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Pat Travers

Patrick Henry Travers (born April 12, 1954) is a Canadian rock guitarist, singer and songwriter who began his recording career in the mid-1970s.[2]

Pat Travers

Patrick Henry Travers

(1954-04-12) April 12, 1954
Toronto, Ontario, Canada

  • Musician
  • singer
  • songwriter

  • Guitar
  • vocals
  • keyboards

1970–present

Early life[edit]

Travers was born and raised in Toronto.[3] Soon after picking up the guitar at age 12, he saw Jimi Hendrix perform in Ottawa. Travers began playing in bands early in his teens; his first bands were the Music Machine (not to be confused with the Californian psychedelic/garage band of the same name), Red Hot, and Merge, which played in clubs in the Quebec area.

Career[edit]

Early career[edit]

While performing with Merge, he was noticed by rock artist Ronnie Hawkins, who invited Travers to perform with him. In his early twenties, Travers moved to London and signed a recording contract with the Polydor label.[2] His self-titled debut album was released in 1976 and featured bassist Peter "Mars" Cowling, who would become a mainstay in Travers' band for several years.[2] An appearance on the German TV show Rockpalast in November 1976 was later released on CD+DVD under the title Live at Rockpalast in 2017. This performance showcases an early version of Travers' band featuring Cowling and drummer Nicko McBrain.[2]

Rise to popularity[edit]

During 1977, Travers added a second guitarist to his band, changed drummers twice including using Clive Edwards, and by the time Heat in the Street was released in 1978 had put together the Pat Travers Band.[2] This grouping featured Travers on vocals and guitar, Pat Thrall on guitar, Cowling on bass, and Tommy Aldridge on drums and percussion.[2] The band toured heavily, also supporting Rush on their Drive til You Die tour in support of A Farewell to Kings.[4]


The guitar Travers most often appeared with on stage and on album covers in the band's early years was a 1964/65 model double cutaway, double humbucker pick-up Gibson Melody Maker. The band's next release was a live album entitled Live! Go for What You Know, which charted in the Top 40 in the United States and included the tune "Boom Boom (Out Go the Lights)" (originally recorded by Little Walter, credited to Stan Lewis), which climbed even higher on the charts, entering the Top 20. "Snortin' Whiskey" was a major American radio hit from 1980's Crash and Burn.


After an appearance before 35,000 people at the Reading Music Festival in England, both Thrall and Aldridge announced they were leaving the band to pursue other projects.[2] Travers and Cowling teamed up with drummer Sandy Gennaro and released Radio Active[2] that same year. A co-headlining tour with Rainbow followed, and the two bands performed in major arenas across North America. Although the tour was Travers' most successful road outing, the Radio Active album barely made it into the Top 40, reaching only number 37.[5]


It was very different from Travers' previous work, with more emphasis on keyboards than heavy guitars. Disappointed with the lack of sales, Polydor dropped Travers from their roster, and he in turn sued the record company on grounds that he was under contract with them to record more material. He won the lawsuit, and was able to release Black Pearl in 1982.


This release also featured more mainstream music rather than the hard-driving rock Travers had recorded earlier, and included the hit single "I La La La Love You", featured prominently on mainstream Top 40 and album oriented rock stations, and in the 1983 film Valley Girl. Hot Shot was Travers' last major label release of original music, and was a return to a harder-edge style of rock than his previous two albums had been. One of Travers' best-recorded projects, it went basically unnoticed and is best remembered for the single "Killer". It was during this time that Travers also released Just Another Killer Day, a 30-minute home video featuring music from Hot Shot that was a sci-fi type short story about sexy alien women searching for information on music here on earth. In 1984, Travers was again supporting Rush. Alex Lifeson is one of Travers' many admirers.[6]


Before the release of Hot Shot, longtime bassist Cowling left the band, and Travers would work with several different bassists including Cliff Jordan and Donni Hughes until Cowling's return in 1989. Also at this time Jerry Riggs joined the Pat Travers Band, and he and Travers created a guitar team that fans considered difficult to rival. After Hot Shot's release in 1984, Polydor made plans to issue a greatest hits package, and then ended their relationship with Travers.


