Chris Squire
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Yes co-founder Chris Squire |
Christopher Russell Edward Squire (born
March 4,
1948), better known as
Chris Squire is an
English musician and the
bassist and backing vocalist for the
progressive rock group
Yes, and is the only member of the groupto appear on every album (co-founder
Jon Anderson appeared on all but one).
He was born in
Kingsbury, a suburb of northwest
London, in
England, and was trained in the
church choir as a young boy, beginning his musical career in the church's
basement. In
1964, he was suspended from school for "having long hair", and given money to get a haircut. Instead he went home, used the money for other things, and never returned to school.
Squire was fond of experimenting with
LSD in the 1960s, until an incident where he had a bad acid trip. He recalls that he spent months inside his girlfriend's apartment, afraid to leave, and it was during this time that he learned how to play bass. He recovered and never used acid again.
Squire's early influences were diverse, ranging from church and choral music to the
Merseybeat sounds of the early 1960's. Squire's first musical groups
The Selfs,
The Syn, and later,
Mabel Greer's Toyshop, would introduce him to his early Yes collaborators
Peter Banks and
Jon Anderson and to
Andrew Jackman.
During his first conversation with Anderson, the pair broke the ice by discussing one of their favourite groups,
Simon & Garfunkel (Yes later covered "America") and Squire discovered that he and Anderson were both into vocal groups.
Yes released their first record in
1969, and though the band have had many personnel changes over the years, they have continued to record and tour for over 35 years. Squire is the only original member who has remained in the lineup throughout the band's tenure.
During the band's formative years Squire was frequently known for his tardiness, a habit that
drummer
Bill Bruford often complained about. Because of this, Squire would frequently drive at unsafe speeds to get to gigs on time, once causing a horrific accident on the way to a gig in
West Germany after he fell asleep at the wheel, although miraculously nobody was injured.
As Squire, along with
Alan White and
Steve Howe co-owned the "Yes" name at the time, the 1989
ABWH lineup without him (which contained Anderson, Bruford,
Wakeman and Howe) could not record under that name.
Squire's bass playing is noted for being aggressive, dynamic, and melodic. Squire's main instrument is a
Rickenbacker 4001, which he has owned and played since
1965; it was the fourth Rickenbacker 4001 ever imported into
Britain from the
United States. This instrument, with its warmth and distortion, is a significant part of Squire's unique sound which is achieved by a technique known as 'bi-amping'. By splitting the stereo signal from his bass (which divided the signal from the pickups into dual high and low frequency outputs) and then sending the low frequency output to a conventional bass
amplifier and the high-frequency output to a separate lead guitar amplifier, Squire produced a tonal 'sandwich' that added a growling, overdriven edge to the sound while retaining the Rickenbacker's powerful bass response. Squire (who is self-taught) was also one of the first rock bass players to successfully adapt electronic guitar effects such as tremolo, phasing and the
wah-wah pedal to the instrument.
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Squire performing with Yes in 1977 |
Squire's vocals are also key to Yes' music, providing important harmonisation with
Jon Anderson's distinctive
countertenor.
Squire has concentrated overwhelmingly on Yes' music over the years, and his solo works have been few and far between. His first and only true solo record was
1975's
Fish Out of Water, featuring Yes alumni
Bill Bruford on drums and
Patrick Moraz on keyboards and The Syn/The Selfs alumnus Andrew Jackman also on keyboards. Squire was later a member of the short-lived
XYZ (eX-Yes/Zeppelin) in 1981, a group composed of
Alan White (Yes) on drums and
Jimmy Page (
Led Zeppelin) on guitar. XYZ recorded several demo tracks at Squire's home studio in Virgina Waters, but never produced anything formal (ostensibly because vocalist
Robert Plant failed to get interested and still mourning for
John Bonham). XYZ never officially released any material, though two of the demos provided the bases for two later Yes tracks, "Mind Drive" and "Can You Imagine?". Squire also played a role in bringing
Trevor Rabin into the Cinema band project, which became the
90125 lineup. Later, Squire would join with Yes guitarist
Billy Sherwood in a side project called
Conspiracy. This band's self-titled debut album contained the nuclei of several songs that had appeared on Yes' recent albums. Conspiracy's second album,
The Unknown, was released in 2003. In late 2004, Squire joined a reunion of
The Syn, subsequently leaving the band in May 2006.
Chris Squire is commonly known by his nickname
Fish, and the name is associated with many of his works (for example his solo record, and his solo piece
Schindleria Praematurus (The Fish) from the 1972 Yes record,
Fragile). The name has multiple origins. First, his astrological sign is
Pisces, and he is apparently a believer in astrology. Second, in the early days of Yes career, he once accidentally flooded a hotel room in
Oslo,
Norway while taking a shower, and
Bill Bruford gave him the nickname. He has also acquired this nickname because of the alleged amount of time he spends in the bath tub. The nickname can also be interpreted such that the species of fish, the bass is homonymous to the musical instrument, the bass.
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Official website*
Discussion group*
Official Syn website*
Official Umbrello Records website*
Notes from the Edge, official Yes online fan club*
Chris Squire discography