Chandler Travis | |
Birth Date: | 15 March 1950 |
Birth Place: | New York City, US |
Occupation: | Musician, singer, songwriter, record producer |
Instrument: | Guitar, Vocals, Bass |
Years Active: | 1969–present |
Label: | Iddy Biddy, Akers Records, Boss Sounds, Demon Records, Eat Records, Just Like Real, Red Rooster Records, Rounder Records, Sonic Trout, Target Earth Records |
Associated Acts: | Travis Shook and the Club Wow, The Incredible Casuals, Chandler Travis Philharmonic, Chandler Travis Three-O, Chandler Travis Philharmonette, The Catbirds |
Birth Name: | Peter Chandler Travis |
Peter Chandler Travis (born March 15, 1950) is an American musician, songwriter, producer and owner of Iddy Biddy record label. Travis plays many unique styles of music sometimes labeled as an "alternative Dixieland," though it is difficult to classify into genres.[1] [2] [3] [4] His career began with the comedic songwriting duo started with Steve Shook, Travis Shook and the Club Wow, which worked closely with top comedians of the time like George Carlin and Martin Mull. Travis co-founded Sonic Trout Records with Chris Blood and later created his own record company, Iddy Biddy.[5] He has toured across America, Europe and Japan, and has developed a Japanese fan-base leading to several of Travis' albums being released on Japanese labels.
Travis created The Cape Cod Christmas Cavalcades for the Homeless and The Boston Christmas Cavalcades for the Homeless, annual fundraisers benefiting various organizations, and is the musical director for The Boston charity.[6] [7] Travis has written articles and reviews for New England publications as himself and under the byline Thurston Kelp.
Chandler Travis was born in New York City and his family moved to Connecticut when he was a child. His father worked as a textile salesman, his mother condensed books for Reader's Digest and his sister, Deborah Travis, is a nurse.[8] Travis was influenced by jazz music from a young age; Duke Ellington, Ella Fitzgerald, Count Basie, and Ray Charles were among his favorite musicians, and he began playing guitar at the age of 13. In Connecticut, he attended prep schools (Taft, along with Steve Shook; and Forman School.) At Forman, Travis played guitar in a garage band that played from 1966-1968 called The Good Fairies, later renamed The St. James Infirmary.[9] He played his first show at a coffee house at age 15, and had his first paying gig at age 16.[10]
Travis has been a Cape Cod resident since the early 1970s. He continues performing, mostly in small New England venues, as a lead member of the Chandler Travis Philharmonic, the Chandler Travis Three-O, the Chandler Travis Philharmonette,[11] and the Catbirds.[12]
Travis moved to Boston to attend Boston University.[13] There he became friends with Steve Shook and the two formed the acoustic-comedy group Travis, Shook and the Club Wow, in 1969. The group wrote folk-rock music with comedic, whimsical lyrics, and created several recurring characters.[14] They quickly gained popularity playing shows at campuses across the Northeast United States, and were opened for by artists such as Bruce Springsteen,[15] [16] and the E Street Band. They appeared on The Dick Cavett Show,[17] The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson, and The Midnight Special.[18] In 1972 the group released their only contemporaneous full-length album, The Essential Travis, Shook and the Club Wow, along with several other musicians including members of NRBQ.[19] Tom Staley, the drummer from NRBQ, joined them on tour for a period of time, as did Rikki Bates (also performed as Vince Valium, formerly known as Rich Bates)[20] who has been a frequent drummer in Travis' collaborations ever since.
Starting July 29, 1971,[21] they were booked as the opening act for Dave Van Ronk for a three-day set at a coffee house in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, called The Main Point. Van Ronk had to cancel last minute and the club owner called in George Carlin, who had opened a series of shows at the same venue earlier that month, as an emergency replacement headliner. Travis and Shook nearly missed the set, being detained by police en route to the show for marijuana possession which the police confiscated; however, they did not find several tablets of MDA (a drug similar to MDMA) which the duo shared with Carlin, who smoked marijuana with them in return. After the set Carlin was so impressed with the group that he signed them as his opening act, and they toured with him until 1981, including a performance at Carnegie Hall in 1974.[22]
Carlin appeared on several tracks released by the Chandler Travis Philharmonic, such as "Tarnation", a track made from a blethering voicemail Carlin left Travis spoken in alien-mimicking phrases.[23] [24] They continued working together until Carlin's death in 2008.[25] Travis wrote and recorded the theme songs for The George Carlin Show, and Carlin's TV pilot, Apt. 2c,[26] [27] and wrote two additional songs for the show performed by Brian Doyle-Murray.
