James Travis Tritt was born on February 9, 1963, in Marietta, Georgia, to James and Gwen Tritt. He first took interest in singing after his church's Sunday school choir performed "Everything Is Beautiful".[4] He received his first guitar at age 8 and taught himself how to play it; in the fourth grade, he performed "Annie's Song" and "King of the Road" for his class, and later got invited to play for other classrooms in his school.[5] At age 14, his parents bought him another guitar, and he learned more songs from his uncle, Sam Lockhart.[6] Later on, Tritt joined his church band, which occasionally performed at other churches nearby.[7]
Tritt began writing music while he was attending Sprayberry High School; his first song composition, entitled "Spend a Little Time", was written about a girlfriend whom he had broken up with.[8] He performed the song for his friends, one of whom complimented him on his songwriting skills.[9] He also founded a bluegrass group with some of his friends and won second place in a local tournament for playing "Mammas Don't Let Your Babies Grow Up to Be Cowboys".[10]
During his teenage years, Tritt worked at a furniture store, and later as a supermarket clerk. He lived with his mother after she and his father divorced; they remarried when he was 18.[11] He worked at an air conditioning company while playing in clubs, but gave up the air conditioning job at the suggestion of one of his bandmates.[12] Tritt's father thought that he would not find success as a musician, while his mother thought that he should perform Christian music instead of country.[1]
Through the assistance of Warner Bros. Records executive Danny Davenport, Tritt began recording demos. The two worked together for the next several years, eventually putting together a demo album called Proud of the Country.[1][13] Davenport sent the demo to Warner Bros. representatives in Los Angeles, who in turn sent the demo to their Nashville division, which signed Tritt in 1987.[14] Davenport also helped Tritt find a talent manager, Ken Kragen. At first, Kragen was not interested in taking an "entry-level act", but decided to sign on as Tritt's manager after Kragen's wife convinced him.[15]
Musical career
1989–1991: Country Club
Tritt's contract with Warner Bros. meant that he was signed to record six songs, and three of them would be released as singles. According to the contract, he would not be signed on for a full album unless one of the three singles became a hit.[14][16] His first single was "Country Club". Recorded in late 1988 and released on August 7, 1989,[17] the song spent 26 weeks on the Hot Country Singles & Tracks charts, peaking at number nine.[18] It was the title track to his 1990 debut album Country Club, produced by Gregg Brown. The month of its release, Tritt burst a blood vessel on his vocal cords, and had to take vocal rest for a month.[14] Second single "Help Me Hold On" became his first number one single in 1990.[18] The album's third and fifth singles, "I'm Gonna Be Somebody" and "Drift Off to Dream", respectively peaked at numbers two and three on the Hot Country Singles & Tracks charts, and number one on the Canadian RPM country charts;[19][20] "I'm Gonna Be Somebody" also went to number one on the U.S. country singles charts published by Radio & Records.[14] "Put Some Drive in Your Country", which was released fourth, peaked at 28 on Hot Country Songs.[18]Country Club was certified platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) in July 1991 for shipments of one million copies, and no medals since in 1996.[21] In 1990, he won the Top New Male Artist award from Billboard.[22] The Country Music Association (CMA) also nominated him for the Horizon Award (now known as the New Artist Award),[14] which is given to new artists who show have shown the most significant artistic and commercial development from a first or second album.[23]
