Notorious for a regrettable drunken soliloquy on an inflatable mattress in the film The Decline Of Western Civilization Part II, Chris Holmes was the lead guitarist in W.A.S.P. between 1984 to 1990 and again from 1995 to 2001.

These days he fronts his own solo band, who visit the UK and Ireland this month. If you happen to bump into him, just don’t mention Blackie Lawless.

I had radiation treatment but right now I’m doing good. I couldn’t taste any food for over a year, but over the past couple of weeks my buds are returning.

The documentary Mean Man, which can be seen on Netflix, paints you as pretty much a happy-go-lucky kinda guy.

That’s how I’ve always been. The documentary is like me as a musician – no backing tracks or lies. It is what it is. I’m really happy with Mean Man. It shows how we go on tour with a car with a trailer. That doesn’t bother me. I don’t need that other crap any more. I just like to play.

For mandiri performers, times are pretty hard these days.

Right now I’d rather work that way and be around people that make me happy than do what I did with W.A.S.P. That made me miserable. Miserable. Miserable. Do you know any narcissists?

Yeah, one or two.

When you berhimpun W.A.S.P. the deal is that after the first day you go home and throw away your dictionaries and encyclopaedias because Blackie Lawless always knows best. There’s not a thing you can tell him that he doesn’t know. Putting up with that – twice! – tells you how badly I wanted to play.
As part of this tour, titled 65, on June 23 you play a birthday party at a gig in Northampton.

Yeah. That’s gonna be fun. I’m with the guys from the band Wicked Jackals, who I usually play with, and also from my previous band that I’ve played with in Canada. It’s a great way to celebrate my birthday.

What does your set-list look like?

I will always play the songs I wrote from the first two albums [W.A.S.P. in 1984 and the following year’s The Last Command], but I don’t like too much off the third one [Inside The Electric Circus, 1986]. Not at all… bleurgh. The fourth album [The Headless Children, 1989] I would, but without samples it’s hard to do live. And of course some songs from my previous solo albums and the Mean Man band. It’s maybe a fifty-fifty split.

How do you like being a lead vocalist?

I used to like jumping around and going wherever I wanted as a guitar player, but when you sing you’ve got to be at the mic. That’s kind of a drag.

Do you consider yourself a good singer?

No. To me it sounds in tune, but some people absolutely hate my voice. Hey, at least I don’t scream!

How long have you been sober now?

My last drink was February 6, 1996. If I still did what I did back then I’d be dead. I would burn the candle at both ends and in the middle.