
“Everybody wanted to be Eddie Van Halen, so bass players were a rare commodity”: Why Les Claypool chickened out of Kirk Hammett’s high school band – and found bass along the way
Les Claypool has looked back on his high school years with Metallica’s Kirk Hammett, and how he even joined his band as a singer.
As a teen, Claypool used to jam with Hammett, but chickened out of his band when he felt his vocals were a little croaky. He then was coaxed by another student who needed a bass player, which was a role he fell into somewhat easily, partly in thanks to the lack of bassists around due to the mass obsession with Eddie Van Halen’s guitar wizardry at the time.
READ MORE: Les Claypool says Kirk Hammett was like “Tommy Chong” in high school: “He’s like, ‘Man, I know the three key elements to success: sex, drugs and rock ’n’ roll’”
In an interview with YouTube’s music mastermind, Rick Beato, the Primus frontman recalls: “[Hammett] actually tried to get me to sing for his band. We had algebra together, and he sat behind me in algebra, and he would always go, ‘Hey, Claypool. Hey, Claypool, check it out, man.’
“I still, to this day, remember this ad. It was the ad for a Stratocaster where the guy’s holding it, and he’s going, ‘It’s a rock machine,’ and the guy behind him is going, ‘No, it’s a country machine…’ [Hammett’s] like, ‘Here’s my guitar, Claypool, man. It’s the one I’m getting.’”
As Claypool would always be sitting around and singing along to bands like Led Zeppelin, Hammett decided he’d make a great singer for his band and gave him some cassettes so he could learn a few tracks for an audition, including Cream’s Sunshine Of Your Love.
“But also on there was Hendrix. I’d never heard Hendrix before. I was 14 or whatever so he turned me on to Hendrix and all these different things. But I chickened out. Back then I was total Bobby Brady, you know, croaking and cracking. But I met this other guy that needed a bass player,” he says.
Claypool’s dad helped him pick out his first ever bass: “We got a brand new P Bass copy Memphis. I got this thing, and I had to pull weeds all summer to pay for it, but then I was instantly in a band because nobody wanted to play bass back then. Everybody wanted to be Eddie Van Halen, so bass players were a very rare commodity.”
Of his bond with Hammett, he later adds, “I didn’t find out till years later that he was kind of pissed at me for bailing on his thing to go play bass in this other band.”
You can watch the full interview below:
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