Jump to content

Nick Beggs

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Nick Beggs
Beggs in 2010
Beggs in 2010
Background information
Birth nameNicholas Beggs
Born (1961-12-15) 15 December 1961 (age 62)
OriginWinslow, Buckinghamshire, England
Genres
OccupationMusician
Instruments
Years active1978–present
Member of
Formerly of
Websitenickbeggs.co.uk

Nicholas Beggs (born 15 December 1961[1]) is a British musician, noted for playing the bass guitar and the Chapman Stick; he is a member of the Mute Gods and Kajagoogoo, formerly also a part of Iona and Ellis, Beggs & Howard and plays in the band of Steven Wilson. He is known for modifying a Chapman Stick into a fully MIDI-capable instrument triggering MIDI from both bass and melody strings; he calls it the Virtual Stick.[2]

Career

[edit]

Beggs' first band Johnny and the Martians (formed when he was 10) consisted of two friends on trumpet and acoustic guitar and Beggs on drums. He went to Linslade Secondary School. After attending art school, in 1978 Beggs formed the band Art Nouveau with Steve Askew, Stuart Croxford Neale and Jez Strode. Chris Hamill (Limahl) joined the band in 1981 and at Beggs' suggestion it was renamed Kajagoogoo. The release of the first single "Too Shy" in January 1983 saw the band on a promotional tour as the record reached number 1 in the UK Singles Chart.[1] The band went on to have four more UK top 40 hits through 1983 and 1984.

After firing lead singer Limahl in 1983 and, following a split with Strode in 1985, the three remaining band members reformed as Kaja,[1] releasing the album Crazy Peoples Right to Speak and the single "Shouldn't Do That".

Between 1985 and 1987, Beggs concentrated on writing with various other songwriters and formed Ellis, Beggs & Howard in March 1987.[3] Ellis, Beggs and Howard split in 1989, and in 1990 Beggs joined the progressive folk band Iona.[1] He recorded two albums with them: The Book of Kells and Beyond These Shores.

He continued working with various artists and bands, including Gary Numan, Alphaville, Belinda Carlisle, Emma Bunton (on her album Life in Mono) and Led Zeppelin's former bass player, John Paul Jones.[4] In 1996, Beggs met Howard Jones on a flight from the United States, and Jones invited Beggs to tour as part of his band.[citation needed]

Beggs worked as a manager for Phonogram Records for eight months. He later became a contributor to various guitar publications, and he is a staff writer for Bass Guitar magazine. He is also a patron of London-based guitar and bass school Guitar-X.

He has recorded and released Stick Insect (2002), The Maverick Helmsman (2004), and The Darkness Inside Mens Hearts.

Beggs and Askew have been heavily involved with a duo named Industrial Salt, which have been successful in Japan. They have written material for Claudia Mills, a finalist on the talent show Let Me Entertain You.

A reformed Kajagoogoo with Beggs, Askew and Croxford Neale toured in 2004. Limahl and Strode both rejoined in 2008, and the band toured extensively.[5] The band released an EP of new material in 2011. In an interview with Cherry Red TV in 2018, Beggs talked about the reunion, stating "we reformed and we toured and we recorded an EP and remastered the back catalogue...and at that point I felt that we had done it all. It was a nice way to tie it up, put a bow on it and leave it alone and move on."[citation needed]

Since 2011, Beggs is a member of Steven Wilson's touring band,[6] having also played on Wilson's albums Grace For Drowning, The Raven That Refused to Sing, Hand. Cannot. Erase., the EP 41/2, To the Bone, The Future Bites and The Harmony Codex.

In February 2013, Beggs's project Lifesigns, with John Young and Frosty Beedle, released a self-titled album.

Beggs also became a member of the Belgian prog band Fish on Friday, starting the collaboration with their third album named Godspeed at the end of 2014, marking the starting point of a series of successful albums, along a decade: Quiet Life (2017), Black Rain (2020), and the most recent creation, 8mm (2023).