In 1991, Tritt received a second Horizon Award nomination, which he won that year.[22] He also released his second album, It's All About to Change. The album went on to become his bestselling, with a triple-platinum certification from the RIAA for shipments of three million copies.[21] All four of its singles reached the top five on the country music charts. "Here's a Quarter (Call Someone Who Cares)" and the Marty Stuart duet "The Whiskey Ain't Workin'", respectively the first and third singles, both reached number two, with the number-one "Anymore" in between. "Nothing Short of Dying" was the fourth single, with a peak at number four on Billboard;[18] both it and "The Whiskey Ain't Working" went to Number One on Radio & Records.[14] "Bible Belt", another cut from the album (recorded in collaboration with Little Feat), appeared in the 1992 film My Cousin Vinny (the lyrics for the song, however, were changed for the version played in the movie to match the story line). Although not released as a single, it peaked at number 72 country based on unsolicited airplay and was the b-side to "Nothing Short of Dying".[18] "Bible Belt" was inspired by a youth pastor whom Tritt knew in his childhood.[26]
In June 1992, Tritt received media attention when he criticized Billy Ray Cyrus' "Achy Breaky Heart" at a Fan Fair interview, saying that he did not think that Cyrus' song made a "statement".[28] The following January, Cyrus responded at the American Music Awards by referring to Tritt's "Here's a Quarter".[29] Tritt later apologized to Cyrus, but said that he defended his opinion on the song.[30]
1992–1993: T-R-O-U-B-L-E and A Travis Tritt Christmas
Tritt and Stuart began a "No Hats Tour" in 1992.[31] In August of that same year, Tritt released the album T-R-O-U-B-L-E. Its first single was "Lord Have Mercy on the Working Man", a song written by Kostas. This song, which featured backing vocals from Brooks & Dunn, T. Graham Brown, George Jones, Little Texas, Dana McVicker (who also sang backup on Tritt's first two albums), Tanya Tucker and Porter Wagoner on the final chorus, peaked at number five.[18] Its follow-up, "Can I Trust You with My Heart", became Tritt's third Billboard number one in early 1993.[18] The album's next three singles did not perform as well on the charts: the title track (a cover of an Elvis Presley song[32]), peaked at 13, followed by "Looking Out for Number One" at number 11 and "Worth Every Mile" at number 30.[18]T-R-O-U-B-L-E became the second album of his career to achieve double-platinum certification.[21]Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic thought that T-R-O-U-B-L-E followed too closely the formula of It's All About to Change, but said that the songs showed Tritt's personality.[33] Nash gave the album a similar criticism, but praised the rock influences of "Looking Out for Number One" and the vocals on "Can I Trust You with My Heart".[32]
1994–1995: Ten Feet Tall and Bulletproof and Greatest Hits
In early 1994, after "Worth Every Mile" fell from the charts, Tritt charted at number 21 with a cover of the Eagles' "Take It Easy".[18] He recorded this song for the tribute album Common Thread: The Songs of the Eagles (released through Warner Bros.' Giant Records division), which featured country music artists' renditions of Eagles songs.[38] When filming the music video for this song, Tritt requested that the band, which had been on hiatus for over 13 years, appear in it. This reunion inspired the Eagles' Hell Freezes Over Tour, which began that year.[14]
His fourth album, Ten Feet Tall and Bulletproof, was released that May. Its lead-off single, "Foolish Pride", went to number one, and the fourth single, "Tell Me I Was Dreaming", reached number two. In between these songs were the title track at number 22 and "Between an Old Memory and Me" (originally recorded by Keith Whitley[39]) at number 11.[18] The album included two co-writes with Gary Rossington of Lynyrd Skynyrd, and guest vocals from Waylon Jennings and Hank Williams, Jr. on the cut "Outlaws Like Us".[40] The album achieved platinum certification in December of that year, and later became his third double-platinum album.[21] AllMusic reviewer Brian Mansfield said that Tritt was "most comfortable with his Southern rock/outlaw mantle" on it, comparing "Foolish Pride" favorably to "Anymore" and the work of Bob Seger.[40] Alanna Nash praised the title track and "Tell Me I Was Dreaming" in her review for Entertainment Weekly, but thought that the other songs were still too similar in sound to his previous works.[39]
