Allan Holdsworth

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Allan Holdsworth

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Guitar player, composer

Allan Holdsworth's unique legato guitar stylings and furious speed have inspired the likes of Eddie Van Halen, Steve Vai, Joe Satriani, and the late Frank Zappa. Though he is a perennial winner of Guitar Player magazine readers' polls, he has never attained the kind of commercial superstar status accorded other guitar giants. Through ties with rock and fusion bands, Holdsworth has established a reputation as one of the finest soloists to come out of the English progressive rock scene of the 1970s.

Holdsworth was born on August 6, 1946, in Bradford, England. His father, an amateur jazz pianist, encouraged him to learn piano, but he was more interested in the saxophone. He especially liked Cannonball Adderly and John Coltrane. Not surprisingly, Holdsworth's fluid guitar style has often been compared to the sounds produced by saxophonists Wayne Shorter and Coltrane. When he was 15, his father gave him a guitar and taught him some basic skills. He had an ear for jazz guitarists Jimmy Rainey, Charlie Christian, Jim Hall, and Joe Pass, but also liked Eric Clapton's electric blues sounds.

After playing rock numbers for a time in a local band, he formed a unit called Igginbottom in 1968, with Steve Robinson on guitar and vocals, Mick Skelly on bass, and Dave Freeman on drums. They released one album, Igginbottom's Wrench, and folded shortly thereafter. The album has been re-released as Allan Holdsworth and Friends Igginbottom's Wrench. In 1969 Holdsworth hooked up with trumpeter Ian Carr and his ever-changing band Nucleus on their album Belladonna. At that time the group also included Dave MacRae on keyboards (later of Robert Wyatt's band Matching Mole), Gordon Beck on piano, Clive Thacker on drums, Trevor Tompkins on percussion, and Roy Babbington on bass. Holdsworth departed when Nucleus expanded its lineup by adding, among others, bassist Tony Levin (later of King Crimson). In 1972 Holdsworth did a brief stint with rock band Tempest, which included John Hiseman on drums, Mark Clarke on bass, Ollie Halsall on guitar, and Paul Williams on vocals. They released a debut album of the same name and toured as an opening act for blues guitarist Rory Gallagher.

When Robert Wyatt left the band Soft Machine in 1972, he was replaced by Nucleus drummer John Marshall. That trend continued in 1973 when Nucleus saxophonist and keyboard player Karl Jenkins replaced sax man Elton Dean, and bassist Roy Babbington replaced Hugh Hopper. With ex-Nucleus members comprising the bulk of the outfit, it was natural that Allan Holdsworth should come in for the 1975 Soft Machine set Bundles. Once the opening act for the Jimi Hendrix Experience, Soft Machine had never featured a lead guitarist, let alone one of Holdsworth's caliber. His contributions gave the band a much needed lift and helped steer it in a guitar-oriented direction. Holdsworth truly left his mark on the band, as he was replaced by jazz guitarist John Etheridge upon his departure.

Holdsworth's next stop was in The New Tony Williams' Lifetime. Williams's earlier version of the band, featuring John McLaughlin on guitar and Larry Young on organ, was regarded by many, including Miles Davis, as the finest fusion of rock, R&B, and jazz of its time. Holdsworth and Williams, joined by bassist Tony Newton and keyboard player Alan Pasqua, released Believe It in 1975 to wide acclaim. Holdsworth's unique harmonic excursions were surprisingly well suited to the precise jazz stylings of Williams. They followed that release with Million Dollar Legs in 1976.

For the next few years, Holdsworth collaborated with a number of artists in the English progressive rock scene. He played on Jean Luc Ponty's 1977 release Enigmatic Ocean, with bassist Ralphe Armstrong, Allan Zavad on keyboards, Steve Smith on drums, and Darrell Steurmer on guitar. He was also featured on the Pierre Moerlen-led Gong album Gazeuse!. Two albums with Yes and King Crimson drummer Bill Bruford, Feels Good and One of a Kind, put him alongside Dave Stewart on keyboards, Jeff Berlin on bass, Kenny Wheeler on trumpet, and Eddie Jobson on violin. During that period he also recorded the more commercially accessible U.K. debut album with Bruford, Jobson, and bassist John Wetton. The "super group" experiment was not consistent with Holdsworth's personal musical directions, and he departed before U. K. recorded subsequent releases Danger Money and Night after Night.

