James Travis Tritt
(born February 9, 1963 in Marietta, Georgia) is a Grammy award-winning American country music artist and occasional actor, more commonly known as Travis Tritt
.
Starting with the debut single release of "Country Club" in 1989, Travis Tritt has charted more than thirty singles on the U.S. Billboard charts, including five Number Ones. His first and third albums—1989's Country Club
and T-R-O-U-B-L-E
—have each achieved platinum certification by the RIAA, while his albums It's All About to Change
(1991), Greatest Hits: From the Beginning
(1995) have each achieved gold status. His most recent album, The Storm
, was released in 2007 on Category 5 Records.
He has also received two Grammy Awards in his musical career, both awards for Best Country Vocal Collaboration: in 1992 for "The Whiskey Ain't Workin'", a duet with Marty Stuart, and again in 1998 for "Same Old Train", a collaboration of more than ten country music artists. In addition, he has received three awards from the Country Music Association, and is a member of the Grand Ole Opry. Tritt was also honored with his inclusion in one of the "show bands", the "Louisiana Gator Boys", appearing in the movie Blues Brothers 2000
.
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Biography
Category:Articles needing subsections
{{#ifexist:Category:Wikipedia articles needing copy edit from September 2008
James Travis Tritt was born in
Marietta, Georgia to James and Gwen Tritt. At age 3, he received his first
guitar from his father.
Travis Tritt began writing music while he was attending Sprayberry High School; his first song composition entitled
"Spend A Little Time"
, was written about his girlfriend about the time she broke up with him. Throughout his childhood, Tritt was obsessed with music, frequently spending hours alone in his bedroom learning to play the guitar and practicing various styles of both traditional country and southern rock songs.
By the age of 22, Tritt had been twice divorced. Single again he committed himself entirely to developing a full time music career. His breakthrough came with the release of his first album,
Country Club
, from which five singles were released, as well as his first No. 1 hit with "Help Me Hold On"' His second album,
It's All About to Change
, produced three top-3 hits: "Anymore", "The Whiskey Ain't Workin'", and "Here's A Quarter (Call Someone Who Cares)". The song "Bible Belt" was used in the movie,
My Cousin Vinny
, and, for which, he composed alternate lyrics exclusively for the use of the film. Tritt also made an appearance in the 1997 film Fire Down Below, starring Steven Seagal and Kris Kristofferson.
Tritt released a trilogy of music videos describing the tale of two paralyzed war veterans: Mac Singleton and his friend Al. The first is "Anymore" followed by "Tell Me I was Dreaming" and finally "If I Lost You". Tritt played the role of Mac Singleton, a wheelchair bound veteran. In "Anymore" he is reluctant to continue his relationship with Annie when he returns to his home town crippled. Then in "Tell Me I was Dreaming" he tries to rescue Annie, now pregnant, from slipping off a boat, subsequently hitting her head on the side of the dock. She dies, but their baby, Annie, survives. The third video "If I lost You" shows what happens to Singleton and his daughter after the filming of his second video.
Tritt was accepted into membership of the
Grand Ole Opry in 1992, when he was only 29.
In 1998, Tritt was in the film
Blues Brothers 2000
performing in a band called the Gator Boys. He also performed a mini concert following
WCW Road Wild 1998, which emanated from the
Sturgis, South Dakota, biker rally. Tritt was also in the 2005 remake of
2001 Maniacs
as a gas clerk.
In 2002, Tritt was asked by
CMT to do an episode of
Crossroads
, a special program allowed artists to choose who they would like to perform music with for an evening, and Tritt chose to share this opportunity and experience with
Ray Charles. The night was particularly memorable for anyone familiar as Charles' had his own roots in country music. Tritt paid special tribute to Charles at the
Grand Ole Opry by performing his hit single, "What' I Say" on
June 3,
2006 on
GAC.
Under the news section of his website, Tritt revealed that he would co-produce his next album with
American Idol
judge
Randy Jackson. That album, titled "The Storm", was released in August 2007. Among one of the more distinctive parts on Tritt's new album is a cover version of the
Canadian rock band
Nickelback's song "Should've Listened", from their
The Long Road
album. In 1996 he starred in "Holiday for Love" with Tim Matheson and Melissa Gilbert, in which he played the sheriff of a small town and love interest of Gilbert's character.
Family
Tritt had two brief failed marriages by the time he was 22. He later married Theresa Nelson, on April 12, 1997. They now reside in
Hiram, Georgia, a town in which Tritt has a highway named for him. Together, they have three children.
2007
In March 2007, a concert promoter in the Pittsburgh area sued Tritt, claiming he had committed to play a show but then backed out and signed on to play a competing venue. Tritt's manager denied he had ever signed a contract with the promoter.
[1]
To promote his new record
The Storm
,
Category 5 Records introduced a MacBook: Travis Tritt edition. The computer came with a free copy of
The Storm.
This was not an Apple-produced MacBook available to the general public.
Tritt released his newest album,
The Storm
on
Category 5 Records on August 21, 2007. The first single from the disc was "You Never Take Me Dancing", written by Grammy Award-winning songwriter
Richard Marx, and originally released on Marx's 1997 album titled
Flesh and Bone
.
[2] In December 2007, Tritt filed a $10 million lawsuit against Category 5, because the label had failed to pay royalties on the album, and failed to give him creative control on
The Storm
.
[3]
Discography
Awards
Country Music Association
- Horizon Award – 1991
- Vocal Event of the Year for "This One's Gonna Hurt You (For A Long, Long Time)" (duet with Marty Stuart) – 1992
- Vocal Event of the Year for "I Don't Need Your Rockin' Chair" (song comprised George Jones and several other artists) – 1993
Grammy Awards
- Best Country Vocal Collaboration for "The Whiskey Ain't Workin'" (with Marty Stuart) – 1992
- Best Country Collaboration With Vocals for "Same Old Train" (with several other artists) – 1998