Steve Travis is an English retired singer-songwriter, musician, recording artist and author. He was born and raised in Colchester, Essex. His biggest selling albums are in the easy listening country style. More recently Travis has been known for sea shanties including "Billy O'Shea" that debuted in April 2021 on BBC Radio Essex[1] with fellow musician and "Wellerman" creator Nathan Evans.
Steve Travis | |
---|---|
Birth name | Stephen Greenfield |
Born | Colchester | 17 March 1951
Genres | |
Occupation(s) | Musician, songwriter, poet, author, craftsman |
Instrument(s) | Vocals, guitar, piano, drums |
Years active | 1964–present |
Labels | |
Website | http://www.stevetravis.co.uk |
Musical career
editRock and pop; 1964–1979
editTravis began his music career in the mid 1960s as a drummer in Colchester bands performing progressive rock. In 1970, he made a switch to guitar and vocals and formed the glam-rock band, Plod. As a pop singer throughout the 1970s, he made many appearances alongside top acts including ELO, Genesis, Slade, Thin Lizzy,[2] and Showaddywaddy. He then went on to form the hard rock band, The Perishers. They attracted the interest of London-based management company Deville Promotions and quickly booked time in Polydor Studios in London and recorded four demo tracks. These were original rock songs written by Travis. At that time Travis bore a likeness to Marc Bolan and his photograph appeared next to the late T. Rex frontman in national newspapers in 1979.[citation needed]
Country; 1981–2004
editTravis moved on to country music issuing a single in 1982 entitled "Ghost Riders in the Sky" / "Moonlight on the Trail". This received excellent reviews in many of the music papers.[citation needed] For some years Travis retreated completely from the music business to concentrate on family life.
In 1991, Travis returned to performing country music and toured in the UK and Europe topping the bill at many CMC clubs, festivals and theatres.[citation needed] In 1994, he released his first CD album on the MJMusic record label, later signing a record deal with the Irish label Foam Records in 1997. His first album, 50 Country & Favourite Songs, a sing-along album in the style of Max Bygraves, sold over 100,000 copies and achieved a silver disc for sales. Travis released a further 14 albums[3] on the Foam label then continued his career with London-based Prism Leisure in 2003.
Contemporary; 2004–2010
editIn 2004, Travis composed and played keyboards on an album of relaxation music titled Healing Shores released on the Aquavision label. Following this an album of his narrated poetry set to music entitled Fragments of Desire was released on the Blue Water music label, taken from the book of the same name.
Sea shanties; 2010–present
editWith an increasing enthusiasm for sea shanties and inspiration from his longtime home by the sea in West Mersea there came a change of musical style.[4] In 2012, H&H Music released Travis' first shanty album, Shanties and Other Songs of the Sea and a music video for his song "The Black Water Smuggler",[5] reflects the history of the Blackwater Estuary. It was followed in 2016 by Sea Shanties and Pirate Songs.[6]
In 2021 Travis created his first charity single to support a Horse & Animal rescue group in Tenerife[7] where he now resides.
Album discography
editYear | Album | Label |
---|---|---|
1982 | Ghost Riders in the Sky | Frontier |
1994 | Roses After the Rain | MJMusic |
1994 | The Song Book | Blue Water Music |
1994 | Sings Country | Blue Water Music |
1994 | Sings Raymond Froggatt | Blue Water Music |
1997 | 50 Country and Favourite Super Songs | Foam Records |
1997 | Life Is What You Make It | Foam Records |
1997 | 50 Songs You Love to Sing | Foam Records |
1997 | 50 Songs You Want to Hear | Foam Records |
1997 | 50 Singalong Country Party | Foam Records |
1997 | Songs of Love | Foam Records |
1997 | For the Good Times | Foam Records |
1997 | Singalong Christmas | Foam Records |
1997 | Country Gospel | Foam Records |
1997 | 50 Singalong Old Time Favourites | Foam Records |
1997 | Nashville Collection | Foam Records |
1997 | Everything I Own | Foam Records |
1997 | Jukebox Favourites | Foam Records |
1997 | Irish Collection | Foam Records |
2002 | When Yesterday Was Now | Blue Water Music |
2003 | Life Is What You Make It | Prism |
2003 | Best of Friends | Prism |
2003 | Enjoy Yourself | Prism |
2004 | Healing Shores | Aquavision |
2006 | Travellin' Light | H&H Music |
2006 | Welcome to My World | H&H Music |
2006 | Monster Country | H&H Music |
2006 | Steve Travis Songs That Won the War | H&H Music |
2010 | Fragment of Desire | Blue Water Music |
2010 | Shanties and Other Songs of the Sea | H&H Music |
2010 | Sea Shanties and Pirate Songs | H&H Music |
Bibliography
edit- As I Recall It. 2005 Blue Water Music, 56 page book of humorous short stories
- A Pirate's Kiss. 2006 Blue Water Music, 36 page book of poems
- One Man and His Microphone. 2011 Memoirs. Amusing fact and fiction, ISBN 9781471696640
- Fragments of Desire. 2013 A compilation of poems, lyrics and short stories, ISBN 9781326073725
- T'were Rite Funny. 2014 Comical short stories, ISBN 9781326290054
- Dr Scrotum's Sex Facts for Men and Women. 2015 A compilation of vintage adverts and sex advice from the early 20th Century, ISBN 9781312640580
References
edit- ^ "Rob Jelly Evenings on BBC Essex". BBC. 2021. Retrieved 10 April 2021.
- ^ "Lou Moodies Top Ten of All Time". Keep Colchester Cool. 2016. Retrieved 17 March 2017.
- ^ "Steve Travis". Irish Music. 2016. Retrieved 23 May 2018.
- ^ "River smugglers are inspiration for album". Colchester Gazette. 2012. Retrieved 17 March 2017.
- ^ "Steve Travis Blackwater Smuggler". H&H Music. 2017. Retrieved 5 September 2017.
- ^ "Steve Travis". H&H Music. 2017. Retrieved 17 March 2017.
- ^ "Charity Single". Tenerife Horse Rescue. 2021. Retrieved 10 April 2021.