It's weird how some songs become radio and classic rock staples, and some do not. Those last weels, listening to the car radio I stumbled, somewhat surprisingly, numerous times over Travis, a band I hadn't thought about and listened to in about fifteen years. Travis is a band I really left in the past, then decided to do some digging and see what this type of music of the early 2000s tells me now.
There are some obstacles, starting with Fran Healy's lyrics, which usually usually top out at nice, cute, sometimes cloying and alays very earnest. Which is fine for a young writer and, even moreso, a young listener. But once as a listener you grow out of that phase, and the band does not, the paths of you and the artist will divide, and cross again only by accident or happenstance. It might be fun to cross a Travis song at random - and to be fair "Sing" and "Side", despite their simplicity, are fun, catchy songs to fondly remember and sing along to - but their music isn't necessarily deserving of an extremely deep dive. Probably because it's difficult to deep dive into relative shallow waters.
That sounds overtly mean, and I don't want to denigrate Healy or Travis's music, at all. It was fine music and a beautiful respie at a time when the airwaves and MTV, while it still existed. (R.I.P. by the way, as they just closed their last music channel. Video Killed The Radio Star? Internet Killed The Music Channel!) were ruled by swanky, bragging hip hoppers, the rap-rock mooks in Adidas or Nike attire and boy bands/teeny bopper prefab 'artists'. But relistening to the music of Travis immediately leads to the EYMSSM problem. That's an unwieldy acronym, for sure, but what are you going to do? Earnest young men's sad sack music just doesn't roll of the tongue either, but that's what it is.
The problem with EYMSSM is also that, as the band's or singers get older, it turns into EMMSSM, earnest middle-aged men's sad sack music, which can only be worse. Becoming an adult, in every sense of the word, means that the unabashed earnestness becomes even harder to stomach in bulk. I don't need for every earnest young songwriter to become a cynical, middle-aged blowhard, but something's got to five. I was bathing in EYMSSM of Travis' variety in the early 2000s because I myself was an earnest sad sack. But the more the years of being an ESS (don't blame me, I live in the country of acrnyms, both useful and fuckin' stupid) are in the rear mirror, the harder it is to reconnect with some of this music. There are records of a certain type of EYMSSM, notably the 'sensitive young man with an acoustic guitar' kind, that I have difficulty to liste to. I absolutely loved Kristofer Aström & Hidden Truck's Go, Went, Gone when it came out - Swedish slowcore Americana, and earnest young men's sad sacl music at its finest - or most appalling. But I have trouble nowadays to listen to the album all the way through these days.
What seemed profound and comforting - languishing in the sllow sad rhythms of someone els's despair that tried to verbalize your own despair - was fine when I myself was that dude, or something close to it, but now as a middle-aged family man, this kind of music just doesn't hold as much appeal. EYMSSM is literally something you grow out of. Unless of course, you're dealing with the GOAT of EYSMSSM: Jackson Browne was, is and always will be the king of earnest young men's sad sack music, made across his first five albums, and those albums are relistenable to no end. Browne, even as a young man, was writing like an old, wizened man, with wisdom far beyond his years. Who the fuck writes a song like "These Days" when they are sixteen years old?
To get back to Travis, it's a little unfair to brand them exclusicely as purveyors of EYMSSM, because they weren't. As a matter of fact, they started out as something entirely different. Like Radiohead during the first wave of britpop they started out as a noisy, guitar-heavy outfit with their 1997 debut Good Feeling, before refining their sound and songwriting. The noissy edges came off, even as the songs became better. Relistening to Good Feeling, I was surprised how uptempo and rock-heavy that album is, too bad that with one exception the songs aren't really there. But it's a reminder that Travis started like many young bands bewteen school friends start: by making joyful noise and see where it led them. Even if it led them towards ennui.
And again, I'm being unfair once more to the Scottidh foursome, and when you listen to the One Buck Record of the day you will maybe wonder what I'm on about. That's of course because I compiled the brightest and sprightliest of Travis' work circa 1997 to 2010. The cluster of earnest to slightly whiny songs becomes cloying on their studio albums from The Invisible Band onwards, but on this - if I might say so myself - expertly compiled compilation you get the good, anthemic, memorable Travis.
Memorable is the word for one of the first songs they ever wrote "All I Wanna Do Is Rock", with legend having it that it's original title (and accompanying lyrics) was "AllI Wanna Do Is Fuck". but they'd rather not tell that to their parents hen asking for money to buy themselves studio time. So "All I Wanna Do Is Rock" ut was, even if front man Fran Healy never looked the part of a noisy rocker and looks like Rivers Cuomo's weird Scottish cousin. "Turn" off 1999's breajthrough The Man Who is the kind of anthem that contemporaries Coldplay would soon ride to stadium-filling stardom...and steal Travis' thunder in the meantime.
That album of course alsi had "Why Does It Always Rain On Me?", the song that introdiced me to the band. That song and video were everywhere in early 2000, but has completely vanished from general conscience and memory. Interesting, that that one didn't become a classic rocl staple (and neither did anything from The Man Who), but the root-ish "Sing" and "Slide" from The Invisible Band did. The best song from Travis - and the one that gives this comp its name - was a one-off single from late 2000, the as-Byrds-and-jingle-jangle-as-it-gets "Coming Around", an absolutely glorious exercise in jangle rock that opens proceedings here.
This 18-track comp gives you the best from the band's seven albums, though I feel that they started to struggle with 12 Memories, so there's only a token track from that one, The Boy With No Name and Ode To J. Smith. I didn't bother with anything past 2010. Since Travis had a knack for covers to enliven their concerts or throw out as b-sides I also included their takes on classics "Thirteen", "Killer Queen" and "All The Young Dudes", as well as Britney Spears' "One More Time". Eichard Thompson covered that one as well (!), but Travis did it first.
Putting this comp together I really was of two minds. On one hand I was reminded why I left a lot of earnest young men's sad sack music in the rearview mirror, on the other one I was reminded of how good Travis were when they were good. Coming Around: The Music Of Travis should convince yiu of that as well...






















