Sean Posted 6 hours ago Posted 6 hours ago This was a fabulous day out and one of the many highlights was @Mike Brooks doing this interview with Chris Childs. It’s a very insightful chat and even if you’re not that familiar with Chris’ work and extensive resume, it’s fascinating and very funny in places. Very enjoyable watching. 5 Quote
Owen Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago Ooh ooh ooh. I have a Chris Childs story! As he moved up the ladder, he left a vacant spot with a Cardiff based Theatre Company which were pushing forward the boundries of theatre as we then knew it. They were called Brith Gof. With substantial Arts Council funding. I have no idea how my name came up. I lived 5 hours away at the other end of Wales. Anyway, they were writing their next production (8 way sound system on 40 foot scaff towers in one of the Harland and Wolf shipyard buildings). One player on each tower and a joystick to pan us to anywhere while the audience were pounded by waves of sound. They were also dodging earth and chalk dust. While the performers flew in on harnesses. I was sent a cassette of what Chris had put down. It was a fretless concerto. I immediately knew that I was WAY out of my depth and my time with them would last the 10 minutes it took for the MD to realise I was not Chris and never would be Chris. Astonishingly I was kept on. If you ever read this Chris, cheers! I had a lot of fun. 3 Quote
Misdee Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago Thanks for posting this, I'm a big fan of Chris's playing going back to the days when I didn't know who he was, or indeed that it was Chris playing the bass parts I was so enamoured of. We take it for granted in the internet age that you can find out who played what for whom, but it wasn't always that way. I remember seeing Chris on TV playing his Status five string live with Go West back when five strings were still a novelty, and I always loved the bass on this track : I had assumed it was Pino, especially as the band were from Cardiff, but it was in fact Chris Childs. Only took me about thirty years to find out by accident! 2 Quote
jonno1981 Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago Thanks for uploading this and all the post production. He was really entertaining on the day, I’ll listen in full when I’ve got an hour free. 2 Quote
Sean Posted 1 hour ago Author Posted 1 hour ago (edited) And, folks, Like, Share and Subscribe etc, as from my point of view I think the content is much better than many other UK bass channels. I learn stuff from most of Brooksy's content that other UK bass Youtubers just can't match. There are UK bass YouTubers whose content just makes me think that I should pull my finger out and do a bit myself. Support the quality Youtubers. Edited 1 hour ago by Sean 1 1 Quote
Mike Brooks Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago Blimey! Thank you, Sean, glad the content is working for you. I'll keep at it! Mike 1 1 Quote
HeadlessBassist Posted 27 minutes ago Posted 27 minutes ago It's a great chat and highly entertaining, Mike. Thanks for putting it up, Sean 1 Quote
Misdee Posted 25 minutes ago Posted 25 minutes ago 1 hour ago, Sean said: And, folks, Like, Share and Subscribe etc, as from my point of view I think the content is much better than many other UK bass channels. I learn stuff from most of Brooksy's content that other UK bass Youtubers just can't match. There are UK bass YouTubers whose content just makes me think that I should pull my finger out and do a bit myself. Support the quality Youtubers. Yes, Mike's channel is chock full of interesting stuff, and the live chats are particularly good IMO. Suffice to say that, by contrast, there is some content from UK bass YouTubers that confirms the urgent mental health care crisis in this country. I don't mean Scott's Bass Lessons, though. That's more of a mental hair care crisis. 1 1 Quote
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