The life and work of Chas and Dave singer Chas Hodges

The life and work of Chas and Dave singer Chas Hodges

Musician Chas Hodges was best known as one half of the cockney rock duo Chas and Dave.

Hodges and Dave Peacock rose to fame in the English pop-rock band, known for their witty lyrics about living in London, in the 1970s.

They had a string of hits, including Rabbit, Snooker Loopy and Ain’t No Pleasing You.

Charles Nicholas “Chas” Hodges was born in Edmonton, Middlesex, in December 1943.

He was a singer, pianist and also played the guitar, bass and banjo.

Chas Hodges
Chas and Dave with the Duchess of Cornwall during the Royal Variety Performance in 2013 (Arthur Edwards/PA)

The band’s debut album One Fing ‘n’ Anuvver was released in 1975 to critical acclaim.

They featured on adverts for Courage beer and Heinz Baked Beans and also collaborated with Tottenham Hotspur FC on their FA cup final songs.

Hodges published a book called Chas & Dave: All About Us in 2008.

Peacock retired from the group in 2009 after his wife Sue died from lung cancer, but the band reunited two years later and continued to tour.

They performed at the Royal Variety Performance for the first time in 2013 and a sell-out headline show at the Royal Albert Hall the following year.

Chas Hodges
Chas and Dave pictured on board HMS Belfast to celebrate their debut recording album One Fing ‘n’ Anuvver in 1975 (PA)

The band was forced to cancel a number of tour dates in August this year due to his illness.

Hodges said in a statement at the time: “In my life as a musician/entertainer I would say the most depressing thing to have to do is to have to cancel a gig or gigs.

“Fortunately, throughout my career of thousands of gigs with Dave or in other bands, these times have been very few and far between, and only extreme illness in the past (and I mean extreme) illness has prompted me/us to have to make this decision.

“So it is because of extreme illness on my part that the forthcoming gigs are going to have to be cancelled.”

He died on September 22 2018, aged 74, from organ failure.

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