Travis Wammack

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
You Better Move On 00:00 Tools
Scratchy 00:00 Tools
Easy Evil 00:00 Tools
Night Train 00:00 Tools
It's Karate Time 00:00 Tools
Fire Fly 00:00 Tools
Louie Louie 00:00 Tools
Thunder Road 00:00 Tools
There's a UFO Up There 00:00 Tools
Funk #49 00:00 Tools
Shotgun Woman 00:00 Tools
Super Soul Beat 00:00 Tools
Slip Away 00:00 Tools
Flip, Flop Bop 00:00 Tools
You Are My Sunshine 00:00 Tools
Tech-Nically Speaking 00:00 Tools
Rock & Roll Blues 00:00 Tools
I Ain't Lyin' 00:00 Tools
Upset 00:00 Tools
Distortion Pt.1 00:00 Tools
Your Love 00:00 Tools
Hallelujah, I Love Her So 00:00 Tools
Country in My Soul 00:00 Tools
Cookin' On The Front Burner 00:00 Tools
Hideaway 00:00 Tools
Memphis, Tennessee 00:00 Tools
Looking for a Fox 00:00 Tools
Find Another Man 00:00 Tools
Umm, How Sweet It Is 00:00 Tools
A Lover's Question 00:00 Tools
Fannie Mae 00:00 Tools
Love Rustler 00:00 Tools
I'm Leavin' Today 00:00 Tools
Sooner's Boogie 00:00 Tools
Cooking On the Front Burner 00:00 Tools
Distortion, Part 2 00:00 Tools
Put On Your Shoes And Walk 00:00 Tools
Love Being Your Fool 00:00 Tools
How Can I Tell You 00:00 Tools
Greenwood, Mississippi 00:00 Tools
So Good 00:00 Tools
Whatever Turns You On 00:00 Tools
Distortion, Pt 2 00:00 Tools
Let's Do It Over 00:00 Tools
(Shu-Do-Pa-Poo-Poop) Love Being Your Fool 00:00 Tools
You've Got Your Troubles 00:00 Tools
I Don't Really Want You 00:00 Tools
Rock 'n' Roll Blues 00:00 Tools
I'm Gonna Rock 00:00 Tools
Keep On Running 00:00 Tools
Darling You're All That I Had 00:00 Tools
Don't Cry No More 00:00 Tools
Greenwood Mississippi 00:00 Tools
10 - Easy Evil - Travis Wammack - Country Got Soul Vol.2 00:00 Tools
Loading Up On Love 00:00 Tools
Distortion Part 1 00:00 Tools
Rock-n-Roll Blues 00:00 Tools
Have You Ever Had The Blues 00:00 Tools
Southern Women 00:00 Tools
Try to Find Another Man 00:00 Tools
Superstitious Woman 00:00 Tools
Love Me a Little Bit More 00:00 Tools
Waitin' 00:00 Tools
(Shu-Doo-Pa-Poo-Poop) Love Being Your Fool 00:00 Tools
Louie, Louie 00:00 Tools
Cooking On The Front 00:00 Tools
Sparks 00:00 Tools
Counterfeit Love 00:00 Tools
Distortion, Pt. 2 00:00 Tools
Today I'm On My Way 00:00 Tools
Tell You About My Girl 00:00 Tools
I Ain't Lying 00:00 Tools
Distortion Pt 1 00:00 Tools
Keep The Fire Burning 00:00 Tools
Still Some Good Rockers 00:00 Tools
Firefly 00:00 Tools
its karate time 7'' 00:00 Tools
You've Got Your Trouble 00:00 Tools
Training Wheels 00:00 Tools
Its Karate Time 00:00 Tools
Get Outta Here 00:00 Tools
The Gift 00:00 Tools
Distortion,Part 2 00:00 Tools
night train 7'' 00:00 Tools
Drugs Destroy Dreams 00:00 Tools
Linda Lou (Maybe I Will, Maybe I Won't) 00:00 Tools
I Forgot to Remember To 00:00 Tools
I Forgot To Remember 00:00 Tools
Never Alone 00:00 Tools
All That Money 00:00 Tools
One Ray of Sunshine 00:00 Tools
Calvary 00:00 Tools
Don´t Cry No More 00:00 Tools
Two Little Love Birds 00:00 Tools
The Journey 00:00 Tools
Are You Ready? 00:00 Tools
Almost Home 00:00 Tools
Almost Home 00:00 Tools
Cork in the Bottle 00:00 Tools
Daddy Don't Live There Anymore 00:00 Tools
  • 22,709
    plays
  • 4,952
    listners
  • 22709
    top track count

Besides being able to pick his Gibson 335 at close to the speed of light, just what was the secret to Memphis guitar genius Travis Wammack’s sound? “I used A tenor banjo strings for my G string,” says Wammack, “I’d go into clubs and look at the picker’s guitar and if he didn’t have an unwound third string I knew I could burn him up. I could get the stretchy sound and lay some funk on him.” And burn he did, from his Eddie Bond-sponsored debut recording on Fernwood Records (“Rock ‘n’ Roll Blues”) at age eleven clear through session work in Muscle Shoals and, most recently, holding down the guitar chair in Little Richard’s band. As if these accomplishments aren’t enough, there’s always the very thing that rock ‘n’ rollers love most about Travis Wammack: the series of recordings that he cut at Roland Janes’ Sonic Studios from 1963 through 1967. There were the originals; “Scratchy,” “Firefly,” “Tech-nically Speaking,” “Distortion Part 2.” There were the classics; “Night Train,” “Hideaway,” “Louie, Louie,” “Hallelujah, I Love Her So.” There was even one vocal number—the incredibly great “Try To Find Another Man”—that barely utilized Travis’s “Scratchy” guitar and still managed to be a complete work of genius. Generally backed only by bassist Prentiss McPhail and drummer Danny Taylor—a rhythm section that sounded like a freight train at full roar, and often moved just as fast—the teenage Wammack laid down a wailing pound of sound the likes and intensity of which will surely never be heard again. It’s almost impossible to grasp the fact that this much sound could come out of three people, but their ferocity of attack coupled with their sheer playing power made this band a true “power trio” years before the term came into usage. When Janes tried to license a few of the cuts to Chet Atkins, the great picker refused them, flatly stating, “This scares me—I pass!” But Roland, having played guitar on every Jerry Lee Lewis hit at Sun, knew rock ‘n’ roll inside out and issued the tracks himself, denting the charts briefly with “Scratchy” in 1964. But by and large, Travis’s wild guitar workouts proved to be too crazed and ahead of their time even for the radical musical climate of the sixties. After a stint with the Bill Black Combo he concentrated on session work, first at Sonic and Hi and eventually at Fame, where he cut a pair of hits under his own name in the early ‘70s. Meanwhile, the Sonic masters languished for decades until they were finally issued by Bear Family and Zu-Zazz, blowing the collective minds of a whole new generation of guitar maniacs. http://www.ponderosastomp.com/music_more.php/128/Travis+Wammack Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.