The latter half of the 1980s were quite gruelling for Travers. Having entered the decade at the top of the music game, he found himself in 1986 without a record contract and being forced to earn a living once again playing nightclubs and touring constantly. By 1990, he had gained a deal with a small European label and released School of Hard Knocks.[2] The project was completely ignored by radio. A full-length concert video, Boom Boom – Live at the Diamond Club 1990, was shot in Toronto, to be released on CD as Boom Boom next year, but Travers was still not able to return to the success he had ten years earlier, working only on indie labels, as with Lemon Recordings.

1990s: Return to form[edit]

Shortly after, Travers signed a deal with U.S.-based Blues Bureau International Records, a company formed by producer Mike Varney. Travers' first recording for the label was Blues Tracks, released in 1992.[2] Several more releases on the BBI label followed during the 1990s. In 1993, Travers parted company with both Jerry Riggs and Peter "Mars" Cowling, and Riggs was briefly replaced by former Foghat guitarist Erik Cartwright. The relationship was brief, and Travers has worked with a variety of musicians since that time. Travers sang on Boston metal band Extreme's song "Get the Funk Out" from their 1990 album Pornograffitti.

Pat Travers Band members[edit]

Pat Thrall, Nicko McBrain, Clive Edwards, Mick Dyche, Tommy Aldridge, Peter "Mars" Cowling, Barry Dunaway, Jerry Riggs, Gunter Nezhoda, Carmine Appice, Michael Shrieve, Aynsley Dunbar, Kirk McKim, Sandy Gennaro, Rodney O'Quinn, Sean Shannon and Frank McDaniel are some of the noted musicians who have been members of the Pat Travers Band through the years.


As of 2021, the band consists of Travers (guitars, vocals), Alex Petrosky (drums) and David Pastorius (bass).[7]

Acclaim[edit]

Paul Gilbert has referred to Travers as a "guitar god",[8] and Kirk Hammett of Metallica has cited him as one of his favourite guitar players.[9]

In popular culture[edit]

"Rage of Travers", the ninth track on The Mountain Goats' 2017 album Goths, retells an incident in which Travers—on tour in 1982 or 1983—showed up, guitar in hand and looking to jam, at a Bauhaus concert after his own gig ended. The chorus, "Nobody wants to hear the 12-bar blues/from a guy in platform shoes", highlights the speed with which the commercial landscape of rock changed in the early 1980s, especially as MTV promoted more visually distinctive acts.[10]


In the 2004 movie Sideways, the song "Snortin' Whiskey" is playing as Miles tries to recover Jack's wallet.

1976

Pat Travers

1977

Makin' Magic

1977

Putting It Straight

1978

Heat in the Street

1978 The Pat Travers You Missed Mini-Album (EP)

1979 (live at Opry House 1979)

Live! Go for What You Know

1980

Crash and Burn

1981

Radio Active

1982 Black Pearl

1984 Hot Shot

1990 School of Hard Knocks

1991 Boom Boom (live 1990)

1992 BBC Radio 1 Live in Concert (live 1977 and 1980) (re-released in 2000)

1992 Blues Tracks

1993 Just a Touch

1994 Blues Magnet

1995 Halfway to Somewhere

1996 Lookin' Up

1997 King Biscuit Flower Hour (live 1984)

1998 Blues Tracks 2

2000 Don't Feed the Alligators

2000 Boom Boom – Live at the Diamond Club 1990 (CD & DVD)

2003 Etched in Stone (2-CD live 2002)

2003 P.T. Power Trio (also called Power Trio)

2003 From the Front... Live! (DVD-audio live 1984)

2005 PT=MC2

2006 P.T. Power Trio 2

2007 Boom Boom (Out Go the Lights) (live)

2008 Stick with What You Know – Live in Europe (live 2007)

2009 Travelin' Blues

2010 Fidelis

2012

Blues on Fire

2013 Live at the Bamboo Room (live CD & DVD)

2013 Can Do

2014 Snortin' Whiskey at the Warfield (Official Bootleg)

2015 Live at the Iridium NYC

2015

Retro Rocket

2017 Live at Rockpalast (1976)

2019 Swing!

2022 The Art of Time Travel

Pat Travers' official website

at AllMusic

Pat Travers

Bio at CanadianBands.com

Pat Travers: Groove and Tone – GuitarInternational.com Interview

discography at Discogs

Pat Travers