Merle Travis

Merle Travis

Merle Travis and his Gibson Super 400 at the Country Music Hall of Fame
Background information
Birth name Merle Robert Travis
Born (1917-11-29)November 29, 1917
Rosewood, Kentucky US
Died October 20, 1983(1983-10-20) (aged 65)
Tahlequah, Oklahoma US
Genres Country, Western swing, blues, folk, gospel, Americana
Occupation(s) Musician, songwriter
Instruments guitar
Years active 1936–83
Labels King, Capitol, CMH

Merle Robert Travis (November 29, 1917 – October 20, 1983) was an American country and western singer, songwriter, and guitarist born in Rosewood, Kentucky. His song's lyrics often discussed both the lives and the economic exploitation of American coal miners. Among his many well-known songs are "Sixteen Tons," "Re-Enlistment Blues," "I am a Pilgrim,"[1] and "Dark as a Dungeon." However, it is his unique guitar style, still called Travis Picking by guitarists, as well as his interpretations of the rich musical traditions of his native Muhlenberg County, Kentucky, for which he is best known today. "Travis Picking" is a syncopated style of guitar fingerpicking rooted in ragtime music in which alternating chords and bass notes are plucked by the thumb while melodies are simultaneously plucked by the index finger. He was inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1970 and elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1977.

Biography

Early years

Merle Travis was born and raised in Muhlenberg County, Kentucky, a place which would inspire many of Travis's original songs. (This is 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.

Merle's guitar playing style was developed out of a native tradition of fingerpicking in Western Kentucky. Among its early practitioners was the black country blues guitarist Arnold Shultz.[2] Shultz taught his style to several local musicians, including Kennedy Jones, who passed it on to other guitarists, notably Mose Rager, a part-time barber and coal miner, and Ike Everly, the father of The Everly Brothers. Their thumb and index fingerpicking method created a solo style that blended lead lines picked by the finger and rhythmic bass patterns picked or strummed by the thumbpick. This technique captivated many guitarists in the region and provided the main inspiration to young Travis. Travis acknowledged his debt to both Rager and Everly,[3] and appears with Rager on the DVD Legends of Country Guitar (Vestapol, 2002).

At the age of 18, Travis performed "Tiger Rag" on a local radio amateur show in Evansville, Indiana, leading to offers of work with local bands. In 1937 Travis was hired by fiddler Clayton McMichen as guitarist in his Georgia Wildcats. He later joined the Drifting Pioneers, a Chicago-area gospel quartet[4] that moved to WLW radio in Cincinnati, the major country music station north of Nashville. Travis's style amazed everyone at WLW and he became a popular member of their barn dance radio show the "Boone County Jamboree" when it began in 1938. He performed on various weekday programs, often working with other WLW acts including Louis Marshall "Grandpa" Jones, the Delmore Brothers,(In Alton Delmores Book "Truth is Stranger Than Publicity" on pages 274–275 Alton describes how he taught Merle Travis how to read and write music)[5] Hank Penny and Joe Maphis, all of whom became lifelong friends.[6]

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, Travis and Jones used the pseudonym The Sheppard Brothers. Their recording of "You'll Be Lonesome Too" was the first to be released by King Records, subsequently known 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.

With World War II and the threat of being drafted, Travis enlisted in the US Marine Corps. His stint as a Marine was very brief, and he returned to Cincinnati.[7] When the Drifting Pioneers left radio station WLW, leaving a half-hour hole in the schedule that needed filling, Merle, Grandpa Jones and the Delmore Brothers formed a gospel group called The Brown's Ferry Four. Performing a repertoire of traditional white and black gospel songs, with Merle singing bass, they became one of the most popular country gospel groups of the time, recording nearly four dozen sides for the King label between 1946 and 1952. The Brown's Ferry Four has been called "possibly the best white gospel group ever."[8]

During this period, Travis appeared in several soundies,[9] an early form of music video intended for visual jukeboxes where customers could view as well as hear the popular performers of the day. His first soundie was "Night Train To Memphis" with the band Jimmy Wakely and his Oklahoma Cowboys and Girls, including Johnny Bond and Wesley Tuttle along with Colleen Summers (who later married Les Paul and became Mary Ford). His performance of "Why'd I Fall For Abner" with Carolina Cotton was chosen for inclusion in the 2007 PBS documentary Soundies.[10] Several years later he recorded a set of Snader Telescriptions, short music videos intended for local television stations needing "filler" programming. His performances included playful duets with his then-wife Judy Hayden as well as several songs from his 1947 album Folk Songs from the Hills (see below).

