Skip to main content
MusicRadar MusicRadar The No.1 website for musicians
UK EditionUK US EditionUS AU EditionAustralia SG EditionSingapore
Sign in
  • View Profile
  • Sign out
  • Artist news
  • Music Gear Reviews
  • Synths
  • Guitars
  • Controllers
  • Drums
  • Keyboards & Pianos
  • Guitar Amps
  • Software & Apps
  • More
    • Recording
    • DJ Gear
    • Acoustic Guitars
    • Bass Guitars
    • Tech
    • Tutorials
    • Reviews
    • Buying Guides
    • About us
Don't miss these
chris lake
Artists “People have been imitating my sound for a long time, but now someone can type a prompt and make a song that sounds like Chris Lake – that's wild!”: Chris Lake on how AI is putting music-making “under threat”
Myles Kennedy makes his point during an early evening festival performance. He plays his signature PRS T-style and wears all black.
Artists Burned out recording vocals? Myles Kennedy shares his top for getting the perfect take
Tommy Thayer
Artists “Back in the old days we all had those ‘magic’ guitars or amps”: Kiss star doesn’t know what gear he used on his new EP
Tom Waits
Artists The DIY attitude that drove Tom Waits’ finest album
modeselektor
Artists "The answer might sound a little boring, but it's probably my iPhone": Modeselektor on their go-to instrument
The Power Station
Artists “The most expensive bit of drumming in history”: When stars of Duran Duran and Chic formed a decadent ’80s supergroup
A PRS McCarty 594 on a hard case
Electric Guitars Best electric guitars 2025: Our pick of guitars to suit all budgets
Mark Tremonti grimaces (or smiles?) as he plays a solo during a 2025 live show with his PRS signature guitar.
Artists "It’s just the most emotive piece of music": Alter Bridge's Mark Tremonti on the greatest guitar solo of all time
Adam F
Artists Adam F on making '90s DnB classic Colours – and why he’s re-recording it for 2025
Davey Johnstone and Elton John are back-to-back as they perform live, with Johnstone playing his Captain Fantastic Les Paul Custom
Artists Davey Johnstone on the making of Elton John’s 1975 masterpiece, Captain Fantastic And The Brown Dirt Cowboy
TORONTO, ONTARIO - NOVEMBER 14: EDITORIAL USE ONLY. NO STANDALONE PUBLICATION USE (NO SPECIAL INTEREST OR SINGLE ARTIST PUBLICATION USE; NO BOOK USE). Taylor Swift performs onstage during "Taylor Swift | The Eras Tour" at Rogers Centre on November 14, 2024 in Toronto, Ontario. (Photo by Emma McIntyre/TAS24/Getty Images for TAS Rights Management)
Artists Taylor Swift's bass player Amos Heller says he couldn't believe the "insane" length of the Eras Tour setlist
Josh Freese
Artists “People said, ‘Hey, I saw you’re on that Avril Lavigne record.’ I went, ‘Nah!'”: The drummer who’s played on 400 albums
bicep
Artists “Omnisphere’s like a Korg Wavestation on crack – you press one button and 16 things happen at once”: Bicep on soft synths, sampling glaciers and club-focused new project CHROMA 000
MPH
Artists “I got woken up at 3 AM by a fan spamming my DMs. I’m still in disbelief”: UKG phenom MPH on featuring in Thomas Bangalter’s comeback DJ set
Bass
Music Production Tutorials 37 heavyweight bass production tips
More
  • "The most expensive bit of drumming in history”
  • JoBo x Fuchs
  • Radiohead Daydreaming
  • Vanilla Fudge
  • 95k+ free music samples
  1. Artists
  2. Singles And Albums

Thunder bassist Chris Childs talks pushing the boundaries with new album Rip It Up

News
By Mike Brooks ( Bass Guitar ) published 14 April 2017

Lessons from the Brit rock legends

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works.

Introduction

Introduction

Ace Brit-rockers Thunder return with an excellent new album, loaded with bass goodness from Chris Childs...

Following up 2015’s highly acclaimed Wonder Days album was always going to be a challenging task, but with 2017’s Rip It Up primed and ready for unveiling, it sounds like the chaps from Thunder have cracked it. But as we found out when we caught up with their suave bass lord, Mr Chris Childs, the album went down smooth and by the numbers.

The brief to everyone for this album was to stretch ourselves a bit

“Apart from the actual time involved, it was very much like we released Wonder Days and went straight back into the studio the next day and carried on writing and recording,” he explains. “Luke [Morley, guitar] started writing songs as soon as Wonder Days was finished and we went back to Rockfield Studios with the same engineer and gear.”

