for a portfolio of work done at York while studying with photographer Shin Sugino.[73]
In 1988, author Nancy Baker commissioned Morgan to photograph her for the June 1988 issue of Rod Serling's The
Twilight Zone Magazine.[74] In 2012, Morgan's portrait was used as the backdrop for Baker's appearance at the
World Fantasy Convention.[75]
In 2020, Reelin' In The Years Productions became the authorized representatives of Morgan's photographic archive to license it worldwide.[76]
In 2021, Morgan's photograph of Lou Reed and Alice Cooper on stage at Massey Hall was printed in That Night At Massey Hall.[77]
Also in 2021, New Haven published Morgan's autobiography Rock Critic Confidential as a hardcover coffee table book containing over fifty years of Morgan's writing and photography.[6]
It was during this second letter writing phase that Morgan’s first known piece of
satirical writing was published. In the letters section of Captain America #122,[84] he had two consecutive letters printed: the first under his own name and home address and, directly beneath it, a second separately-sent letter from "Toronto, Ontario" which he'd signed with the name of deceased villain
Baron Zemo. In it, "Zemo" implored Marvel writer/editor
Stan Lee against resurrecting Cap’s former
World War II teen partner
Bucky Barnes in favor of himself: "I’m begging you, Stan--keep the kid dead and let me return!" Lee, who had met Morgan eighteen months earlier in Toronto,[85] wrote the following editorial reply: "Sooo! The infamous Baron Zemo is alive and well in Toronto, ehhh? (TORONTO?!?)".
Over the next few years, Morgan’s style of comic book letter writing would become so distinctive that the iconoclastic American humor magazine
National Lampoon parodied his letter writing style in their "Is Nothing Sacred?" issue (January 1972).[86] In the Marvel pastiche Son-O’-God Comics which was written by Canadian associate editor
Michel Choquette, the first letter in the fake letters section at the end of the story was attributed to having been written by "Stan Spooner, Toronto, Canada". This parody letter accurately spoofed Morgan’s writing style in tone and spirit, right down to its similar use of a spiritual closing salutation (Morgan:
Pacem in Terris; Spooner: Yours in Christ).[87]
In 1973, Morgan began writing letters to Creem, which led to his hiring, a year later, by Lester Bangs.[8][88]
In November 1988, Morgan was hired to write volume two of
Dean Motter's
Vortex Comics series Mister X,[90] the first volume of which ran 12 issues cover-dated June 1984 to August 1988. When Motter left the first, color series to work on other projects, he asked Morgan to assume the writing duties for a second, black-and-white volume, which ran 12 issues cover-dated April 1989 to March 1990.[91]
In 2008, again at Motter's behest, Morgan wrote 'Motivation By Obsession: The Architect + The Archetype' as the introduction[92] to Volume One of
Dark Horse Comics' hardcover omnibus Mister X: The Archives.[93]
In 2011, Dark Horse reprinted Morgan's Mister X stories in a 320-page deluxe hardcover edition titled The Brides of Mister X and Other Stories.[4]
In 2013, Schreiber & Leser reprinted Morgan's Mister X introduction as 'Motivation Durch Obsession: Der Architekt + Der Archetyp' in their German language edition of Mister X: The Archives[94]
In 2018, Cosmo Comics reprinted Morgan's Mister X introduction as 'Motivato Dall'Ossessioneion: L'Architetto + L'Archetipo' in their Italian language edition of Mister X: The Archives[95]
In 2019,
Rolling Stone magazine said "Mister X is one of the greats: the speed-addicted, sleepless, sunglasses wearing architect of the insanity-inducing Radiant City. A high-contrast blend of Art Deco design, noir accents and flying cars, Mister X remains a high point of retro-futurist comic coolness and is one of the 50 best non-superhero graphic novels" and provided a link to Morgan's graphic novel.[96]
Music
In 1975, Morgan met conceptual illustrator and graphic designer
Dean Motter, with whom he would collaborate on a number of projects. Between 1977 and 1980, they recorded an "ambient electronic avant-garde progressive art rock album"[4] called Thrilling Women under the collective band name of the Air Pirates, in tribute to the original
Air Pirates. The album featured vocalist Paul Robinson of
The Diodes, guitarist Toby Swann of
Battered Wives, and saxophonist Andy Haas of
Martha And The Muffins.[97]
In 2002, a song from the album, "A Darkened Stretch", was released by Bongo Beat Records on the compilation Driving In The Rain: 3AM (Songs To Get Lost With).[98]
In 2011, Bongo Beat released the complete album Thrilling Women: The Lost Air Pirates Sessions - Toronto: 1977 - 1980 as a
music download.[99]
In 2022, Bongo Beat will release the album as a physical
compact disc with a 24-page booklet.