Career peak

Travis performed in stage shows and landed bit parts and singing roles in several B Westerns. He recorded for small labels there until 1946 when he was signed to Hollywood-based Capitol Records. Early hits like "Cincinnati Lou", "No Vacancy", "Divorce Me C.O.D., "Sweet Temptation", "So Round, So Firm, So Fully Packed", and "Three Times Seven", all his own compositions, gave him national prominence, although they did not all showcase the guitar work that Travis was renowned for amongst his peers. His design for a solid body electric guitar, built for him by Paul Bigsby with a single row of tuners, is thought to have inspired longtime Travis pal Leo Fender's design of the famous Broadcaster in 1950. The Travis-Bigsby guitar now resides in the Music Hall of Fame Museum.

In 1946, asked to record an album of folk songs, Travis combined traditional songs with several original compositions recalling his family's days working in the mines. The result was released as the 4-disk 78 rpm box set Folk Songs of the Hills. This album, featuring Travis accompanied only on his guitar, contains his two most enduring songs, both centered on the lives of coal miners: "Sixteen Tons" and "Dark as a Dungeon".

"Sixteen Tons" (whose authorship has also been claimed by George S. Davis) became a No. 1 Billboard country hit for Tennessee Ernie Ford in 1955[3] and has been recorded many times over the years. Travis and Molly Bee appeared together as guests on November 24, 1960, on NBC's The Ford Show, Starring Tennessee Ernie Ford.[11] The darkly philosophical "Dark As A Dungeon", although never a hit single, became a folk standard during the 1960s folk revival, and has been covered by many artists including Johnny Cash in his best-selling concert album At Folsom Prison, 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. In spite of its initial lack of commercial success, Folk Songs of the Hills, with added tracks, has remained in print virtually ever since.

Travis was a popular radio performer throughout the 1940s and 1950s, and appeared on many country music television shows, co-hosting a show "Merle Travis and Company" with his wife Judy Hayden around 1953. He was a regular member of the Hollywood Barn dance broadcast over radio station KNX, Hollywood, and of the Town Hall Party, which was broadcast first as a radio show on KXLA out of Pasadena, California and later as a TV series in 1953–1961. However, his personal life became increasingly troubled. A heavy drinker and at times desperately insecure despite his multitude of talents (including prose writing, taxidermy, cartooning and watch repair), he was involved in various violent incidents in California, and he married several times in the course of his life. He suffered from serious stage fright, though amazed fellow performers added that once onstage, he was an effective and even charismatic performer. In spite of his problems he was respected and admired by his friends and fellow musicians. Longtime Travis fan Doc Watson named his son Merle Watson, and Travis admirer Chet Atkins named his daughter Merle Atkins, in Travis's honor.

Travis' string of chart-topping honky-tonk hits in the 1940s did not continue into the 1950s, despite the reverence of friends like Grandpa Jones and Hank Thompson, with whom he toured and recorded as lead guitarist (Thompson, who could pick Travis-style, even had Gibson design him a Super 400 hollow body electric guitar identical to the one Travis began using in 1952). Travis continued recording for Capitol in the 1950s, broadening his repertoire to include new guitar instrumentals, blues and boogie numbers. His uptempo single "Merle's Boogie Woogie" showed him working with multi-part disc recording at the same time as Les Paul.

He found greater exposure after an appearance in the successful 1953 movie From Here to Eternity singing "Reenlistment Blues", and following the success of his friend Tennessee Ernie Ford's million-selling rendition of "Sixteen Tons" in 1955. His reputation as a folk-inspired singer-composer and guitarist grew after the appearance of the album The Merle Travis Guitar in 1956, the reissue of Folk Songs of the Hills with four additional tracks under the title Back Home in 1957, and Walkin' the Strings in 1960, the latter two of which won 5-star ratings from Rolling Stone Magazine. His career acquired a second wind during the American folk music revival in the late 1950s and early 1960s, leading to appearances at clubs, folk festivals and at Carnegie Hall as a guest of Lester Flatt and Earl Scruggs in 1962. In the mid-1960s he moved to Nashville and joined the Grand Ole Opry. During this time he became a close friend and occasional hunting partner of Johnny Cash.

Guitar style

Merle Travis is now acknowledged as one of the most influential American guitarists of the 20th century. His unique guitar style inspired many guitarists who followed, most notably Chet Atkins, who first heard Travis's radio broadcasts on Cincinnati's WLW Boone County Jamboree in 1939 while living with his father in rural Georgia. Among the many other guitarists influenced by Travis are Scotty Moore, Earl Hooker and Marcel Dadi. Today, his son Thom Bresh (1948–) continues playing in Travis's style on a custom-made Langejans Dualette.

