Chris Collins (musician)

Chris Collins is an American musician, recording engineer/producer and technologist. Collins' work in the New Jersey/NYC music scene has spanned three decades.

Collins got his start in NYC area pop-punk/garage band Mod Fun - which was formed late in 1982 with his childhood friends Mick "London" Hale and Bobby "Werner" Strete, with whom he had been playing music since 1979. Although he had experimented with songwriting from early on, Chris' primary contribution to Mod Fun was as drummer and backing vocalist. The band released two full-length albums, a 3-song EP and two singles between 1984 and 1987. In addition, they honed their performance skills by playing a heavy schedule of club dates at local NYC & NJ venues and touring in support of their records. Their powerful (and sometimes destructive) live sets garnered the band a reputation as one of the New York area's most exciting acts of the burgeoning garage revival scene.

During that same period, Collins also served as the drummer for New York pop-punk outfit "True Colours" which quickly evolved into The Punch Line - a power pop quartet in which the focus was on vocal harmonies and clean production. The Punch Line performed live at a handful of local venues and released one single. The recording sessions for that single, coupled with the break-up of Mod Fun, served as the impetus for Collins' entry into the field of recording engineering.

Collins attended the Institute of Audio Research in New York City where he earned a diploma in multi-track recording technology and eventually became an instructor under president Al Grundy. At age 20 he was, at the time, the youngest instructor to have ever taught a full course load at the Institute and was an active member of both the AES and SMPTE. Simultaneously, he was working extensively as a freelance recording engineer and live sound reinforcement tech - having provided his services to artists such as Liza Minnelli, Elton John, Kim Simmonds (of Savoy Brown), Crocodile Shop and others. Home & Studio Recording magazine published a feature article on Collins in its October, 1989 issue.

Collins continued to perform with bands into the early 1990s, playing drums with NYC's The Devil Dogs and, occasionally, with his old friends in The Punch Line. In addition, he played drums, keyboards and a bit of guitar with long time friends Hale and Strete who had gone on to form Crocodile Shop - also engineering many of the early recordings for that group. In 1992, after leaving the Institute of Audio Research and after a songwriting deal with Kevin Henneman and Deborah Gibson fell through, Collins found himself as the bass player in a short-lived new group featuring Al Scherr of The Incinerators. That act never quite got off the ground and for several years thereafter Collins refocused his energies on computer technology - doing little in professional music.

Late in 1999, Collins did a brief stint as lead singer and occasional drummer for his brother in The Matt Collins Band - taking over full-time drumming duties a few years later. In addition, a brief reformation of The Punch Line led to a headlining performance and the release of a 10-song CD which was recorded in Collins' own 40 track digital studio. Subsequently, Collins served as engineer/producer for New York act "4 Miles Out".

In 2004, Collins' first band Mod Fun performed a reunion concert at The Saint in Asbury Park, NJ in celebration of the reissue of their retrospective CD "Past...Forward" by Get Hip Records. The rekindled friendship among the original members and their renewed interest in making music together has led to gigs in cities as far away as Nashville and Chicago as well as the release of a new double-length CD and multiple performances in an around New Jersey and New York.

In 2006, Collins founded "CC Media Network" - a multimedia production and promotion company to serve as a channel through which his music industry releases could be distributed and various live events could be advertised.

2007 saw Chris Collins produce his first solo album entitled "Eclectic Blue" for limited release through CC Media Network. After catching the attention of BlowUpRadio DJ "Lazlo" and receiving airplay on his Live365 show, much of his original music from that record was showcased in a low key acoustic performance in early 2008.

In 2009, Collins returned to the studio with his bandmates in Mod Fun to begin the recordings that became the band's new CD "Futurepresent". In addition to handling the drums, percussion, and keyboards on the record, Collins contributed an original track entitled "The Jettison" on which he sings the lead vocal. He also served as recording/mixing engineer for the sessions and assisted with production and mastering.

2010 saw Collins' primary musical project, Mod Fun go on extended hiatus so he refocused his energies on music publishing in a venture that would ultimately lead to release of hip-hop artist ERYX first full length album the following year.

Throughout 2011 and 2012, Collins continued to write original music and occasionally perform/record both as a solo artist and with and The Matt Collins Band as well as promote and publish music through his media company. Chris Collins is a writer/publisher member of ASCAP.

Famous quotes containing the words chris and/or collins:

    When I get all these accolades for being true to myself, I say, “Who else can I be? I can’t be Chris Evert.”
    Martina Navratilova (b. 1956)

    The head must bow, and the back will have to bend,
    Wherever the darkey may go;
    A few more days, and the trouble all will end,
    In the field where the sugar-canes grow.
    A few more days for to tote the weary load,—
    No matter, ‘t will never be light;
    A few more days till we totter on the road:—
    Then my old Kentucky home, good-night!
    —Stephen Collins Foster (1826–1884)