Tritt unleashes career-spanning set of enduring classics
Get ready for a double dose of โT-R-O-U-B-L-E,โ as AXS TV puts the spotlight on GRAMMY-winning country star Travis Tritt with the premiere of the unforgettable concert event Travis Tritt: Homegrown on Sunday, June 2nd at 9 pm ET/6 pm PT; followed by Trittโs candid conversation with Dan Rather in an all-new episode of The Big Interview on Tuesday, June 4th at 8 pm ET/5 pm PT.
Filmed live last year at Bell Auditorium in Augusta, Georgia, Travis Tritt: Homegrown finds the beloved chart-topper performing in his home state and rocking to a packed house with some of his most enduring hits. During the night, Tritt entertains the audience with his thoughts on songwriting, his life-long respect for veterans, and his experience with the legendary Waylon Jennings, and delivers an impressive career-spanning set featuring a wide range of classics such as โPut Some Drive In Your Country,โ โIโm Gonna Be Somebody,โ โWhisky On Ice,โ โCountry Club,โ โHereโs A Quarter (Call Someone Who Cares),โ โT-R-O-U-B-L-E,โ and โLonesome, Onโry And Mean,โ among many others.
Then, on June 4th, Dan Rather catches up with Tritt at the world-famous Country Music Hall Of Fame in Nashville, Tennessee, where the outlaw country hero opens up about his favorite artists, his faith, his introduction to singing, his friendship with fellow icon Marty Stuart, and what sets country apart from other genres. Tritt also talks about his lifeโs proudest accomplishment โ becoming a member of the Grand Ole Opry โ and reveals why he never thought heโd get in.
โI looked different than all the rest of the guys,โ Tritt says. โThey were clean cutโฆ They starched and pressed their blue jeansโฆ Meanwhile I was wearin’ a lotta leather. I had hair down to hereโฆ and I was very heavily influenced by blues as a kid. When I tried to bring that extra stuff inโฆ I got a lotta pushback from the Nashville establishment.”
One particular area of criticism revolved around his distinct lack of a cowboy hat. On his decision to forego the country staple, Tritt explains, โI was tryin’ to set myself apart. Second reason, and the more practical, was I had all this hair back thenโฆ I was not tryin’ to make any kind of statements against cowboy hats.โ Trittโs style choice even caught the attention of the great Waylon Jennings, who famously aired his opinion on the matter in the pairโs duet โOld Outlaws Like Us.โ As Tritt recalls, “At the very end of it, as the song was trailin’ off, Waylon says in a clear voice, โTravis, you may be the best, but I think you need a hat.'”