Chris Tsangarides learned to play piano as a child and studied trumpet at the Royal Academy of Music,[3] before studying economics at college.[4] He started his career in the music business in 1974, as an apprentice at Morgan Studios in London, one of the major independent recording studios in the UK at the time.[4][5] Initially, he worked there as a tape operator and his first job as sound engineer was on Judas Priest's second album Sad Wings of Destiny in 1976.[4][5][6] He engineered the British hit single "Naughty Naughty Naughty" in 1977, a pop song by Joy Sarney, whose success gave him much more work as engineer at the studio.[4] In that period he engineered and mixed albums of new wave acts, such as Japan's Obscure Alternatives (1978),[6] and jazz fusion releases of Colosseum II and Brand X.[4] Tsangarides befriended Colosseum II guitarist Gary Moore, who asked him to produce his solo album Back on the Streets (1978), which was Tsangarides's first job as producer.[4] The song "Parisienne Walkways", sung on the album by Thin Lizzy's Phil Lynott, was a hit in the UK.[7] Tsangarides continued working with Moore on live albums and produced Back to the Blues in 2001.[4][8]
The 1990s saw Tsangarides still at work with metal bands like Exodus, Overkill, Judas Priest again with the album Painkiller, Japanese band Loudness and guitar virtuoso Yngwie Malmsteen,[10] but he also produced for British gothic rock act the Sisters of Mercy and the alternative rock groups the Tragically Hip and Concrete Blonde.[5][8] For the latter band, he also produced and engineered the hit single "Joey" in 1990.[13] In 1999, Tsangarides collaborated as a performer and songwriter with Shin Hae-chul in the techno/metal act Monocrom. They made one album and did an arena tour in Shin's native Korea.[4]
At the beginning of the 2000s, Tsangarides had his own music company called Rainmaker Music, which included a recording studio with the same name in South London.[4] He later opened another studio called The Dump in Kenley, Surrey, which operated until January 2006.[14] Among others, New Model Army, Leanne Harte, Winters Bane and Glyder recorded there.[14]
In 2006, Tsangarides opened a new recording facility, Ecology Room Studios in Kent, England, where he went on producing new and established acts on lower budgets than in corporate studios.[6]The Strawbs, Mountain, Steeleye Span, the Quireboys, Biomechanical, Spit Like This, Savage Messiah and many other bands recorded at his new facility. LunarMile, whose members include Toni-Marie Iommi (daughter of Black Sabbath's Tony Iommi) and Alex Hill (son of Judas Priest's Ian Hill), recorded there in June 2007.[15]
Between 2010 and 2013, Tsangarides collaborated with the Band Complete team at SAE Athens. Tsangarides acted as the recording-sessions mentor, supervisor, recording engineer, and producer. Band Complete engaged students in several areas of creative media production/publishing and the professional life of a music band. Overall, Tsangarides mentored three intakes and engineered/produced EPs for Puta Volcano, Stonebringer, and Skinny Whales.
In February 2012, Tsangarides announced details of a new record label Dark Lord Records formed with the Strawbs frontman Dave Cousins.[16] The first release on the new label was Normalityville Horror by Spit Like This on 21 May.[16]
Tsangarides occasionally played guitar and performed live with the metal band Exmore / More 2012.[10]
Tsangarides is known for a guitar recording technique called "the vortex", which he first used when recording the guitar of John Goodsall for the Brand X album Moroccan Roll in 1977.[4] He later refined the technique, which gives to the recordings a random panning effect similar to a reverb, but obtained through a particular placement of microphones.[6][10]
^ abcdefSaxon, Jonathan (March 2009). "Ecology Now!"(PDF). Tape Op (70): 30–36. Archived from the original(PDF) on 3 February 2015. Retrieved 25 January 2015.
^ abcdeKrannila, Ville; Asell, Jari; Tattari, Kimmo (August 2009). "Chris Tsangarides". K. K. Downing Steel Mill. Archived from the original on 29 November 2014. Retrieved 3 February 2015.
^Harris, Tony (2011). "Morgan Studios". Philsbook.com. Archived from the original on 1 June 2013. Retrieved 19 June 2013.