chris chandler
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The Chris Chandler Story

Few musicians can claim “on-the roadisms” the way Chris Chandler can. He is a true veteran of the road, traveling across The United States of Generica for many years. His anthology of road tales transforms into a flock of doves beneath the musical high-wire act.

Originally from Stone Mountain, Georgia the son of a Baptist minister, Chris has been on or around the stage his whole life. As a teen-ager he was in the bars and on the road working as a roadie for bands like the Georgia Satellites. He graduated from the North Carolina School of the Performing Arts in 1988. That summer – which was supposed to be a “summer away from college” he hit the road as a street performer to fund his way to audition as a lighting designer in Theatres across America. He actually landed a job on Broadway no-less but turned it down to become a performer in his own right. He has been on the road ever since.

For the first few years he was living in has car and stopping in every town from Bangor to San Ysidro where he opened his guitar case and waxed the manifesto electric sporting a sign that read “Stranded Musician Needs Gas Out of Town.” Eventually he hooked up with a group of performers busking in Harvard Square where he joined a commune of other traveling street musicians. These nomadic experiences naturally fed him into the world of activism. Since then he has performed at thousands of festivals, colleges, and bar rooms across the US and Canada.

You can usually find him at demonstrations and protests – large and small - all across the US and Canada. He was recently seen protesting the FTAA in Miami, the G-8 in Calgary and the Iraq war (both of them) in Washington, DC to name a few.

He’s played union halls and debutante balls, picket lines and county fairs, “Prestigious” folk clubs, and skid row laundromats. His experience as a street performer and rabble rouser shine through every performance making him a welcome addition to festivals, carnivals, hayrides and riots, or where ever the rabble need to be roused.
Why this name?
I have a hard time remebering more than my own name.
Do you play live?
more than 250 shows in 2004 all over the US and Canada. Do I like it? well I have done only this for so long it's hard to say - people who think life is great simply have nothing to compare it to.
How, do you think, does the internet (or mp3) change the music industry?
there is a music industry? and all this time I've been doing it on my own.
Would you sign a record contract with a major label?
I already have - i just can't get them to sign it.
Your influences?
Anne Feeney, Dan Bern, Jim Infantino, Adam Brodsky, Myshkin,
Favorite spot?
The Flying J truckstop at I-90 and I-35.
Equipment used:
a folding chair
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