1995's Greatest Hits: From the Beginning included most of his singles to that point, as well as two new cuts: the Steve Earle composition "Sometimes She Forgets" and a cover of the pop standard "Only You (And You Alone)". The former was a top ten hit at number seven, while the latter spent only eight weeks on the country charts and peaked at number 51.[18]Greatest Hits was certified platinum.[21]
1996–1997: The Restless Kind
In April 1996, Tritt and Stuart charted a third duet, "Honky Tonkin's What I Do Best", which appeared on Stuart's album of the same name and peaked at 23 on the country charts. The song won both artists that year's Country Music Association award for Vocal Event, Tritt's third win in this category.[18] The two began a second tour, the Double Trouble Tour, that year.[14]
Tritt charted at number three in mid-1996 with "More Than You'll Ever Know", the first single from his fifth album, The Restless Kind. The album accounted for one more top ten hit, a cover of Waylon Jennings's "Where Corn Don't Grow", which Tritt took to number six in late 1996. This song's chart run overlapped with that of "Here's Your Sign (Get the Picture)", a novelty release combining snippets of comedian Bill Engvall's "Here are Your Sign" routines with a chorus sung by Tritt.[41] "Here's Your Sign (Get the Picture)" peaked at 29 on the country charts and 43 on the Billboard Hot 100, accounting for Tritt's first entry on the latter chart.[18] The other singles from The Restless Kind all failed to make Top Ten upon their 1997 release. "She's Going Home with Me" and "Still in Love with You" (previously the respective B-sides to "Where Corn Don't Grow" and "More Than You'll Ever Know") were the third and fifth releases, peaking at 24 and 23 on Hot Country Singles & Tracks. In between was the number 18 "Helping Me Get Over You", a duet with Lari White which the two co-wrote.[18]
Unlike his previous albums, all of which were produced by Gregg Brown, Tritt produced The Restless Kind with Don Was.[42] Tritt told Billboard that the album showed a greater level of personal involvement than his previous efforts, as it was his first co-production credit. He also noted that he sang most of the vocal harmony by himself, played guitar on "She's Going Home with Me", and helped with the album's art direction.[43] It received positive reviews from Thom Owens of AllMusic, who said that it was the most country-sounding album of his career.[44] Don Yates of Country Standard Time also praised it for having a more "organic" sound than Tritt's other albums.[42]
1998–1999: No More Looking over My Shoulder
In 1998, he and several other artists contributed to Stuart's "Same Old Train", a cut from the collaborative album Tribute to Tradition; this song charted at number 59 on Hot Country Songs and won Tritt his second Grammy for Best Country Collaboration with Vocals.[45] He also performed on Frank Wildhorn's concept album of the musical The Civil War, singing the song "The Day the Sun Stood Still".[46] By year's end, Tritt also released his final Warner Bros. album, No More Looking over My Shoulder. It was his first of four consecutive albums which he produced with Billy Joe Walker, Jr., who is a session guitarist, producer, and New Age musician. The album was led off by the ballad "If I Lost You", which peaked at number 29 on the country charts and number 86 on the Hot 100.[18]Michael Peterson (who recorded for Warner Bros.' Reprise label at the time) co-wrote and sang backing vocals on the title track,[47] which went to number 38 country in early 1999. The album's third and final single was a cover of Jude Cole's "Start the Car" (previously the B-side to "If I Lost You"), which peaked at number 52.[18]
Soon after leaving Warner Bros. Records, Tritt signed to Columbia Records and released the album Down the Road I Go in 2000.[1] The album's first release was "Best of Intentions", his fifth and final number one hit on Billboard.[18] It was also his most successful entry on the Hot 100, where it reached number 27.[18] The next two singles, "It's a Great Day to Be Alive" and "Love of a Woman", both peaked at number two on the country charts in 2001, followed by "Modern Day Bonnie and Clyde" at number eight. All three songs also crossed over to the Hot 100, respectively reaching peaks of 33, 39 and 55.[18] Tritt wrote or co-wrote seven of the album's songs, including "Best of Intentions",[49] and collaborated with Charlie Daniels on two of them.[50] "It's a Great Day to Be Alive" was originally recorded by Jon Randall, whose version was to have been included on an unreleased album for BNA Records in the late 1990s.[51]