He continues: “I’m very proud of it: it’s enough of a departure from Wonder Days but it maintains what made that album so good. The brief to everyone for this album was to stretch ourselves a bit: that was an internal brief among ourselves, to push the boundaries, which, as it turns out, is totally in keeping with the artwork too. You look at something from the outside and it appears to be one thing, but look slightly deeper and it’s something completely different from what you were expecting.”

As Childs has been with the band for 20 years, he, Morley, singer Danny Bowes, guitarist/ keyboardist Ben Matthews and drummer Harry James have a way of working together that keeps all parties happy. 

“Luke’s demos come to us completely fully formed, and then it’s my job to play the bass-lines. On some of the songs, because he approaches them from a guitarist’s point of view, some of the lines are really hard to play. 

“I’ll try a couple of things, and if it works, it stays - but if it doesn’t, then his idea stays. He’s a flexible producer: we’ve made so many records together over the last 20 years that it now works very quickly. Harry and I have always played well together, it’s like putting on an old pair of slippers!”

Page 1 of 3
Page 1 of 3
Live lasts

Live lasts

Looking back at Childs’ stints with Go West and Then Jerico in the late 80s and early 90s, his path towards a two-decade career so far with Thunder wasn’t an obvious one, as he’s quick to acknowledge. 

“To be honest, I didn’t know very much about Thunder when I joined them,” he recalls. “They weren’t on my radar, and I’d never heard one of their songs before I learned the material for the audition. As a gigging bassist, you look at most things on a short-term basis, not 20 years into the future. I never expected it to last this long - and I’m overjoyed that it has.”

The people that come to see us know that they will see the very best that we have to offer at the time

Which brings us to Thunder’s new album, Rip It Up, an album that takes the best elements of Wonder Days and, with Luke hitting a purple patch in his songwriting, pushes the band forward - something Childs is quick to reinforce.

“We’ve never rested on our laurels,” he says. “Every show and every recording is the very best that we can do, there’s never any ‘second best’. I think the fact that we can still sell out venues is because we’ve maintained such a high standard, certainly of live performance. The albums have ebbed and flowed with musical changes, but the people that come to see us know that they will see the very best that we have to offer at the time.”

With a keen eye (and an even keener ear) for new gear and different sounds, it comes as no surprise that Childs’ bass arsenal has changed since we last caught up with him. He runs us through the gear we can expect to see and hear on the new albums by Thunder and his other project, Tyketto, as well as on the road with both outfits.

“For recording, I used an Orange Terror Bass head and a Fender Neo 4x10 cab, which work very well together, along with a Sansamp Bass Driver pedal and the Ampeg Scrambler unit. However, for the tours, I’m now endorsing Fender gear, specifically a Bassman 800 amp and 6x10 Neo cabinets. The Bassman amp is absolutely stonking - you can pick it up with one finger, it’s ridiculous!”

Page 2 of 3
Page 2 of 3
Hitting the Big time

Hitting the Big time

He continues: “On Wonder Days, I used my Rickenbacker and a Höfner Electromatic, which sounds great - although it’s difficult to use live because it feeds back even at low volume. 

“In the studio it has a great sound. On the new Tyketto and Thunder albums, aside from one or two tracks, I used my Sandberg Forty Eight and California TM basses exclusively. 

The TM bass was head and shoulders above any bass I’ve ever played in my life. I had to have it, it’s just unbelievable

“The TM bass is a ‘Hardcore Aged’ model: I picked it up at Synergy Distribution’s warehouse and it was head and shoulders above any bass I’ve ever played in my life. I had to have it, it’s just unbelievable! Regardless how much top end you put on it or how hard you play it with a pick, it’s always got meat in the middle of the note - every note sings. This one does not leave my grasp, it will only ever get used in the studio.”

The Thunder back catalogue has a number of songs with dropped tunings, so it’s unsurprising that five-string basses and Hipshot-equipped four-string instruments are called upon from time to time. As Childs explains, 

“I’ve got Hipshots on my Rickenbacker and two other basses. A lot of the Thunder songs with drop D tuning are much easier to play with an open D string rather than a fretted low B string, because that’s the way Luke has written them.”

After all these years, Childs is still excited about the instrument, mixing with the occasional bass-playing heavyweight and what lies ahead.

“I love playing, and I get just as big a thrill from picking up a bass guitar now as the very first time I picked one up,” he says with tangible excitement.

“Tyketto recently performed on a rock cruise with Mr Big and the Winery Dogs, who knocked my socks off - they were unbelievable. I went backstage to meet the guys. I never get starstruck, but I shook Billy Sheehan’s hand and I said ‘That was mind blowing!’ I felt like a complete fan and it felt brilliant, especially when I’ve been playing as long as I have. 