Travis and Shook met with drummer Rikki (Rich) Bates in 1978 and began working on a new, more serious band focused on pop-rock.[28] Originally with Eric Rosenfeld on the guitar they went by the name The Susan Anton People; they were joined by Johnny Spampinato a couple of years later and became The Incredible Casuals. After a couple of singles, the "Let'S Go Summer Fun Maxi-EP" was released in 1982.[29] Shook then left the group and was later replaced by Aaron Spade. In 1983 and '84, the group produced a monthly mail-order cassette subscription called the Inedible Casserole series in which they recorded and released a new album every other month.[30] The Casuals played at a club called the Wellfleet Beachcomber in Wellfleet for 35 years every Sunday during summer months.[31] [32] [33] Spampinato joined NRBQ in 1994; however, the Casuals continued to play part-time while their members focused on other projects for over 20 years until 2014.[34]
Over the years, The Casuals were joined on stage by guest singers, including their soundman, Chris Blood, who had a recurring feature as "The White Prince," performing unusually inept covers of classic songs, with the Casuals credited as the Brain Bats of Venus, and they have released two albums on Sonic Trout Records: You've Got a Friend: The White Prince Story, and Resurrection!
In 1996, the house band of the Lizard Lounge in Cambridge, Massachusetts, was a rhythm section led by Dinty Child. The club had a guest position that rotated weekly; Child was joined by Travis for one of these positions and by Travis' suggestion Child recruited a full brass section, leading to the formation of Chandler Travis Philharmonic.[35] [36] The Lizard Lounge resident band position was next filled by Session Americana.[37]
Travis has created two smaller versions of the Philharmonic: the Chandler Travis Three-O, and the Chandler Travis Philharmonette; each group mostly plays different material with unique styles.[38] The groups are known for regularly performing in brightly colored pajamas, smoking jackets, and hats.[39] The Philharmonic in particular is a high-energy, theatrical group, often engaging with the audience in quirky ways during their performances like the way they present their tip jar; it is taped to a Roomba robot vacuum and roams the audience randomly and was dubbed the Honey Bunny 6000 by its inventor, trumpetist Kami Lyle.[40]
The Philharmonic usually consists of nine members, currently, Chandler Travis (guitar/vocals), Alex Brander (drums), John Clark (upright bass), Fred Boak (vocals), Cliff Spencer (keyboards), Dinty Child (mandocello/mandolin/accordion/cello), and their three-piece horn section known as The June Trailer Dancers;[41] [42] Berke McKelvey (clarinets/saxophones/keys), Kami Lyle (trumpet), and Bob Pilkington (trombone).[43]
Fred Boak (also known as "The Valet") was a longtime fan of the group before joining them. After befriending the group he began selling their merchandise at shows and managing Travis' website. Boak became a harmony singer with the Philharmonic's many versions around 2001 when he was called in as a last-minute substitute, and now performs regularly, although he describes his role as “being on stage, with a drink in my hand, looking good.” Boak replaced Travis as the musical director of The Cape Cod Christmas Cavalcades for the Homeless in 2018.
Chandler Travis Three-O is a quartet that was created to play smaller venues than Chandler Travis Philharmonic, it being difficult to find venues with the budget and stage-space to fulfill the Philharmonic's needs. Although they have rearranged songs from the Philharmonic to work with the quartet, there is enough material that the Three-O has quite a different repertoire from the Philharmonic, and they have released two albums.[44] The scaled-down group is: Chandler Travis (guitar/vocals), Fred Boak (vocals), John Clark (upright bass), Berke McKelvey (saxes/clarinets/keyboards), and sometimes Kami Lyle (trumpet, vocals).[45]
The Catbirds are a simple guitar/bass/drums quartet, play rootsier, louder rock, a bit closer to the Casuals in style than any of Travis's other current groups. They've released a couple of EPs and 2012's full-length "Catbirds Say Yeah". The Catbirds' current lineup is: Travis (bass/vocals), Steve Wood (guitar/vocals), Mark Usher (guitarist) and Sam Wood (drums).[46]
1974 | Essential Travis Shook and the Club Wow | |
1974 | It's Not Too Late (single) | |
2000 | Weekend on Mt. Cod (Radio Ball #14) |
1981 | Money Won't Buy You Happiness (single) | |
1981 | That's Why (single) | |
1982 | Picnic Ape (single) | |
1982 | Let's Go (EP) | |
1983 | hi there. (Inedible Casserole #1) | |
1983 | New Hats for Summer (Inedible Casserole #2) | |
1983 | There Goes 5 Dollars (Inedible Casserole #3) | |
1983 | Sammy Davis Jr. (Inedible Casserole #4) | |
