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Nick Travis: A New York Studio Jazzman

Nowhere, more so, it seems, than in music, and even in jazz, the taste of a distinct minority. Especially in jazz, apparently, seek and you shall find, somewhere, sooner or later. This is the historian's blessing.
Trumpet player

Nick Travis
trumpet1925 - 1964

Hal McKusick
saxophoneb.1924

Doug Mettome
trumpet1925 - 1964
Travis' roots were more modest than Mettome's distinctly middle-class background. He was born Nicholas Anthony Travascio (sometimes spelled Traviscio as well) in the Olney section of Philadelphia. His father, also Nicholas, was an Italian immigrant who had been born in 1893 and was employed as a tailor at Strawbridge and Clothier's in Philadelphia. His, mother, Sadie, was an immigrant as well, born in Ireland, and employed as a seamstress. According to one source who knew Nick in Philadelphia, he was "very serious" about the trumpet from a young age, but he was still living at home in 1940. He apparently lost his mother around that time, and, perhaps not coincidentally, began his career as a professional musician soon after. He seems to have been an only child, although some bandmates mention a sister. His first experience seems to have been with
Vido Musso
saxophone, tenorb.1913

Benny Goodman
clarinet1909 - 1986

Woody Herman
band / ensemble / orchestra1913 - 1987
Bob Chester
b.1908
Larry Elgart
woodwinds1922 - 2017

Charlie Byrd
guitar1925 - 1999
Les Elgart
b.1918
Ray McKinley
drums1910 - 1995

Eddie Sauter
composer / conductor1914 - 1981
Billy Butterfield
b.1917Yank Lawson
b.19111949 found Travis with Benny Goodman in what has been labelled Goodman's "bop" band, in which he played lead. He was called "the mainstay of the brass section." "He boasts a strong tone," in a section that included Doug Mettome, Howard Reich and

Al Stewart
trumpet1927 - 2016
Sonny Igoe
drumsb.1923
Don Fagerquist
trumpetb.1927
It's a bit difficult for us to realize that Sauter-Finegan, which was conceived as a recording band for arrangers Eddie Sauter and

Bill Finegan
arranger1917 - 2008

Glenn Miller
trombone1904 - 1944

Doc Severinsen
trumpetb.1927
Tin soldier or no, it was a job, and a good one, well compensated, and with television appearances to boot. Jazz or no, the avant-garde air that surrounded the band's novel use of electronicsit apparently used 10 microphones in the studiohurt Travis not one bit. Hentoff called him "an important jazz talent" "currently wired for sound in the Sauter-Finegan band." Most importantly, the band seemed to be viable, played (and jammed after hours) in Las Vegas, and did the Hollywood Palladium too. This was a high visibility, high prestige gig. And it probably led to Travis' one recording as a leader in 1954, which came on RCA, the same label that had taken a chance on recording Sauter-Finegan when it was formed. In a Soundflight Air Force Reserve Broadcast, probably in 1959, Travis told the host, Jim Lowe, that Sauter-Finegan was the band he had, to date, most enjoyed playing with. To genuine laughter, he called the band "100 years ahead of its time."
Let's take a look at some of Travis' work with Sauter-Finegan and his one recording as a leader. We can, at best, sample a few highlights, because Nick recorded a great deal, including some on valve trombone, on which he capably doubled. If you're looking for a "trumpet player" piece, one that surely highlights why Travis was highly regarded as a lead trumpet, it was called "The Land Between," a tone poem on the recording "Concert in Jazz" that showcases Travis' gorgeous tone, especially in the middle register, as do few other of his recordings. This is a recording that is so plush and accomplished that Billy Butterfield praised it in a Downbeat Blindfold Test as "wonderful," and Butterfield was not especially free with his compliments. On the recording "The Sons of Sauter-Finegan," there are a couple of exceptionally pretty duets with
Bobby Nichols
b.1924"Panic" features Nick at the head of a very good quintet, with