“You think you’re doing well in your own little world and then, to be totally gobsmacked and in awe of them, it was fantastic. Thunder are off to Australia shortly. I’ve spent my whole career wanting to go. I’m 57 and I’m finally going - I can’t wait!”

Rip It Up is out now on Edel Music.

Page 3 of 3
Page 3 of 3
Mike Brooks
We're the UK's only print publication devoted to bass guitar. image
We're the UK's only print publication devoted to bass guitar.
Subscribe for star interviews, essential gear reviews and killer tuition!
More Info
Read more
DarWin
“Most pop music is rubbish now”: Legendary drummer Simon Phillips on producing supergroup DarWin
 
 
Steve Morse poses in the studio with his Ernie Ball Music Man signature model – not the guitar synth at the bridge.
“Nobody can play better than that guy, man!”: Steve Morse on the supernatural powers of Petrucci, Johnson and Blackmore
 
 
Justin Hawkins
“He wanted it to sound tinny, so he literally put the mic in a tin”: When The Darkness teamed up with Queen’s producer
 
 
Bass
37 heavyweight bass production tips
 
 
MARIBOU
“Each of our albums had a synth that really excited us. The first was a Prophet ‘08, the second was the MS-20, and this time the Moog Matriarch is on every track”: Maribou State on Hallucinating Love
 
 
Fender's American Professional Classic series photographed against the side of a chrome tour bus [L-R]: Jaguar in faded Sherwood Green Metallic, HSS Stratocaster in Faded Lake Placid Blue, Stratocaster in Faded Firemist Gold, Telecaster in Faded Butterscotch Blonde, Precision Bass in Faded 3-Color Sunburst.
Fender gives its US lineup a retro-modern makeover with the American Professional Classic range
 
 
Latest in Singles And Albums
Portrait of British musician Kirsty MacColl (1959 - 2000) and Irish musician Shane MacGowan, the latter of the group the Pogues, as they pose together, each holding a toy gun with one hand and, in the other, a Christmas cracker over an inflatable Santa Claus, 1987.
“In operas, if you have a double aria, it's what the woman does that really matters. The man lies, the woman tells the truth": The story of Fairytale Of New York
 
 
Lady Gaga performs during her 'JAZZ & PIANO' residency at Park MGM on August 31, 2023 in Las Vegas, Nevada
“Being a human being isn’t going to go out of style anytime soon”: Why Lady Gaga is unafraid of AI
 
 
Artist Paul Simon arrives for the Polar Music Prize at Konserthuset on August 28, 2012 in Stockholm, Sweden
“One of music’s great storytellers”: Paul Simon among artists to be given Lifetime Achievement award at 2026 Grammys
 
 
Joe Strummer, with Topper Headon behind, performing live onstage
We were boys before, now we were men”: The making of the Clash’s mature masterpiece, London Calling
 
 
Dave Gahan
“ I was like, 'That’s like Elvis asking! Of course you let him do it!’”: The Depeche Mode classic loved by Johnny Cash
 
 
Digital generated image of abstract multicoloured wave pattern.
“So many ways a fan can support an artist they love”: Billboard attempt a chart repair job
 
 
Latest in News
Perry Bamonte of The Cure performs at Riot Fest 2023 at Douglass Park on September 17, 2023
“Quiet, intense, intuitive, constant and hugely creative": Perry Bamonte, of the Cure, dies aged 65
 
 
D'Angelo and Prince
D’Angelo was so in awe of Prince that he refused to play his guitar on the one occasion they shared a stage
 
 
Chris Rea circa 1970
Tell Me There’s A Heaven: Chris Rea has died, aged 74
 
 
LONDON, ENGLAND - JULY 27: (EDITORIAL USE ONLY) Alanis Morrisette performs live on stage at The O2 Arena on July 27, 2025 in London, England. (Photo by Samir Hussein/WireImage for ABA)
Alanis Morissette reveals what she thinks is “the real irony” of the fuss caused by the lyrics in her 1996 hit
 
 
 Morrissey performs at The SSE Arena, Wembley on March 14, 2020 in London, England
Back To The Old House: Morrissey signs again to Warners subsidiary Sire
 
 
The Beatles
This deep dive into a classic Beatles song reveals 4 synth parts that we’d never even noticed before
 
 

MusicRadar is part of Future plc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site.

Add as a preferred source on Google
  • About Us
  • Contact Future's experts
  • Terms and conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Cookies policy
  • Advertise with us
  • Accessibility Statement
  • Careers

© Future Publishing Limited Quay House, The Ambury, Bath BA1 1UA. All rights reserved. England and Wales company registration number 2008885.

Please login or signup to comment

Please wait...