1983 | It's Christmas Time (Inedible Casserole #5) | |
1984 | The Casserole of Death (Inedible Casserole #6) | |
1984 |
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1987 | Live! At Da 'Coma | |
1987 | That's That | |
1990 | Parsley, Sage, Suffer and Leroy (Inedible Casserole #7) | |
1991 | Your Sounds | |
1992 | Live, Loud, Drunk & Out of Tune | |
1995 | College Girls/Go Bruins (single) | |
1995 | It is Balloon | |
2000 | The Future Will Be Better Tomorrow (Radio Ball #11) | |
2004 | Yearbook '04: Live! At Da 'Coma | (Radio Ball #24) |
2005 | Nature Calls | |
2005 | Doin' Time (single) | |
2007 | World Championship Songs 1980-2007 (compilation) | |
2008 |
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2010 | Rip Your Mother |
1983 | Sub Pop-9 | "Picnic Ape" | |
1984 | 1983 Rock Hunt | "Somethings" | |
1988 | The Rounder Sub-Compact Disc, Volume 2 | "Don't Tell Me" | |
1989 | Lyrics by Ernest Noyes Brooking | "Headphones" | |
1991 | Place of General Happiness (Lyrics by Ernest Noyes Brooking, vol. 2) | "Toast" | |
1993 | Mash It Up '93 | "Let's Get Better", "Step it Up" | |
1994 | 39 Steps to Seattle: An Alternative American History | "Crazy Girl" | |
1995 | Outstandingly Ignited (Lyrics by Ernest Noyes Brooking, Volume 4) | "Spiders" | |
1997 | The Tarquin Records All-Star Holiday Extravaganza | "Thanksgiving in Stoughton: | |
1997 | Fireworks (24 Explosive Tracks) | "Be Here Now", "College Girls" | |
1999 | Hit the Hay vol. 3 | "I Still Believe in Summer" | |
1999 | It's Heartbreak That Sells: A Tribute to Ray Mason | "Between Blue and Okay" | |
2000 | Home Runs: Songs That'll Take You All the Way | "Money Won't Buy Happiness" | |
2001 | What's Up Buttercup | "Everyone Plays Guitar (in the United States)" | |
2001 | Ernie - Songs of Ernest Noyes Bookings | "Ape" | |
2009 | Micke Finell and Friends: Walking With Me and Mr. Lee | "Yackety Yak" | |
2011 | The Figgs/The Incredible Casuals: Citizen Band/Ape | "Ape" |
1997 | The Dreadful Hummings of Chandler Travis Philharmonic | |
1999 | Raw Blarney | |
1999 | Holiday Time (Radio Ball #1) | |
1999 | Y' Gotta Have The Mental (Radio Ball #2) | |
2000 | Rocket Travis Infinity Caravan 2000 (Radio Ball #3) | |
2000 | Miss America Presents (Radio Ball #4) | |
2000 | Let's Music, Volume 1 (Radio Ball #5) | |
2000 | Taffy Shoot (Radio Ball #6) | |
2000 | The Dog Ate My Album (Radio Ball #8) | |
2000 | Bosoms (Radio Ball #9) | |
2000 | The Sound of Food (Radio Ball #10) | |
2000 | Live at Bickford's (Radio Ball #12) | |
2000 | Monkeys of Nothing (Radio Ball #13) | |
2000 | Let's Music, Volume 2 (Radio Ball #15) | |
2000 | Introducing Chandler Travis Philharmonic (Radio Ball #18) | |
2000 | Le Spectacle dans le Lizarde (Radio Ball #21) | |
2000 | Let's Have a Pancake! | |
2002 | Llama Rhymes | |
2003 | Live at Babala's (Radio Ball #23) | |
2005 | I'm a Fool for Christmas (Radio Ball #25) | |
2006 | In Our Room (Radio Ball #26) | |
2007 | Tarnation and Alastair slim aka Kitty | |
2010 | The Chandler Travis Philharmonic Blows | |
2016 | Waving Kissyhead vol. 1 (EP) | |
2017 | Waving Kissyhead vol. 1 & 2 | |
2017 | Tribute to the Midway: Blurry Then, Blurry Now.... | |
2017 | Live at the Cutting Room | |
2018 | Advice to the President (single) |
2005 | Holiday Heart, A Hospice Awareness & Benefit Project | "If We Can Just Make it Through Christmas" | |
2012 | Superhits of the Seventies | "Right Back Where We Started From" | |
2012 | The Petite 7-inch Record | "Still Wanna Make a Record" | |
2014 | The Date Fork Seeps the River Volume 3 | "Italian Ape" |
2012 | This is What Bears Look Like Underwater | |
2012 | January/Drunk, Angry People, Shut Up (single) | |
2018 | Backwards Crooked From the Sunset |
2011 | Viborate (EP) | |
2011 | Gonna Keep Driving (single) | |
2012 | Catbirds Say Yeah | |
2018 | What Th? (EP) |
2013 | Eponymously Titled | "Playin' Records" |
1992 | Writer-Songsinger | |
1996 | His Lavender Silhouette | |
1996 | Hi! I'm Lippy Blappinklappy | |
1998 | Ivan in Paris | |
2000 | Dogsuit, Volume One (Radio Ball #7) | |
2000 | Burned (Radio Ball #15) | |
2000 | Dogsuit, Volume Two (Radio Ball #19) | |
2000 |
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2000 | You Must Come Over Tonight (Radio Ball #20) | |
2004 | Another Christmas Gift for You (compilation) | |
2009 | After She Left | |
2012 | First Warm Day by The Incredible Chandler Travis Catual Birdomonics (single) | |
2015 |
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2004 | Eddie-G's Screamin' Xmas! | "Xmas Time" | |
2010 | New Orleans Musicians Clinic | "I Want My Heart Back"[48] [49] | |
2014 | 7-inches and Other Delights | "Records 'n' Bubble" | |
2015 | 7-inches in Heaven | "Victrola", "Blamey Bubbles", "Blamey Bubble (outro)", "Side 2!" | |
2015 | Rabbit Rabbit Radio vol. 3, Year of the Wooden Horse | "Nokomis"[50] |