Atlanta, GA - The acoustic guitar. The colorful strap adorned with vintage scout patches. The soulful voice with a delicate mood. The scarred left cheek. Songs about human relationships, both good and bad. Optimistic, up-beat, and catchy. Deep, brooding, and spiritual. This is Chip Houston.

    For 28 years, Chip Houston has called this southern city his home. And indeed it is. For Atlanta is where he was born, raised and realized his passion for crafting songs. It was Eddie's Attic in Decatur where Chip cut his teeth on the local scene, playing in the same room where his great-grandmother, Willi-Mae Widner worked as a seamstress, decades before Belk's became Eddie's.

    Atlanta has been good to Mr. Houston. He has appeared on Fox 5's Good Day Atlanta, WNNX 99X's The Morning X, performed at Six Flags Over Georgia, The Hard Rock Cafe, Smith's Olde Bar, Andrew's Upstairs and the Arena at Gwinnett Center. He has opened for Drivin' n' Cryin's Kevin Kinney, Sony's Ari Hest, Eric Saperston's The Journey Film, a George Foreman charity boxing match, as well as Boston's Brian Webb and Atlanta's Alan Yates.

    In 2001, Chip left a teaching career, bought a van for $10 from a neighbor and set out around the Southeast. He soon established fan bases performing in Athens, Winston-Salem, Auburn and Columbus. Folks around the southeast were discovering Chip's first album "Chasing the Dark" with great enthusiasm, while Chip was traveling and living out of his good friends' one bedroom, basement apartment.

    In April of 2005 Chip Houston teamed up with Grammy-winning producer Mitch Dane and guitar virtuoso Willi Boos to bring you the result of two years of hard work and song crafting. "Daybreak" was released as Chip's second studio album, with huge momentum and great recognition by radio stations and the live music venues through the southeast, Chip Houston has only scratched the surface of what is to come in 2006.