Chris Estes

Christopher Douglas Estes (born June 8, 1971) is a former King Diamond bass player (1994-1999).[1] Originally from Dodge City, Kansas, Estes moved to Denton, Texas in 1991 to attend the University of North Texas as a Jazz Studies major. During his time at UNT he met Darrin Anthony Stull and joined his unsigned Dallas band Mindstorm. During the next three years Mindstorm played the Dallas club scene and eventually caught the attention of Danish singer King Diamond (Kim Bendix Peterson), who had recently moved to the DFW area and was looking for new members for his solo act. In early 1994 three members of Mindstorm (Estes, Darrin (Anthony) Stull, and Herb Simonsen) were officially asked to join King Diamond. During his tenure with King Diamond, Estes recorded three albums and took part in three tours, in addition earning writing credits on the album Voodoo. Returning to college in 1997 and attending classes between studio sessions and tour, Estes eventually earned a degree in Computer Science. In the summer of 1999, Estes received word that the studio session for House of God had been postponed. Burdened by immediate financial needs, Estes reluctantly resigned his position in King Diamond. Estes lives and works in Richardson, Texas as a computer programmer. Estes continues to write and perform music as a hobby in his free time.

Chris Estes
Background information
Birth nameChristopher Douglas Estes
Born (1971-06-08) June 8, 1971
GenresHeavy metal
Occupation(s)Musician
InstrumentsBass guitar, guitar, keyboards
Associated actsKing Diamond

Discography

Photographic art

gollark: Yes, sadly cloud things are taking over.
gollark: google docs = heresy
gollark: Unfortunately, it probably will in practice.
gollark: But that's probably a hard-to-teach mindset thing.
gollark: What would probably be better than teaching specific tools is teaching people, well, how to learn/adapt to new ones, how to debug things, actual manual reading, and whatnot.

References

  1. Bukszpan, Daniel and Ronnie James Dio. The Encyclopedia of Heavy Metal. p. 109-110


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