Thisbiography of a living personneeds additionalcitations forverification. Please help by addingreliable sources.Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced orpoorly sourcedmust be removed immediately from the article and its talk page, especially if potentiallylibelous. Find sources: "Chris Haskett" – news ·newspapers ·books ·scholar ·JSTOR(May 2010) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
Chris Haskett | |
|---|---|
Haskett performing with theRollins Band in 1993 | |
| Background information | |
| Born | 1962 (age 62–63) Washington, D.C., U.S. |
| Occupation | Guitarist |
| Formerly of | Rollins Band |
| Website | chrishaskett |
Chris Haskett (born 1962) is an American guitarist. He was a member of the rock bandRollins Band[1] from 1986 to 1997 and again for the band's reunion in 2006. He has also recorded or performed withDavid Bowie,Foetus,Pigface,The Cassandra Complex,Tool,[2]The Joy Thieves, and others.
Haskett was born inWashington, D.C. He spent 1976–1977 in the UK where he was greatly inspired by the birth of the UKpunk scene. Soon after his return to the US he was recruited into seminal D.C. band The Enzymes. Heavily inspired by such diverse influences asSun Ra,The Art Ensemble of Chicago,The Damned andCaptain Beefheart, the band existed at the fringes of what would eventually turn intoWashington, D.C. hardcore. After the appearance of theBad Brains on the scene, the band became moved to a more conventionally punk and reggae repertoire. The Enzymes recorded a number of sessions but never released any.
In 1982 he moved to Leeds to finish an undergraduate degree in Philosophy. While there he joined Dave Coleman a.k.a. Surfin Dave's surf/trash band. Originally called the Beany T's, the band was rechristened the Absent Legends. The band played a good deal in the UK and released one LP.In Search of a Decent Haircut onCrammed Discs in 1985. The Absent Legends disbanded the following year.
During a return visit to Washington, D.C. in the Summer of 1986, Haskett encountered longtime friendHenry Rollins. The two had been in regular contact since 1984 and often discussed musical collaboration. The serendipitous meeting turned into an improvised plan. Washington, D.C. bassist Bernie Wandel and Absent Legends drummer Mick Green were brought in as rhythm section and the result was the albumHot Animal Machine.
From 1987 to 1997, Haskett was the guitarist in theRollins Band. The band racked up close to a thousand performances across the globe and were known for a high-intensity blend of raw energy and profound musicianship. In 1994 they were nominated for a Grammy and performed live at the ceremony. This incarnation broke up in 1998 after finishing their tour on theCome In and Burn album. Rollins kept the Rollins Band name with a new lineup of the band. The Rollins/Haskett/Cain/Gibbs lineup reformed briefly for the "As the World Burns" tour with Los Angeles rockersX.
Post-Rollins Band, Haskett has done multiple, mostly low-profile, projects. Throughout the 1990s he played his own instrumental compositions live with various bands. Inspired by bothSonny Sharrock and theGrateful Dead, the instrumentation was usually guitar, bass, and two drummers. 1995 saw his first solo releaseLanguage[1], a mixture of angular, dense, difficult acoustic guitar (some in duet with ex-Birthday Party guitaristRowland S. Howard) andtape loops inspired bymusique concrète . In 1997 he released the CD"Nonfiction" in collaboration with drummer Brandon Finley (ofDog Eat Dog). The CD was a fusion of electric jazz and thego-go music that had been the soundtrack to his Washington, D.C. teen years. 2002 saw the release of "[2]" which showcased a more conventional approach to the electric guitar and allowed his debt to his heroes such as Zappa and Beck to show through. He reunited with Brandon Finley for 2011'sMaybe Definitely[3]" (a play on Jeff Beck's title "Definitely Maybe") and another foray into the jazz/go-go territory the two explored on "Nonfiction". In 2014, he releasedThe Courage Born of Conflicting Terrors[4]" in collaboration with Nick Enfield and Mirna Sodre.
Other past projects included collaborations withReeves Gabrels at the end of the 1990s, the Preaching to the Perverted Tour withPigface,The Cassandra Complex,Foetus ("Blow tour 2001"). He is also heard on the song "If I'm Dreaming My Life" on theDavid Bowie album'hours...'.
Now resident in Australia,[3] Haskett continues to record and tour.
Haskett was one of the first "indie" guitarists to putPaul Reed Smith guitars in front of large audiences notably on the Rollins Band's 1991 tour on the firstLollapalooza. His customized PRS CE24's, later combined with the original appearance of theMesa Boogie Dual Rectifier series became a staple of modern rock. More recently, his association with Paul Reed Smith resulted in a unique 9-string custom which has the lower E-A-D strings coursed for a 12-string sound but leaves the high G-B-E strings single to allow easier bends and solos.