To quote a recent press release regarding Chris Green's new material: "Best known as the guitarist for metal veterans Tyketto and Rubicon Cross, Chris Green will be showcasing his six-string skills on an all-instrumental five-song EP, Unveil (for which a teaser video can be viewed here). The release comes hot on the heels of Tyketto’s latest offering, ‘Reach,’ which was released via Frontier Records on October 14th. With so many oars in the proverbial water, we were happy to nail down 10 Quickies with Chris Green.
My father was a successful musician, i grew up seeing him on TV and being around live music. There were always musicians around the house, parties with live music and even holidays in Europe while his band played residencies at clubs. So ultimately it seemed a no brainer that i would be drawn to an instrument. My dad kept an acoustic guitar in his office, i’d go in there and just strum the strings even though i had no idea what i was doing. In the end he caved in and taught me a few chords. From there i was hooked and just ran with it, i love playing guitar, it’s the only thing i do that completely makes sense.
2. Who would be your main five musical influences?
There so many, so here we go, let’s try and narrow it down to 5.
3. If you could call in any one collaborator to do a song with, who would it be?
Probably John Sykes, i mean, he wouldn’t even need me around as he sings and plays his ass off, but it’d just be an excuse to sit and jam with one of my favorite players of all time.
4. How would you describe your music to someone who’d never listened to you before?
I would say its Technical Melodic Progressive Instrumental music, yea i think that would be an accurate description.
5. What’s the best thing about being a musician?
Not every having to grow up - hahahahaha. No it has to be that i get see the world and get paid doing it. Not to mention playing in front of thousands of people, it’s a little narcissistic i suppose, but you need a little bit of that to pull the job of properly i think haha.
6. When the band are all hanging out together, who cooks; who gets the drinks in; and who is first to crack out the acoustic guitars for a singalong?
Ok, so with Tyketto we all cook, actually we all love to cook so we take turns. It’s definitely me that gets the drinks in as 3 of the band don’t drink, me and the bass player always hit the meet n greet double fisting a couple of beers.
7. If you weren’t a musician, what would be your dream job?
I don’t know, really my dream job would be that my band was at a stadium level. That absolutely IS my dream job, it’s all i’ve ever dreamed about. But if i HAVE to choose something else, maybe an archeologist, but more Indiana Jones than Time Team haha.
8. Looking back over your career, is there a single moment or situation you feel was a misstep or you would like to have a “do over”?
This is a hard one, because i’m in such a happy place with my family that none of tat would have happened if I hadn’t walked this exact path. There are 1,000 things i could have done differently in my career, and yes i think about it sometimes when i see bands up there in front of 70,000 people, i think “what didn’t i do right to have that success”, but thinking like that leads to a very negative headspace. And i don’t wanna be that bitter musician slagging off musicians just because they’re more successful.
9. If you could magically go back in time and be a part of the recording sessions for any one record in history, which would you choose – and what does that record mean to you?
Probably the Whitesnake ’87’ album. It has so much energy and (in my opinion) the best incarnation of the band. Just to be a fly on the wall and see the takes, the chemistry, an arguments haha. Just the whole thing. I would loved to see that record take shape.
10. What, for you, is the meaning of life??
Apart from 42??? It’s happiness, it’s the only thing that matters. When you’re happy nothing else really matters anyway. I’d take true happiness over absolutely anything.
11. BONUS – tell us a little about your latest release. What might a fan or listener not grab the first or second time they listen through? Are there any hidden nuggets the band put in the material or that only diehard fans might find?
Well my instrumental album UNVEIL came out last December, it’s my 1st instrumental release and i’m so happy with it. All the song on there are emotionally driven, i believe that instrumental music is a bit of a lost art form. To be able to move somebody with music alone and no lyrics, i think that’s a great achievement. It’s easy to move someone with lyrics as everything is laid out for you, you can easily relate to a story. But instrumental music (especially classical) has the chance to let you use your imagination to feel whatever you want, let the music just take you where it wants. It’s been a great experimentation and i think it’s a very inspirational body of work that i’m incredibly proud of. Thanks very much for the opportunity to talk about it.
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