Song Playing: "Country Club" Recorded By Travis Tritt
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Travis Tritt was
born on February 9,1963 in Marietta,Georgia to James Tritt, a bus driver
and former farmer, and Gwen Tritt, bookkeeper and homemaker.
He fell in love with music as a child, teaching himself how to play guitar when
he was eight and beginning to write songs when he was 14. Travis was determined
to have a musical career, but his parents didn't encourage him to follow his
instincts. His mother didn't mind that he wanted to perform, but she wanted him
to sing gospel (his first musical performances were made in children's choir at
First Assembly Church of God); his father was afraid there was no money in
singing. When he was 18, he tried to settle down, work and have a family but he
was unsuccessful -- he was married and divorced twice before he was 27. He
continued to play music while working various jobs, including one at an
air-conditioning company. The company's vice-president was a guitarist who gave
up hopes of a musical career and he urged Tritt to follow his dreams. Travis
quit his job and began pursuing a career full-time.
In 1982, Tritt began his pursuit by recording a
demo for a promotion man, who happened to be an executive at Warner Brothers.
For the next several years, Travis recorded demos while he played the honky tonk
circuit. The singer was developing a distinctive sound, adding elements of
country-rock and Southern rock to his honky tonk.
Part way through in 1989, Warner Brothers' Nashville
division signed Tritt and his debut album, Country Club, appeared
in the stores in the spring of 1990. Their investment paid dividends immediately
as Tritt's first single,
Country
Club (Windows Media Player),
which still ranks among his top-selling singles, went Top 10 on the charts in
1989. The album Country Club came out in 1990, and songs like Put Some
Drive In Your Country earned Tritt a reputation as a country singer with one
foot in rock.
Despite his success, the Nashville music industry was
hesitant to embrace Tritt. His music and stage show owed too much to rock
& roll, and his image didn't conform with the behatted legions of new male
singers. Nevertheless, Travis had a breakthrough success with his second album,
1991's It's All About To Change. Prior to its release, he had hired
manager Ken Kragen, who also worked with Lionel Richie, Trisha Yearwood, Kenny
Rogers, and We Are the World. Kragen helped market Tritt in a way that appealed
to both country fans and a mass audience, sending It's All About To Change
into multi-platinum territory.
T-R-O-U-B-L-E, Tritt's
third album, was released in 1992. Although it didn't match the success
of It's all About to Change ,it had the number one single
Can I Trust You With My Heart
(Windows Media Player) and went Gold. Travis bounced
back to form in 1994 with Ten Feet Tall & Bulletproof, which went
Platinum, spawned the number one single Foolish Pride, and marked his
highest position, number 20, on the pop charts. His 1995 compilation Greatest
Hits -- From the Beginning went platinum within six months of its November
release.
As he was becoming one of country music's most
recognizable voices, Tritt was also becoming one of the genre's most
visible entertainers. He won the Country Music Association's Horizon Award in
1991 and won a Grammy in 1993 for his work with Marty Stuart. That partnership
led to several chart-topping hits, as well as the acclaimed "No Hats" tour in
1992.
A part in the 1993
made-for-TV movie Rio Diablo led to feature film work in The
Cowboy Way and Sgt. Bilko. Tritt also had a role in HBO's Tales
From The Crypt, performed in the Atlanta area for a Disney concert special
titled Coming Home, and provided half-time entertainment for a
half-billion people at 1993's Super Bowl. The Rhythm, Country & Blues
album, produced by Don Was, found Tritt singing with Patti LaBelle and he
reunited The Eagles on the video shoot for Take It Easy from the Common
Thread: The Songs Of The Eagles album. Tritt released a holiday album in
1992, A Travis Tritt Christmas: Loving Time Of The Year. His
autobiography, Ten Feet Tall And Bulletproof, was released in conjunction
with the album of the same name in 1994.
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