Randy Travis
- Original name:
- Randy Bruce Traywick
- Born:
- May 4, 1959, Marshville, North Carolina, U.S. (age 65)
- Also Known As:
- Randy Bruce Traywick
- On the Web:
- Official Site of The Randy Travis Foundation (Nov. 18, 2024)
Randy Travis (born May 4, 1959, Marshville, North Carolina, U.S.) is an American country music singer-songwriter and actor known musically as being a new traditionalist, or neo-traditionalist, preferring to explore classic country over the urban cowboy sound that was popular when he gained fame in the mid-1980s. Throughout his career, he won numerous awards, including several Grammy Awards, Academy of Country Music Awards, and Gospel Music Association Dove Awards.
Early life and career
He was born Randy Traywick and spent his early years in rural North Carolina. When he was eight years old, he began playing the guitar. Within a few years, he and his elder brother, Ricky Traywick, started entering talent contests as the Traywick Brothers. In the ninth grade, Randy Traywick dropped out of school and soon found himself in trouble with the law. At age 16, he ran away from home to Charlotte, North Carolina, where he became more serious about music. He won a talent contest at a nightclub there and met Elizabeth (“Lib”) Hatcher, the club’s manager, who became his mentor and eventually his manager. (The two married in 1991 and divorced in 2010.) In the early 1980s Traywick and Hatcher moved to Nashville, where he sang under the name Randy Ray while holding down odd jobs. By 1985 he had signed with Warner Brothers Records and was performing as Randy Travis.
Country superstar
Travis’s first album, Storms of Life (1986), went to number one on the Billboard country chart and sold more than three million copies. With songs such as the chart-topping “Diggin’ Up Bones,” Travis showcased a smooth baritone voice and a laid-back singing style. His next album, Always and Forever (1987), also sold several million copies and remained number one on the country chart for 46 weeks. It features the single “Forever and Ever, Amen,” which was the first of seven number-one hits by Travis in a row. He released two more albums in the 1980s, Old 8×10 (1988) and No Holdin’ Back (1989), which, though not as commercially successful as his previous albums, performed well.
After 5 of his albums and 10 of his singles reached the top of the Billboard country charts in the 1980s, Travis’s career began to level out in the 1990s as country music newcomers with crossover appeal, such as Garth Brooks, began to rise. Travis’s albums from that time include This Is Me (1994), Full Circle (1996), and You and You Alone (1998), the last of which was released by DreamWorks, his new label.
Gospel career
At the beginning of the 21st century, Travis’s interest turned toward gospel music, and he released the albums Inspirational Journey (2000), Worship & Faith (2003), and Glory Train (2005). The album Rise and Shine (2002) features the popular single “Three Wooden Crosses,” which reached number one on the Billboard country singles chart. On the albums Influence, Vol. 1: The Man I Am (2013) and Influence, Vol. 2: The Man I Am (2014), Travis paid tribute to the singers who influenced him.
Acting career
Travis began a simultaneous acting career in the early 1990s with a role on the television series Matlock. Other series in which he appeared include Frasier and Touched by an Angel. Travis also had small parts and cameo roles in movies such as The Rainmaker (1997), Texas Rangers (2001), and National Treasure: Book of Secrets (2007). He appeared in larger supporting roles in TV movies such as The Trial of Old Drum (2000) and Christmas on the Bayou (2013). In addition, he lent his voice to several animated children’s videos.
Personal life and honors
In 2013 Travis suffered a stroke, which had a great impact on his ability to sing and perform, curtailing both his music and acting careers. He made few public appearances in the years that followed. He was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2016. Having undergone years of vocal therapy, he was able to briefly speak and sing the hymn “Amazing Grace” while accepting the honor during the ceremony. In 2024 he released his first single since his stroke, “Where That Came From,” which was made with assistance of artificial-intelligence technology.