Al Cohn
saxophone, tenor1925 - 1988
Johnny Williams
bassb.1942

Teddy Kotick
bass1928 - 1986
Art Mardigan
drumsb.1923
In mid to late 1957, The United States economy entered a recession, and the economics of a big band, always chancy, simply became impossible. In debt, Sauter and Finegan broke up the band and Nick was back to free lancing full time. He was much in demand both as a crack reader and experienced lead player, and when you try to reconstruct his schedule in 1957-58, the results are nothing short of amazing. In no particular order, an incomplete list of people or outfits he recorded with reads as follows:

Bob Brookmeyer
trombone1929 - 2011

Zoot Sims
saxophone, tenor1925 - 1985

Urbie Green
trombone1926 - 2018

Jimmy Giuffre
clarinet1921 - 2008

Lee Wiley
vocals1915 - 1975

Joe Newman
trumpet1922 - 1992

Manny Albam
arranger1922 - 2001

Coleman Hawkins
saxophone, tenor1904 - 1969

Tito Puente
drums1923 - 2000

Maynard Ferguson
trumpet1928 - 2006
Trigger Alpert
b.1916
Don Lamond
drums1920 - 2003

Ed Shaughnessy
drums1929 - 2013
Yet perhaps, this strikes a wrong note. In mid-1956, Travis had made what is now considered, among trumpet players at least, a classic recording with

Conte Candoli
trumpet1927 - 2001

Bernie Glow
trumpet1926 - 1982

Rex Stewart
trumpet1907 - 1967
Elliot Lawrence
piano1925 - 2021
In reality, by the beginning of the 1960s, Nick Travis was basically a young player on the way up. Unlike, say, Doug Mettome, who peaked around 1956 or so, Travis' star continued to rise. There are imperfect ways of trying to measure these things, but of the cohort of young, white East Coast trumpet players who were on the radar screen, only Doc Severinsen seems to have become better known.

Don Ferrara
trumpet1928 - 2011

Gerry Mulligan
saxophone, baritone1927 - 1996

Bob Brookmeyer
trombone1929 - 2011

Clark Terry
trumpet1920 - 2015

Mel Lewis
drums1929 - 1990

Bill Crow
bass, acousticb.1927

Gene Quill
b.1927
Zoot Sims
saxophone, tenor1925 - 1985
Jazz stories have a way of unending unhappily, or at least, as

Gunther Schuller
composer / conductor1925 - 2015

Bill Crow
bass, acousticb.1927

Conrad Gozzo
trumpet1922 - 1964
Much of what transpired after Travis's death remains a mystery. He had a family, but was divorced from his wife, Pat Turner, and no ceremony was originally planned. But, apparently at the behest of some of his colleagues, the Rev. John Gensel agreed to hold a memorial service which was quite crowded. The service began with Nick's recording of "These Foolish Things" with Sauter-Finegan. Gerry Mulligan made some remarks. At the end, Mulligan,

Billy Taylor
piano1921 - 2010

Joe Newman
trumpet1922 - 1992
A death this sudden and at this age brings a story to an end not only in mid-sentence, but in mid-paragraph. It feels incomplete because it is incomplete. What you make of it becomes a matter of perspective. In this case, Travis died just as the popular music world was undergoing a dramatic change, the British Invasion, in early 1964. How Travis would have dealt with this is anyone's guess, although one thinks of Gerry Mulligan's "If You Can't Beat 'Em, Join 'Em" in 1965, a recording that told a lot of aspiring jazz musicians that there were rough times ahead. It's also easy to forget the Travis represented a younger link to the Swing Era, its music and sensibilities. Say what you want, no one had quite given up on big bands yet, but losing dynamic young musicians who would replace the players moving into later phases of their careers certainly didn't help. Some, like Doc Severinsen, negotiated the transition very well. What Travis would or wouldn't have done is pure speculation, although his later work saw him moving in a

Conte Candoli
trumpet1927 - 2001

Tony Bennett
vocals1926 - 2023

Stan Getz
saxophone, tenor1927 - 1991
Tags
History of Jazz
Nick Travis
Richard J Salvucci
Doug Mettome
Hal McKusick
Vido Musso
Benny Goodman
Woody Herman
Ray McKinley
Doc Severinsen
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