Christian Lasegue

Christian Lasegue is an international recording and performing artist. He was formerly with the critically acclaimed music group Jag Panzer until his departure in 2011.[1] Currently, he is a Psychologist/Professor in the Denver area.

Christian Lasegue
Background information
GenresRock, Classical, Jazz, Blues, Country, Acoustic, Heavy Metal
Occupation(s)Musician (Guitarist, Keyboardist, Composer), Psychologist/Researcher/Educator
InstrumentsGuitar, Keyboards, Piano
Years activeOngoing
LabelsSony, SPV, Steamhammer, Various
Associated actsSylencer, Jag Panzer, Independent Solo Artist
Websitechrislasegue.com

History

Christian Lasegue joined Jag Panzer prior to recording Chain of Command; following the release of that album, he left the band in order to pursue other musical and educational goals. Rejoining the band in 2008, he recorded the critically acclaimed album The Scourge of the Light in 2010, which placed at No. 117 on the Billboard New Artist Chart, making the album Jag Panzer's most successful to date. .[2] Lasegue left Jag Panzer in 2011.

Christian has been featured on several other albums, including "Shredding Across the World, Volume Three", Leviathan's "Beholden to Nothing, Braver Since Then", and Sylencer's "A Lethal Dose of Truth" (in which he recorded the track "Rise and Die", alongside Dream Theater's Jordan Rudess).

Lasegue has performed/recorded with classic rock artists such as Kenny Loggins, members of Steppenwolf, Frank Zappa, Loggins and Messina, Spencer Davis, Chris Hillman, Herman's Hermits, Warren Zevon, Axe, and Badfinger.

gollark: Possibly. But in general, by sneaking a thing into the category via technicalities or quoting the definition and saying "see, it obviously fits" or something like that, you can make people treat it like a central member of the category.
gollark: This is something called the "noncentral fallacy", where because a thing is an *edge-case example* of a category, you taint it with all the connotations of everything else in the category.
gollark: A lot of political arguments are also something like "abortion is murder" / "abortion is important for choice", where you just associate it with badness/goodness tangentially to taint it with that badness/goodness.
gollark: Nevertheless, people will go around actually answering it based on whether they associate warm fuzzy feelings™️ with Israel or Palestine.
gollark: That's not really a well-stated question. It doesn't actually depend on the state of some thing which exists in the world.

References

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