Having started his career in the 1960s working as a session musician and member of rock’n’roll instrumental group The Outlaws, Chas Hodges has since become best known as the piano-playing half of self-styled ‘rockney’ combo Chas and Dave alongside bassist David Peacock.
Their mixture of pub rock, boogie-woogie piano and music-hall humour scored them several UK top 20 hits in the late 1970s and early 1980s including Gertcha, Rabbit, Tottenham Hotspur’s 1981 FA Cup Final song Ossie’s Dream (Spurs Are On Their Way To Wembley) and Ain’t No Pleasing You. Chas and Dave even inspired the theme song to sitcom Only Fools and Horses, and would have recorded it too if they weren’t on tour in Australia at the time.
Chas and Dave even inspired the theme song to sitcom Only Fools and Horses
Despite Hodges currently receiving treatment for cancer of the oesophagus, the duo are still going strong, with a date supporting Phil Collins at BST Hyde Park in London set to be their comeback after several gig postponements in 2017. As he convalesces in the comfort of his allotment – gardening being his other great love in life alongside music – Chas discusses five of the songs that tell the story of his life and career, from the early rock’n’roll and skiffle numbers that inspired him to a huge hip-hop anthem upon which he’s very prominently sampled.
Lonnie Donegan – Bring a Little Water Sylvie
Chas Hodges: I obviously go back to what made me want to become a musician first. My mum was a great piano player, she brought us up around the piano, and she dearly wanted me to be a piano player. But I didn’t want to know when I was a kid because I was more interested in football and fishing and playing out in the street. All the kids I knew that learned to play the piano, I’d say to them, ‘You coming out to play football’ and they’d say, ‘Nah, got to go ‘av a piano lesson’, and I’d be like, ‘Bugger that’.
But one day I heard a record and it was Lonnie Donegan, and I just liked the sound of him strumming that guitar. I said to my mum, ‘I’d love to play guitar’ and she was so happy, she ended up getting me an old guitar from my uncle Alb over in Hackney – he had an old guitar. She actually learned to play it and taught me. So that record got me started, along with my mum’s encouragement, to becoming a musician.