Maria Konicki Dinoia gave the album a positive review on AllMusic, saying that Tritt "hasn't lost his touch".[49]Country Standard Time also gave a positive review, saying that it showed Tritt's balance of country and rock influences.[52] An uncredited review in Billboard magazine called "Best of Intentions" a "gorgeous ballad", comparing it favorably to his early Warner Bros. releases.[53]
2002–2005: Strong Enough and My Honky Tonk History
In September 2002, Tritt released his second album on Columbia Records, Strong Enough. Its first single was "Strong Enough to Be Your Man" (an answer song to Sheryl Crow's 1994 single "Strong Enough"[54]) which reached number 13. The only other release was "Country Ain't Country", which peaked at 26 on the country charts.[18] William Ruhlmann gave the album a generally positive review on AllMusic, saying that he considered its sound closer to mainstream country than Tritt's previous albums.[54]
Also in 2002, Tritt performed on an episode of Crossroads, a program on Country Music Television which pairs country acts with musicians from other genres for collaborative performances. He performed with Ray Charles.[55] Tritt contributed guest vocals to Charlie Daniels' 2003 single "Southern Boy", and recorded a cover of Waylon Jennings' "Lonesome, On'ry and Mean" to the RCA Records tribute album I've Always Been Crazy. Respectively, these songs reached 51 and 50 on the country charts.[18]
Tritt's tenth studio album, My Honky Tonk History, was released in 2004. This album included three charting singles: "The Girl's Gone Wild" at 28, followed by the John Mellencamp duet "What Say You" at number 21 and "I See Me" at number 32.[18] Other songs on the album included a cover of Philip Claypool's "Circus Leaving Town" and songs written by Gretchen Wilson, Benmont Tench and Delbert McClinton.[56] Thom Jurek rated this album favorably, saying that it was a "solid, sure-voiced outing"; he also thought that "What Say You" was the best song on it.[56]
2007–present: The Storm, The Calm After... and Set in Stone
Tritt exited Columbia in July 2005, citing creative differences over My Honky Tonk History.[57] He signed to the independent Category 5 Records in February 2006, and served as the label's flagship artist.[58] 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 to play a competing venue. Tritt's manager denied he had ever signed a contract with the promoter.[59] Tritt released his first single for Category 5 in May 2007: a cover of the Richard Marx song "You Never Take Me Dancing".[60] It was included on his only album for Category 5, The Storm, which American Idol judge Randy Jackson produced.[61] The album featured a more rhythm and blues influence than Tritt's previous works.[60][61] "You Never Take Me Dancing" peaked at number 27 on the country charts; a second single, "Something Stronger Than Me", was released in October,[62] but it did not chart. Category 5 closed in November 2007 after allegations that the label's chief executive officer, Raymond Termini, had illegally used Medicaid funds to finance it.[63] A month later, 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.[64]
In October 2008, Tritt began an 11-date tour with Marty Stuart. On this tour, they performed acoustic renditions of their duets; Tritt also performed five solo shows.[65] Tritt signed a management deal with Parallel Entertainment in December 2010.[66] He continued to tour through to 2012 and into 2013, with most of his shows being solo acoustic performances.[67] Tritt acquired the rights to the songs on The Storm and re-issued it via his own Post Oak label in July 2013 under the title The Calm After...[68] The re-release included two covers: the Patty Smyth and Don Henley duet "Sometimes Love Just Ain't Enough", which he recorded as a duet with his daughter Tyler Reese,[69] and Faces' 1971 hit "Stay with Me".
