Travis Stever

Travis Stever (born November 25, 1978) is the lead guitarist for Coheed and Cambria, a progressive rock band from Nyack, New York.

Travis Stever
Stever performing at the Mercury Ballroom in Louisville, Kentucky
Background information
Born (1978-11-25) November 25, 1978 New Jersey, U.S.
GenresRock, alternative rock, progressive rock
Occupation(s)Musician
InstrumentsGuitar, lap steel, vocals
Years active1995–present
LabelsColumbia, Sony BMG Music Entertainment
Associated actsCoheed and Cambria
Fire Deuce
Davenport Cabinet
Websitewww.coheedandcambria.com

Coheed and Cambria

Travis Stever is a founding member of Coheed and Cambria. The band is named after the title characters in lead singer-guitarist Claudio Sanchez's story, which is central to most of the band's albums.[1] Stever acts as a lead and rhythm guitarist in the band. He wrote the lyrics for the song "Ten Speed". He and Sanchez share leads and solos in the band's music, and often switch back and forth in the "dueling guitar" style made popular in the 1970s.

Side projects

Stever is the lead guitarist and vocalist of a side project called Fire Deuce, a 1980s-style metal band who released "Children of the Deuce" in 2005. Stever has also embarked on a second non-Coheed project named Davenport Cabinet, which released Nostalgia In Stereo in 2008, Our Machine in 2013 and Damned Renegades in 2014.[2]

Instruments

Besides guitar, Stever plays other stringed instruments such as the lap steel, banjo, mandolin, and dobro. He is credited with these instruments on various tracks of Coheed albums, and experiments with many of them on the Davenport Cabinet albums.

He uses a guitar talk box, as seen in Neverender Box Set.

He contributed to The Prize Fighter Inferno's My Brother's Blood Machine by playing lap steel on "Wayne Andrews, The Old Beekeeper".

Equipment

Guitars

  • All electric guitars strung with DR Strings: DDT-10/52
  • Gibson Les Paul Standard in wine red w/ Bigsby B5 Tailpiece, Sperzel locking tuners, and Gibson black speed knobs
  • Gibson Les Paul Standard in Vintage Sunburst w/ a Graph-Tech nut and Chrome Grover tuners w/ EMG 81/85
  • Gibson Les Paul Standard in Heritage Cherry-Burst, kept stock
  • Gibson Les Paul Goldtop Traditional w/ Bigsby B7 Tailpiece
  • Gibson Les Paul Custom in Ebony w/ The Keywork graphic built into the finish
  • Gibson Les Paul Studio in Alpine White w/ Gold hardware, kept stock (The Running Free video)
  • Gibson SG Special in Blue-Teal Flip-Flop w/ Chrome Grover tuners and a Graph-Tech nut tuned B Standard for Sentry the Defiant
  • Gibson Johnny A. Model (Domino the Destitute video)
  • Taylor 814-CE acoustic/electric
  • Rickenbacker lap-steel slide guitar tuned to open F (used only in "Once Upon Your Dead Body" and "The Willing Well II: Fear Through The Eyes Of Madness")

Amplifiers

  • Bogner Uberschall 120 W Head w/ Standard Grill
  • Marshall JCM900 100 W Head
  • Mesa/Boogie Stiletto Deuce 100 W Head
  • Mesa/Boogie Stiletto Ace 2×12 50 W Combo
  • Marshall JCM2000 Head
  • Mesa/Boogie Lonestar 2x12 Combo
  • Mesa/Boogie Electra Dyne Head
  • Mesa/Boogie Mark V Head
  • Fractal Audio AxeFX II (current live rig)

Cabinets

  • Mesa/Boogie Rectifier oversized 4x12s
  • Bogner Uberschall 4x12s
  • Marshall 1960A 4x12

Effects

  • Heil Talk Box
  • Dunlop 535Q CryBaby Wah
  • Boss DD-3 Digital Delay
  • Boss PS-5 Super Shifter
  • Boss TU-2 Chromatic Tuner
  • Ernie Ball VP Junior Passive Volume Pedal
  • Morley Steve Vai Bad Horsie 2 Contour Wah
  • Fractal Audio AxeFX II (current live rig)

Personal life

Following his parents' divorce, Stever grew up in both Park Ridge, New Jersey, and Nyack, New York.[3]

gollark: Yes, tables.
gollark: Oh good.
gollark: Don't limit yourself to ASCII though, use the extra CC characters.
gollark: `pcall` can execute strings? I thought that was only `load`/`loadstring`, neat.
gollark: Storing everything as strings also makes serialization/deserialization for files easy!

References

  1. "How Coheed and Cambria Broke Concept-Album Streak on New LP". Retrieved September 30, 2016.
  2. "Davenport Cabinet - Myspace". Retrieved September 30, 2016.
  3. Watry, Greg (November 26, 2014). "Davenport Cabinet plays rock from the heart". KWWL (TV). Archived from the original on November 25, 2015. Retrieved November 24, 2015. Stever's parents eventually split, and he spent his youth between Park Ridge and Nyack, N.Y.
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