Although his early tutors were among the first to use the thumbpick in guitar playing, freeing the fingers to pick melody, Travis's style, according to Chet Atkins, went on in musical directions "never dreamt about" by his predecessors.[12] His trademark mature style incorporated elements from ragtime, blues, boogie, jazz and Western swing, and was marked by rich chord progressions, harmonics, slides and bends, and rapid changes of key. He could shift quickly from finger-picking to flatpicking in the midst of a number by gripping his thumbpick like a flat pick. In his hands, the guitar resembled a full band. As his son Thom Bresh puts it, on first hearing his father as a child "I thought it was just the coolest sound, because it sounded like a whole bunch of instruments coming from one guitar. In it, I heard rhythm parts, I heard melodies, I heard chords and all this wrapped up in one."[13] Equally at home on acoustic and electric guitar, Travis was one of the first to exploit the full range of techniques and sonorities available on the electric guitar.

Though Chet Atkins was the most prominent guitarist to be inspired by Merle Travis, the two players' styles were significantly different. As Atkins explained, "While I play alternate bass strings which sounds more like a stride piano style, Merle played two bass strings simultaneously on the one and three beats, producing a more exciting solo rhythm, in my opinion. It was somewhat reminiscent of the great old black players."[12] The resemblance was no coincidence; Travis himself acknowledged the influence of black guitarists such as Blind Blake, the foremost ragtime and blues guitarist of the late 1920s and early 1930s.[14][15]

Travis's style is explained and exemplified by Marcel Dadi on the DVD The Guitar of Merle Travis, which includes live video performances by Travis of classics such as "John Henry" and "Nine Pound Hammer" as well as transcriptions of Travis solos in tablature.[16]

Late career

After a career dip during which he struggled to overcome alcohol and drug abuse, Travis put his career back on track in the 1970s. He appeared frequently on such country music TV shows as The Porter Wagoner Show, The Johnny Cash Show, Austin City Limits, Grand Old Country, and Nashville Swing; and his featured performances on the 1972 Nitty Gritty Dirt Band album Will the Circle Be Unbroken introduced him to a new generation of roots music enthusiasts. His 1974 album of duets with Chet Atkins, The Atkins - Travis Traveling Show, won a Grammy award in the category "Best Country Instrumental," and a later album Travis Pickin' received another nomination. In 1976, he contributed to the musical score of the Academy Award-winning documentary Harlan County, USA. Toward the end of the 1970s he signed a new contract with the Los-Angeles-based country music label CMH, which launched one of the most prolific recording periods in his career. The many titles that followed included new guitar solo albums, duets with Joe Maphis, a blues album, and a double LP tribute to the legendary country fiddler Clayton McMichen, with whom he had played in the 1930s.

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.[17]

Legacy

Although many of his original LP albums are still unissued on CD, Travis' posthumous discography continues to grow, due in large part to the efforts of independent labels. A live concert album Merle Travis in Boston 1959 released by Rounder Records in 1993 documents Travis' singing and guitar work still at its peak. A major retrospective of Travis' work and career (Guitar Rags and a Too Fast Past, five CDs with an 80-page booklet authored by Rich Kienzle, who interviewed many of Travis's contemporaries) was produced by Bear Family Records in 1994, and includes much previously unreleased material. The Country Routes label has issued several transcriptions of his radio broadcasts of the 1940s and 1950s. Several recent DVDs published by Vestapol and Bear Family have collected many of his music videos and television appearances. He was an honoree of the two-hour television special An Evening of Country Greats: A Hall of Fame Celebration in 1996, and two classic Travis performances were included in the four-part PBS television documentary American Roots Music in 2001, available in CD and DVD formats.

