Sandy Beales - One Direction
The word boyband conjures up certain images. Fan mania. Handsome, fresh-faced looks. An abundance of hair gel. Low V-necks. Embarrassing dance routines. Ballads. All standing up from their bar-stools for the key change. Knickers thrown around like caution to the wind. Â
One Direction had all these things, and a little more too.
If you havenât heard of them, you must have been living under a rock. Although currently on hiatus, they are still undeniably the biggest boy band the UK has given the world for some time. Birthed from the 2010 X Factor TV series, they are the most successful thing to have come from the show, despite coming only third place in the competition. Formed on the show from five individual participants hoping for solo success, they made a winning combination and had one of the fastest climbs to worldwide success. They have had a colossal amount of hits, including 95 international number one singles, and their âWhere Are Weâ Tour was the highest-grossing tour of all time by a vocal group.
Although they were very much a pop act, with thousands of young girlsâ affections in the palms of their hands, they werenât the squeakiest of clean; their live show was heavy hitting, with shredding guitar solos Brian May wouldnât kick out of bed. Harry Styles did his best to channel his inner Mick Jagger at all times. They certainly had more to offer to the adult fan base than people perceived. I got to meet them in person during the filming of the X-Factor series, and Niall came strumming in my direction, singing âWish You Were Hereâ by Pink Floyd.
Surprising.
Sandy Beales had been building his career as a session bass player when he got the call for the One Direction live band audition, shortly after the series finished. Hailing from Devon, Sandy had moved to London to attend Tech Music Schools and study for his degree in Popular Music Performance. He had worked with many artists including Loick Essien, Ben Montague, Leddra Chapman and Franka De Mille performing on TV shows and touring across Europe.
Little did he know, joining the session band for some X Factor contestants could blow up to be the wild journey that it was. He was on the road for nearly five years with the notorious 1D boys, so he must have some storiesâŠ
V: So Sandy, you were touring with One Direction for 4-5 years. Over that time you must have a lot of experiences to share. I wanted to start with asking about how you got the One Direction gig.
S: I got put forward for the audition and went from there. They were at Grove Studios and it was the typical thing; go in, have a two minute chat and then play the track that they sent us. It was pretty full on, especially the second day of auditions. Everything was thrown at us, making sure we could handle high pressure scenarios.
V: I read that you thought it was just a UK tour you were auditioning for.
S: Yeah, we were told we were needed for just three months. I think I realised it was going to blow up when we went to New York to play the Today Show. We were pulling up to the TV studio at 4am in Manhattan, in this little van. As we got there we could see queues of fans, going half a mile back around the corner. It was one of these moments where we were like âwow, this is crazy.â It suddenly became apparent that this gig was going to be a bit different.
V: Yes, I remember watching that performance and thinking how mad it was. You were performing outside amongst a sea of fans. When the tour began, were the venues you were playing already quite big?
S: We played theatre sizes, relatively small venues but still a really good size for a bandâs first tour.
V: I remember I came to your show in Brighton on the first tour and even then, I remember it being ridiculous. I came in after you guys had already gone on stage and Iâll never forget walking into that venue being absolutely blown away by the wall of sound that was the screams of fans.
S: Yeah, itâs just absolutely that wall of sound, from start to finish. Pure screaming. It was like that everywhere in the world apart from Japan. They scream right up until the minute you start playing. Apparently, for them itâs a respect thing. They want to respect the other audience members and that everyone wants to hear the show. The concept of that is pretty amazing. One time, on a Japanese TV show, the security guards had to make a human chain, to stop the fans pushing through. But the show started, and they stopped. Itâs the only place itâs been almost silent whilst weâre playing. One time, the boys put their mics down and sang a song a capella. They couldnât have done that anywhere else.
V: Speaking of security guards, I know that eventually even you guys in the band had your own. At what point did that happen?
S: I canât really remember, but it got to a point when the boys fame was so big, that that attention and following spilt over to anyone attached to the project, ourselves included. Our security wasnât just to protect us, but to make sure we were never causing a scene or problem for the rest of the team. It was madâŠas session players you never think youâll need security.
V: Yeah, I think itâs quite unusual for session players to have their own dedicated security. There must have been some really crazy fans as well. Did you have any experiences with them that were good or bad?
S: It was just amazing always seeing a sea of fans 100%, giving it their all in the audience. That was the cool thing about it, it was amazing that the boys and their music brought that out in people. Itâs great to get that intense a reaction from people.
V: Okay, tell me the craziest fan story?