In 2019, Tritt was featured on the country rock hit "Outlaws & Outsiders" by Cory Marks.[70] In 2021 "Set in Stone" released in 2021. around that time recorded in 2019 and 2020 they album pushed back in early 2021. In 2024, Tritt featured on another Cory Marks song titled "(Make My) Country Rock".[71]
Although he had been singing since childhood, Tritt said that he began to put "a little more soul" in his voice after his church band performed at an African-American church. He said that he took interest in how African-American singers put "all these bends and sweeps and curls" in their voices, and began emulating that sound.[7] While performing at these churches, he also took interest in gospel singers such as Andraé Crouch.[78] Later on, he began listening to Southern rock acts such as Lynyrd Skynyrd through the recommendation of a friend,[79] as well as the bluegrass music that his uncle exposed him to.[80] Tritt said that he found his songwriting began to develop during the creation of his demo tape, when he had written a song called "Gambler's Blues" that "felt a lot more connected to Southern rock" than his previous writings.[81] He cites country, rock and folk as his influences.[22] Stephen Thomas Erlewine contrasts him with contemporaries Clint Black and Alan Jackson, saying that Tritt was "the only one not to wear a [cowboy] hat and the only one to dip into bluesy Southern rock. Consequently, he developed a gutsy, outlaw image that distinguished him from the pack."[1] Zell Miller, in the book They Heard Georgia Singing, said that Tritt has an "unerring ability to walk the narrow path between his country heritage and his rock leanings to the acclaim of the devotees of both."[82]
Regarding his songwriting style and single choices, Tritt said that he writes "strictly from personal experiences" and does not follow a particular formula.[83] He described "Here's a Quarter" as "one of the simplest three-chord waltzes I've ever written",[84] and said that label executives were reluctant to release it because they thought that it was a novelty song.[85] Also, he was told that "I'm Gonna Be Somebody" would not be a hit because it did not contain any rhymes,[86] and fought the release of the song "Country Club" because he did not think that it fit his style.[87] He also said that, despite their low peaks, the more rock-influenced "Put Some Drive in Your Country" and "T-R-O-U-B-L-E" helped generate sales for their respective albums more so than the top ten hits from those albums.[88]
Personal life
Tritt married his high school sweetheart, Karen Ryon,[89] in September 1982. They were married two years before divorcing.[90] After going to court, Tritt was ordered to pay alimony to Karen for six months.[91] When he was 21, he married Jodi Barnett,[92] who was 33 at the time.[93] He divorced her shortly after signing with Warner Bros. in 1989; the divorce finalized one month before "Country Club" was released. Tritt wrote the song "Here's a Quarter" the night he received his divorce papers.[94]
He married Theresa Nelson on April 12, 1997.[50] They have one daughter,[50] and two sons.[95]
On May 18, 2019, he was in his tour bus when it was involved in a motor vehicle accident that took the lives of two people driving the wrong way on Veteran's Highway leaving Myrtle Beach, South Carolina.[96]
Political views and advocacy
Tritt is a member of the Republican Party and supported George W. Bush for president in 2000. The two met in 1996 at the Republican National Convention in San Diego, California, where Tritt sang the national anthem.[97] Tritt told Insight on the News that he is a strong supporter of Second Amendment rights and believes the answer to crime is not gun control but criminal control. "I'm a pro-gun guy. I'm an NRA (National Rifle Association of America) member, a life member as a matter of fact. I'm more for the belief of making the punishment tougher for the criminals to start with. I think that sends much more of an incentive for people to not commit crimes of any type than taking away guns. Because you take away guns, and the next thing you know, stabbing murders are going to increase." He adds that he is "definitely pro-death penalty".[citation needed]
In September 2020, Tritt gained notoriety for joining fellow Republican James Woods in blocking random Twitter users for using pro-Black Lives Matter and other anti-Trump tags in their posts, under the belief that it would counteract anti-Republican sentiment on Twitter.[98]
In April 2023, as a protest against Bud Light for supporting transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney, Tritt Tweeted "I will be deleting all Anheuser-Busch products from my tour hospitality rider."[99][100]
Alleged paranormal encounters
In October 2015, Tritt appeared on Lifetime network's The Haunting of... program to discuss his experiences with the paranormal. Tritt stated that beginning in 1993, he was awakened "regularly" by disembodied voices in a vacation cabin that he owned – the voices spoke in an unknown dialect. His wife, Theresa, eventually heard them as well. According to Tritt, "Over the years, these voices started happening
on such a frequent basis that we were afraid to come up here." He also asserted that footprints once appeared in the carpet of the cabin, and imprints in the bedspread, that belonged to neither him nor his wife.
