Chris Swinney
Newcastle, UK      Rock / Acoustic Rock / Folk Rock
    • Songs
    • Not going down
    • Throw me a line
    • Mary won't let me go
    • All that I can hide (I will)
    • It always ends this way
    • Don't try this at home
    • Makes me feel good
    • Over the moon
    • Pull it down
    • What amazes me
    • Now, forever
    • The last time
    • T.J's tune
    • Out of my life
    • Just when I thought
    • This hasn't been his day
    • Missy's eyes
    • What are you gonna do?
    • Guise of conservation
    • Any other way
    • You threw it all away
    • Something in Rennison's pies
    • Without wheels
    • Right back at you
    • What are you gonna do? (instrume...
    • Start again
    • Over now
    • So easy
    • Heading just one way
    • Solid ground
    • Next time around
    • Jealous
    • Only love could do those things t...
    • Blood out of a stone
    • Asshole
    • The life we were given/coming down
    • Treating a love like mine
    • Where my heart lies
    • Something inside
    • Long way home
    • This is what you get
    • You give yourself away
    • Call the tune
    • Tell her no
    • Since you walked out the door
    • Spare me the truth
    • Heart of the light
    • Not Going Down
    • The Last Time
    • The Life We Were Given
    • Over Now
    • This is what you get
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Status New CD, "Try this at home", now available through www.cdbaby.com

Artist Info

Members: Chris Swinney
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About

 
Chris was born into a working class background. His father was a coal miner and his mother was a hard working housewife – the way it was for many back in the late 1950s.
 
Scremerston near Berwick-upon-Tweed, was where it all began but before Chris was two years old, The Blackhill Colliery where his father worked was closing and the Swinney family moved to Shilbottle near Alnwick in Northumberland, England where the coal mine was thriving.
 
Chris spent a lot of his early years listening to the radio – particularly the U.K. charts on BBC Radio 1 and Radio Luxembourg late at night in bed, where he'd sing along to the hits at the top of his voice.
 
Around the age of twelve, Chris took a huge interest in The Beatles and decided that playing guitar was the thing for him. After a short time playing a classical guitar which he struggled with, his parents bought him his first steel strung acoustic guitar manufactured by “Kay”. His guitar tutor became The Beatles Complete Songbook and he worked his way through it until he'd learnt most of his favourites.
His recording set up back then was one microphone and a cassette recorder and his first taste of sound on sound recording was when he used two cassette recorders to enable him to sing harmonies with himself (and build up lots of hiss and noise in his recordings!).
Chris also bought his first electric guitar in the early 1970s from the music shop in his home town of Berwick-upon-Tweed – a black “Avon” Les Paul copy. This was accompanied by a 15 watt WEM guitar combo.
 
 
By the age of 16, Chris was performing gigs at his local pubs and clubs. He spent some time with one or two bands but was more at home playing solo. It was around this time that Chris became interested in writing his own songs.
 
Chris met Berny in 1977 at one of the local pubs where he used to play and in 1978 they were married. In 1979 they upped sticks and moved from Northumberland to Harrogate, North Yorkshire due to lack of work in their area.
Chris continued to play occasional gigs and worked with bands around Harrogate but few got past the rehearsal stage.
 
However primitive those two early cassette players were, the enjoyment of being able to build the parts for a song always stayed with Chris and, in the first half of the 1980s, he bought his first four-track cassette recorder – a Tascam Porta One. From then on, he was well and truly hooked on writing and recording his own songs and was rarely seen performing live, except for the occasional one or two songs in his local pub.
 
Chris used his new recording machine to record demos which he could submit to publishers and sent off a huge amount of tapes in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Due to this, many of his songs were assigned to publishers but despite lots of positive feedback, none resulted in any of Chris' songs being covered by artists.
 
With the advent of the CD recorder and the digital multi-track, in 2000 Chris decided to put some of his favourite recordings together on one CD entitled, “First”.
 
In November 2002, Chris and Berny made the move back to north Northumberland, just a few miles from where Chris was born.
 
Chris was submitting very little to publishers by this time and decided to concentrate on writing and recording a new album. Many of the tracks were to be inspired by his own personal experiences and feelings. In 2004, “Was it something I said?”, was released and it wasn't long before Chris was back in the studio writing and recording again for his next CD, “Major 3rd”, which became available in 2006.
 
Chris has just released his fourth CD, "Try this at home", which is available through www.chrisswinney.com and www.cdbaby.com/cd/swinney4
 
 
Copyright © 2007, 2008, 2009 Chris Swinney
 

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