S: Well⊠there are loads I wonât mention but hereâs one! There was one time when myself and the other musicians were in our hotel, coming down in the lift. As we got to the bottom there was a girl wheeling a huge suitcase. The hotel security decided to stop her and ask which room she was going to, and to see inside the suitcase. They opened it up and her friend was inside. They were trying to pretend they were staying in the hotel, to try and get to the floor where the boys were. She just spilled out on the floor.
V: Wow⊠Thatâs really, really wild! Do you remember any other stories like that?
S: The trouble is my memory is so bad.. itâs funny when I talk to other people on the tour and theyâre saying âdo you remember that time this happened?â and I had totally forgotten about it.
V: This is the trouble, when youâre moving around so much you really can forget where you are. It sounds ridiculous and clichĂ© but itâs really what happens. Thatâs why I called this blog âwhere are we again?â
S: Yeah, there have definitely been times I have been on the phone to my wife and she asks where I am and my answer has been, âI couldnât even tell you what country Iâm in right now.â It sounds dumb but genuinely youâre not sure. One time we got out of the bus to go get a McDonalds or something and we were really not sure what currency we were meant to use.
V: Yeah, especially if you go to sleep on the bus somewhere, you could wake up somewhere else. In America, my way of figuring out at least what state youâre in, is looking at what the state number plate is on the majority of cars.
S: I remember especially in 2013 when we were in a lot of arenas, the bus drives straight into the arena. You wake up inside, with literally no idea what city youâre in. Each day is like the previous, and it becomes a bit of a blur. As a fan, going to see an artist like Prince at the O2 would be really memorable day, but for everyone on stage and in the crew itâs day 51 of 200 on the road. Each day is special, but itâs a different experience as a fan and as a musician.
V: There must have been some really memorable shows though. What were they for you?
S: Definitely Wembley Stadium and Madison Square Gardens in New York. The first stadium we ever played with 1D was in BogatĂĄ, Colombia. Itâs so fanatical and intense there anyway, for that be our first stadium was pretty amazing.
V: Obviously it was such a whirlwind, it must have taken some adjusting to get used to. Was it hard at times?
S: It wasnât really. It was just so much fun. It was what I always I wanted to do, and to be doing it was amazing. Lets be honest, as musicians however much faith we have in ourselves, we all have self-doubt too. Iâm not sure that Iâve ever met someone who knew âYes, Iâm definitely going to do all these things I dream of doing.â Itâs one thing saying it youâre going to do these things, and itâs another actually really believing it will happen. That self-doubt is not always a negative thing, it can be a good thing. Itâs being realistic. But I was doing it, thinking wow, this is actually happening. It was just special, so it wasnât hard at all. I enjoyed every moment.
V: I think thatâs the thing, when youâre on a tour like that, youâre living out your wildest dreams so you just feelâŠ.really chuffed!
S: Thatâs it, and I think you need to allow yourself to have that buzz and excitement and just love it; just let yourself be part of it. I feel like some musicians think you need to act really aloof or stand-offish, and I just think, just enjoy yourself! Let loose and be yourself. Your façade is always going to get found out.
V: Well Iâm sure for a lot of people on that tour, it was their first experience of a gig that massive⊠constant stadiums! I always thought it was particularly special that you and Dan (the 1D guitarist) had known each other since you were teenagers, went to college together in Devon, then both went to the same university in London and then ended up on this huge tour together.
S: Yeah, it was mad, because weâre from such a small place - itâs not a music hub by any means. I remember seeing him when I parked up at the auditions. There we were, both auditioning and it was crazy. I did a masterclass tour last week and I was saying to the students in the schools, âyouâre making your contacts now. You might not think it, but itâs already begun.â You never know whatâs going to happen in the future and who youâre going to end up working with.
V: So, itâs good to know it wasnât ever a struggle to be on the road for you. I remember before I went on my first big tour, a musician friend sat me down and said âthereâs going to be some days where youâre going to find touring really hard, and you might be sad and want to go home.â I took it on board and was a little worried, but for me there were actually never times where I was really feeling down. I certainly never wanted to go home. Were there any days that you wanted to go home?
S: I felt the same, there was never a day that I wanted to book a flight home. Itâs being away from your friends and family thatâs the hardest bit about touring. I like to think that weâre not really being paid to play music, were being paid to be away from home.
V: Yeah, and some people say we get paid a lot to be on stage for an hour, but itâs not the hour that weâre on stage that we want to get paid for really, itâs all the hours of bullshit surrounding that!
S: Yeah, its a 24 hour job. You could be working any time, getting up at 4am for a flight every day of the week. Thatâs the unique thing about our job. The actual music part is amazing, but everything else⊠isnât necessarily not fun, but there can be times where it can be full on. There can be times when you donât know why you feel a bit upset on the road; youâre just run down. It gets everyone to some extent. Though this is the thing people donât really talk about much; the fact it can be hard sometimes.