Discography

Albums

Year Album US Country Label
1947 Folk Songs of the Hills Capitol
1956 The Merle Travis Guitar (Instrumental Album)
1957 Back Home (LP reissue of Folk Songs of the Hills plus some songs not released before)
1960 Walkin' the Strings (Acoustic instrumentals and songs recorded in the 1940s and 50s)
1962 Travis (Compilation of songs recorded in the 1940s and 50s)
1963 Songs of the Coal Mines
1964 Merle Travis and Joe Maphis
1967 The Best of Merle Travis
Our Man from Kentucky Hilltop
1968 Strictly Guitar (Instrumental Album) Capitol
1969 Great Songs of the Delmore Brothers (with Johnny Bond)
1974 Merle's Boogie Woogie + 3 (with Ray Campi) Rollin' Rock
The Atkins - Travis Traveling Show (with Chet Atkins) 30 RCA Victor
1976 Guitar Player Shasta
1979 Country Guitar Giants (with Joe Maphis) CMH
The Merle Travis Story: 24 Greatest Hits
1980 Light Singin' and Heavy Pickin
Guitar Standards
1981 Travis Pickin' (Instrumental Album)
Rough, Rowdy and Blue
1982 Country Guitar Thunder (1977–1981) (with Joe Maphis)
The Clayton McMichen Story (with Mac Wiseman)
Farm and Home Hour (with Grandpa Jones) (includes the 1981 re-recording of the instrumental "Rose Time")

Posthumous albums

Year Album Label
1991 Merle Travis Unreleased Radio Transcriptions 1944–1949 Country Routes
1994 Guitar Rags and a Too Fast Past (5 CD-Set) Bear Family
1995 Country Hoedown Shows & Films Country Routes
Unissued Radio Shows (1944–1948)
1998 Turn Your Radio On (1944–1965)
2002 The Very Best of Merle Travis Varese Sarabande
2003 Boogie Woogie Cowboy 1944–1956 Country Routes
In Boston 1959 Rounder

Selected compilations and reissues

Year Album Label
1990 The Best of Rhino
1993 Folk Songs of the Hills: Back Home/Songs of the Coalminers Bear Family
1995 Guitar Retrospective (instrumental compilation album) CMH
2000 The Best of Merle Travis: Sweet Temptation 1946–1953 Razor & Tie
2002 Sixteen Tons ASV Living Era
2003 Hot Pickin Proper Records
2005 I Am a Pilgrim Country Stars
2008 Merle Travis: The Definitive Collection Delta Leisure Group
Legend of Merle Travis Country Stars

Notes on the recordings

Singles

Year Single US Country
1946 "Cincinnati Lou" 2
"No Vacancy" 3
"Divorce Me C.O.D." 1
1947 "Missouri" 5
"So Round, So Firm, So Fully Packed" 1
"Steel Guitar Rag" 4
"Three Times Seven" 4
"Fat Gal" 4
1948 "Merle's Boogie Woogie" 7
"Crazy Boogie" 11
1949 "What a Shame" 13
1955 "Wildwood Flower" (w/ Hank Thompson) 5
1966 "John Henry, Jr." 44

Music DVDs

Music films

1. Soundies Distributing Corporation (1946)

2. Snader Transcriptions (1951)

Film appearances as musical performer

Other film appearances

Original film music

References

  1. "I Am A Pilgrim ( Merle Travis ) ‒ Guitar- and Ukulele chords". GuitarParty.com. Retrieved 2016-07-07.
  2. Lightfoot, William E. 1990. "A regional musical style: The legacy of Arnold Shultz," in Sense of place: American regional cultures, edited by Barbara Allen and Thomas J. Schlereth, 120–137. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky; Kienzle, Rich. "The evolution of country fingerpicking"
  3. 1 2 Merle Travis interviewed on the Pop Chronicles (1969)
  4. The Drifting Pioneers
  5. Truth is Stranger Than Publicity 1995 ed.
  6. Rich Kienzle, The Merle Travis Story This link is dead. Archived September 26, 2007, at the Wayback Machine.
  7. An interview with Merle Travis Yesteryear in Nashville, retrieved July 2010 Check date values in: |access-date= (help)
  8. by William E. Lightfoot, 2003. The Three Doc(k)s: White Blues in Appalachia, Black Music Research Journal, Vol. 23, No. 1/2, pp. 167–193; see also "Brown's Ferry Four" by Bruce Eder, Allmusic
  9. http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0871419/
  10. Liberation sets 'Soundies' free
  11. "The Ford Show. Season Five. 1960-'61". ernieford.com. Retrieved February 11, 2015.
  12. 1 2 Chet Atkins, liner notes to 1996 reissue of the album Walkin' the Strings
  13. Gold 2006.
  14. Ferris, William R., Michael K. Honey and Pete Seeger,"Pete Seeger, San Francisco, 1989", Southern Cultures Volume 13.3, Fall 2007, pp. 5–38
  15. Gérard Herzhaft et al., 1997. Encyclopedia of the Blues, University of Arkansas Press, p. 14
  16. Available from Stefan Grossman's Guitar Workshop GW 918, 1993
  17. Points of Interest – Central City, KY

Bibliography

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