Merle Travis

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Merle Travis
Birth name Merle Robert Travis
Born November 29, 1917(1917-11-29)
Rosewood, Kentucky USA
Died October 20, 1983 (aged 65)
Tahlequah, Oklahoma USA
Genre(s) Country, Western swing
Occupation(s) Musician, Songwriter
Instrument(s) Guitar
Years active 1936 – 1983
Label(s) King, Capitol

Merle Robert Travis (November 29, 1917October 20, 1983) was an American country and western singer, songwriter, and musician born in Rosewood, Kentucky. His lyrics often discussed the exploitation of coal miners. Some of the songs he wrote or performed include: "Sixteen Tons"; "Dark as a Dungeon"; "So Round, So Firm, So Fully Packed"; and "Smoke, Smoke, Smoke that Cigarette". However, it is his masterful guitar playing that he is best known for today. "Travis picking", a style of guitar picking, is named after him. He was inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1970 and elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1977.

Contents

[edit] Early Years

Travis was raised in Muhlenberg County, Kentucky, the same coal mining county mentioned in the John Prine song "Paradise." He became interested in the guitar early in life and originally played one made by his brother. Travis reportedly saved his money to buy a guitar that he had window-shopped for some time.

There were several local guitar players that drew his attention. Mose Rager was his main inspiration. Rager played a thumb and index finger picking style method which essentially created a solo style that blended lead lines and rhythmic bass plucked by the thumb (equipped with a thumbpick), similar to the style Travis developed. This guitar style captivated many guitarists in the region; most notable was Kennedy Jones, its first great local proponent. A part-time barber and coal miner, Mose Rager was also a disciple of Jones, as was Ike Everly, the father of The Everly Brothers. Young Travis learned from both.

In 1936, he performed "Tiger Rag" on a local radio amateur show while visiting his older brother in Evansville, Indiana, leading to offers of work with local bands. He then spent a brief period with the better-known Clayton McMichen's Georgia Wildcats, before connecting with the Drifting Pioneers who performed on WLW in Cincinnati.

Travis's style amazed everyone at WLW. He became a popular member of their barn dance show the "Boone County Jamboree," and worked on various weekday programs, often working with other WLW acts including Grandpa Jones, the Delmore Brothers, Hank Penny and Joe Maphis, all of whom became lifelong friends. In 1943, he and Grandpa Jones recorded for Cincinnati used-record dealer Syd Nathan, who had founded a new label, King Records. Because WLW barred their staff musicians from recording, they used the pseudonym "The Sheppard Brothers." It was the first recording ever released by King, known also for its country recordings by the Delmore Brothers and Stanley Brothers as well as R&B legends Hank Ballard, Wynonie Harris and most notably James Brown.

During this period, Travis appeared in soundies, an early form of music video. He first appeared on "Night Train to Memphis" with the band Jimmie Wakely and his Oklahoma Cowboys and Girls in 1944. Johnny Bond and Wesley Tuttle are also in the band, along with Colleen Summers (Who later married Les Paul and became Mary Ford). His other Soundies include "Texas Home," "Silver Spurs," "Old Chisholm Trail," and "Catalogue Cowboy." He and Carolina Cotton performed "Why'd I Fall for Abner," which was chosen for inclusion in the PBS documentary Soundies, broadcast in 2007.[1]

[edit] Career peak

In 1944, Travis left Cincinnati for Hollywood where his style became even more renowned as he worked on radio, recording sessions and on live stage shows. He recorded for small labels there and in 1946 was signed to Capitol Records. Hits like "Divorce Me C.O.D.," Sweet Temptation," "Steel Guitar Rag" and "Fat Gal" gave him national prominence, although they rarely showcased the guitar work that Travis was renowned for amongst his peers in the music industry. His single "Merle's Boogie Woogie" showed him working with multi-part disc recording at the same time as Les Paul. His design for a solidbody electric guitar, built for him by Paul Bigsby with a single row of tuners, inspired longtime Travis pal Leo Fender's early guitar design. That guitar now resides in the Country Music Hall of Fame. 1946 also included an appearance in the western "Roaring Rangers" along with Merle Travis' Bronco Busters.

In 1946, asked to record an album of folk songs or pseudo-folk tunes, Travis combined traditional numbers with originals he wrote recalling his family's days working in the mines. He wrote his two most enduring songs at this time, both centered on the lives of coal miners: "Sixteen Tons" and "Dark as a Dungeon". "Sixteen Tons" became a #1 Billboard Country hit for Tennessee Ernie Ford in 1955. It has been recorded many times over the years. The darkly philosophical "Dark as a Dungeon", although never a hit single, became a folk standard during the 1960s folk revival, and had successful covers by Dolly Parton on her 9 to 5 and Odd Jobs album and by Travis himself along with Doc Watson and the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band in the landmark 1972 album "Will the Circle Be Unbroken".

Travis's personal life was troubled. A heavy drinker and at times desperately insecure despite his multitude of talents (prose writing, taxidermy, cartooning and watch repair), he was involved in various violent incidents in California and married several times. He also suffered from serious stage fright, though amazed fellow performers added that once onstage, he was an effective and even charismatic performer.

His unique picking style spawned followers, the most notable of whom was Chet Atkins, who first heard Travis on WLW in 1939 while living with his father in rural Georgia. Travis continued recording for Capitol into the 1950s, finding greater exposure after an appearance in the 1953 movie From Here to Eternity playing "Reenlistment Blues", and when his friend Tennessee Ernie Ford recorded his million-selling rendition of "Sixteen Tons" in 1955. From 1944 through 1982 Travis appeared in 16 films.[1] Still plagued by substance abuse issues, he never sustained his popularity, despite the reverence of friends like Johnny Cash, Grandpa Jones and Hank Thompson, with whom he toured in the 1950s. Thompson, who could pick Travis-style, even had Gibson design him a Super 400 hollowbody electric guitar identical to the one Travis began using in 1952; longtime Travis fan Doc Watson named his son, Merle Watson, in Merle Travis's honor. Glen Campbell's country music loving parents named him Glen Travis Campbell in honor of Merle Travis.

[edit] Late career and death

Travis enjoyed a brief revival in the late 1970s with some recordings for CMH Records which showcased the guitar work he was renowned for, including Western Swing, re-recordings of his hits, and acoustic playing. He and his songs were also featured on the 1972 Nitty Gritty Dirt Band album, Will the Circle Be Unbroken. In 1983, Travis died of a heart attack at his Tahlequah, Oklahoma home. His body was cremated and his ashes scattered around a memorial erected to him near Drakesboro, Kentucky.[2] Today, his son Thom Bresh continues playing in Travis's style on a custom-made Langejans Dualette.

[edit] References

  • Kienzle, Rich (1998). "Merle Travis". In The Encyclopedia of Country Music. Paul Kingsbury, Editor. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 543-4.
Languages