V: I think the difficult thing to wrap your head around is the highs and lows. One minute youâre on tour, playing to thousands of people and the next you could be back home doing the dishes. I think you have to get used to that. I remember one week I was doing a TV show with Cee Lo Green, and Snoop Dogg is there in the audience dancing along - itâs great. The next day I was back in the pub, pulling pints. Itâs just a bit mad.
S: And thatâs the nature of our job, that you can go from those crazy highs, experiencing some of the things that artists do and then the next day, thatâs it. Youâre back at your flat, eating Chinese food or whatever.
V: Yeah, making beans on toast.
S: Exactly! Itâs crazy, but itâs amazing, I wouldnât trade it for the world. Thatâs probably what got me through any hard times. Just telling myself; this was your dream, you wanted this.
V: Throughout your years of touring, you must have found yourself in some very surreal situations, in places youâd never thought youâd be. What were some of those moments where you thought, âis this real?â
S: Oh manâŠso many. We all got to go to the Real Madrid training ground and meet the team, including Christiano RonaldoâŠit was insane. We went to watch a Manchester United game in Chicago, and Iâm a big United fan. We got to go to the locker room afterwards and meet some of the players. It was proper childhood dream stuff. You donât think musicâs going to get you those kind of dreams, itâs crazy that side of it. We did a TV show in Japan and Katy Perry was performing on it too. This was when she was dating John Mayer, and he was watching the show backstage. I was sitting next to him watching it too, and I love John Mayer, and there he was, right there. It was surreal the first time I played with Brendan (from the band Wheatus). Josh (1Dâs drummer), him and I were in his studio and we jammed âTeenage Dirtbag.â I just look at Josh like, âweâre playing Teenage Dirtbag, with Wheatus.â There was also a show we did where Ronnie Wood came up and played. Lots of things like that happened, and youâve gotta keep your cool but youâre thinking, âthis is crazy.â
V: Where there any other people or celebrities you met that were memorable?
S: Will Smith⊠Katy Perry⊠again it was the really nice people that stood out. People like Olly Murs and Dermot OâLeary; not necessarily global mega-stars, but just super nice people. Thatâs what sticks in my mind.
V: I would love to know about your favourite âday offâ between shows on a tour. What was yours?
S: Thereâs been a lot of good onesâŠ. we had a few days off in Australia so Jon and I took a trip to the Great Barrier Reef. Youâre at work, and then suddenly it feels like youâre on holiday. There was a time in Minnesota where someone we know took us out on a boat on Lake MinnetonkaâŠ
V: Oh, was that Doug?
S: Yeah!
V: I did that with him too! Dan told me to go hang out with him in Minneapolis.
S: (Laughs) There you go, we had a shared experience! Thatâs the thing thatâs great, when people tour and they end up with friends all over the world and then we all get to meet through each other. Itâs always nice to have a local show you around too.
V: Iâve read that your advice for aspiring session musicians is to be a chameleon and be multi skilled. What other qualities do you think make for a good musician?
S: Firstly, being a great player is most important. Then I would say punctuality and personality. Just being a pro. Wanting to be the person that someone would recommend when theyâre asked about bass players. Our industry is word of mouth.
V: What were the qualities in yourself that you think landed you the One Direction gig?
S: I spent at least two years saying yes to everything. There were bad gigs, there were great gigs and so much in-between, but you just meet so many people that way. Itâs about not closing any doors and doing as much as possible.
V: So you ultimately got the One Direction audition because the person who put you forward was someone youâd met as a result of saying âyesâ to something?
S: Yeah, it was somebody who had seen me in the studio one time. Saying âyesâ led me to all those things. Sometimes you do things that lead to nothing, but what have you lost really? You still performed that night, and I think any time the bass is in your hand is a good thing.
V: So since One Direction have stopped touring for now, what have you been up to recently?
S: Iâm touring with a new artist JP Cooper, teaching and presenting masterclasses. Just keeping busy! Also taking the time to decompress after the tour was important too. I think you need to give yourself that little bit of time to get back to normal life. It was nice to get back and have a few months of doing nothing.
V: Yeah, plus you came off tour and had a wife and a new house to spend time with.
S: Yeah, if I didnât have my wife I donât know what I wouldâve done. The start of 2016 wouldâve been very different, and I donât know how I wouldâve coped with it. But we had a family unit, a house to decorate, and all these other things to take my mind somewhere else. It was also important to take the time to enjoy how all the hard work had paid off. Itâs about being able to look forward, and put yourself in that mindset to think âwhatâs waiting for me at the end of this tour?â
- VW

