He contributed to John Mitchell's solo project Lonely Robot, which released the album Please Come Home in February 2015.

Beggs's latest collaboration is named The Mute Gods,[7] with Marco Minneman and Roger King. Their first album was released in January 2016, titled Do Nothing till You Hear from Me. This was followed up with Tardigrades Will Inherit The Earth in February 2017 and Atheists and Believers in 2019.

Nick Beggs, Berlin, 14 November 2008

In 2024, Beggs will temporarily replace bass player Peter Trewavas of Marillion, who is unavailable after a medical procedure. [8]

Personal life

[edit]

Beggs was a pescetarian for a while. He has been a vegetarian as of January 2016,[9] due to his rejection of the livestock industry.[10]

Discography

[edit]

Ellis, Beggs and Howard

[edit]

Singles

[edit]
  • "Big Bubbles No Troubles" (RCA, 1988) – # 59 UK
  • "Bad Times" (RCA, 1988)
  • "Where Did Tomorrow Go?" (RCA, 1988)
  • "Big Bubbles No Troubles" remix (RCA, 1989) – # 41 UK
  • "Big Bubbles No Troubles" remix (RCA, 1989)

Albums

[edit]
  • Homelands (RCA, 1988)
  • The Lost Years Volume One – available from Nick Beggs website
  • The Lost Years Volume Two – available from Nick Beggs website as of 2010

Lifesigns

[edit]
  • Lifesigns (Esoteric Antenna, 2013)

Solo

[edit]

Albums

[edit]
  • Stick Insect (Stick Enterprises, 2002)
  • The Maverick Helmsman (Stick Enterprises, 2004)
  • The Darkness Inside Mens Hearts (Burning Shed, 2014) – a compilation of the solo Chapman Stick pieces from his albums Stick Insect (2002) and The Maverick Helmsman (2004)
  • Words Fail Me (Cherry Red, 2019)

With other artists

[edit]

With John Paul Jones

With Steve Hackett

With Steven Wilson

With Fish on Friday

  • Godspeed (2014)
  • Quiet Life (2017)
  • Black Rain (2020)
  • 8mm (2023)

With Lonely Robot (i.e. John Mitchell)

  • Please Come Home (2015)

With The Mute Gods

With Trifecta

  • Fragments (2021)

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d Larkin, Colin (1997) The Virgin Encyclopedia of Eighties Music, Virgin Books, ISBN 0-7535-0159-7, p. 270-271
  2. ^ "Nick Beggs: Prog & Proud". www.bassplayer.com. Retrieved 12 March 2016.
  3. ^ Burnett, Bryan (1998) "Nick's Knack for Finding Success", Evening Times, 7 December 1988, p. 17, retrieved 2 July 2011
  4. ^ Christman, Ed (1999) "Zeppelin's Jones Makes Solo Return", Billboard, 14 August 1999, p. 12, 15, retrieved 2 July 2011
  5. ^ "Kajagoogoo announce British tour", BBC, 14 May 2009, retrieved 2 July 2011
  6. ^ "Steven Wilson ‘Grace for Drowning’ 2011 Official Dates!", 8 July 2011, retrieved 22 September 2011
  7. ^ "The Mute Gods - Band". The Mute Gods. Retrieved 30 November 2015.
  8. ^ https://www.marillion.com/news/newsitem.htm?id=531 [bare URL]
  9. ^ Yücel, Ilker (12 January 2016). "The Mute Gods InterView: Embrace the Things that Frighten". ReGen. Retrieved 13 November 2016. ...since doing that interview, I have become a complete vegetarian; I don't even eat fish now as I did then.
  10. ^ Lartigot, Gilles (9 April 2013). "Nick Beggs (Steven Wilson) : interview dé(s)tressée avec le Heavy Metal Cook" (in French). Radio Metal.
[edit]