The show's host, Kim Russo, concluded that an African-American medicine man had been stabbed and beaten to death on the property, and the voices that Tritt was hearing belonged to the murderers' angry spirits. A title card in the program notes that "On August 14, 1875, a group of men killed a 'hoodoo doctor' close to the land where Travis' cabin was built." Russo believed that the hoodoo doctor's spirit also lingered on the property because it found a "kindred spirit" in Tritt.[101][102]
^Himes, Geoffrey (August 28, 1996). "COUNTRY MUSIC'S NEW PAIR OF OUTLAWS". The Washington Post. Retrieved July 25, 2023. Tritt was an outsider, playing a mix of Southern rock and outlaw country in Atlanta bar bands before signing a record deal.
^No More Looking over My Shoulder (CD insert). Travis Tritt. Warner Bros. Records. 1998. 47097.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
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10th episode of the 2nd season of The X-Files Red MuseumThe X-Files episodeEpisode no.Season 2Episode 10Directed byWin PhelpsWritten byChris CarterProduction code2X10Original air dateDecember 9, 1994 (1994-12-09)Running time45 minutesGuest appearances Paul Sand as Gerd Thomas Steve Eastin as Sheriff Mazeroski Mark Rolston as Richard Odin Lindsey Ginter as Crew Cut Man[1] Episode chronology ← PreviousFirewalker Next →Excelsis Dei The X-Files (season 2)...
1966 film by William Asher Fireball 500Directed byWilliam AsherWritten byWilliam AsherLeo TownsendProduced byJames H. NicholsonSamuel Z. ArkoffBurt TopperStarringFrankie AvalonAnnette FunicelloFabianChill WillsHarvey LembeckJulie ParrishCinematographyFloyd CrosbyEdited byFred R. Feitshans, Jr.Eve NewmanMusic byLes BaxterProductioncompanyAmerican International PicturesDistributed byAmerican International PicturesRelease date June 7, 1966 (1966-06-07) Running time92 minutesCountr...
Симон IIфр. Simon II de Lorraine Народився 1140невідомоПомер 4 січня 1207невідомоПоховання Abbey SturzelbronndКраїна ФранціяДіяльність феодалЗнання мов французькаТитул герцог Лотарингії[d][1]Рід Лотаринзький дімБатько Матьє I (герцог Лотарингії)[2]Мати Bertha, duchess of Lorrained[1][2 ...
Esta página cita fontes, mas que não cobrem todo o conteúdo. Ajude a inserir referências. Conteúdo não verificável pode ser removido.—Encontre fontes: ABW • CAPES • Google (N • L • A) (Novembro de 2012) Tutemés III Estátua do faraó Tutemés III em basalto, no museu de Luxor, Egito. Faraó do Egito Reinado 1479–1425 a.C., Predecessor Hatexepsute Sucessor Amenófis II Título Real Esposa(s) Hatchepsut Meryt-Ra, ...
La guerra spirituale nei cieli, dettaglio da Caduta degli angeli ribelli, di Pieter Bruegel il Vecchio (1562) La guerra spirituale è un concetto cristiano che indica la lotta delle forze angeliche del bene contro l'opera di quelle preternaturali del male.[1] Si basa sulla credenza biblica degli spiriti maligni, o demoni, che si ritiene possano interferire negli affari umani in vari modi.[2] Anche gli esseri umani infatti sono coinvolti in questa guerra, sicché vari gruppi cr...