His next effort, billed as his first true solo project, was I.O.U., featuring Paul Carmichael on bass, Gary Husband on drums and piano, and Paul Williams, formerly of Tempest, on vocals. By all accounts, Holdsworth turned up the juice on this set, achieving a sophistication and subtlety he was not able to express in a group context. Critics were less than kind as to Williams's vocals, but the album was seen as a long overdue step for Holdsworth. Recorded in 1979, its release was delayed until 1982. On the heels of I.O.U. he released a six track mini-album, Road Games, with Jack Bruce and Jeff Berlin alternating on bass, Chad Wackerman on drums, and Paul Williams again on vocals. Holdsworth was not happy with this effort and the mix was improved for the 2001 CD release.

Between 1985 and 1992 Holdsworth released several albums backed by the core lineup of Alan Pasqua on keyboards and Gary Husband and Chad Wackerman on drums. 1985's Metal Fatigue, also featuring Paul Williams on vocals and Jimmy Johnson on bass, has been regarded as one of his best. Standout tracks were "Devil Take the Hindmost" and "Un-Merry-Go-Round." The following year he released Atavachron, which, of all things, included cover art depicting him as a character in a Star Trek episode of the same name. Truly a product of its time, Atavachron was intended as a futuristically themed vehicle for introducing Holdsworth's experiments with the synth axe. Like many synthesizer-based projects of the 1980s, it now comes across as somewhat dated and overproduced. Likewise, the 1987 release Sand, though more rhythmically exciting, suffered for sounding more like a keyboard exercise than the kind of agile and expansive guitar work that Holdsworth pioneered. He all but shelved the synth axe for the 1989 release Secrets, which is regarded by many critics as his compositional peak. On Wardenclyffe Tower, he introduced the baritone guitar and reached for a softer, more lyrical style.

In 1993 Holdsworth, backed by bassist Skuli Sverrisson, keyboard player Steve Hunt, and Gary Husband on drums, cut Hard Hat Area. Like Wardenclyffe Tower, this album did not rely on synth axe, and it had more of a rock feel. On 1996's None Too Soon, Holdsworth covered two standards beautifully, the Beatles' "Norwegian Wood" and Coltrane's "Countdown." In a jazzier vein, Sixteen Men of Tain featured Dave Carpenter on acoustic bass, Walt Fowler on trumpet, and Gary Novak on drums. In this set Holdsworth blended his guitar and synth axe to create a mellower sound. He returned to the synth axe with Flat Tire Music for a Non-existent Movie, teamed again with Dave Carpenter.

Despite his reputation as a virtuoso, Holdsworth has never been too fond of live performances. In a 2005 Abstract Logix interview he explained: "I don't really do very well on the road. Back when I worked with Tony (Williams) I remember I used to do a lot of stuff in hotel rooms. That was years ago. Now I like to be at home and just sit down with a guitar and try to come up with a few ideas. If it feels OK then I'll make notes and just keep going back until I can make it grow into something. But on the road I get panicked, I get really nervous about playing." Nevertheless, Holdsworth released two live sets: I.O.U. Live in 1997 and All Night Wrong in 2002. Both were recorded in Tokyo, in 1984 and 2002, respectively. In 2003 Holdsworth also toured and recorded with the Soft Machine alumni band Softworks, with Elton Dean, Hugh Hopper, and John Marshall.

Selected discography

With Igginbottom
Igginbottom's Wrench, Deram, 1969; reissued on Deram-Japan, 1988.

With Ian Carr's Nucleus
Belladonna, Vertigo, 1972.
Direct Hits, Vertigo, 1973.

With Soft Machine
Bundles, Harvest, 1975.
Triple Echo, Harvest, 1977.
Land of Cockayne, EMI, 1981.
The Untouchabler, Castle, 1990.
Best of the Harvest Years, See for Miles, 1995.
BBC Radio, 1971-74, Hux, 2003.

With Soft Works
Abracadabra, Universal, 2003.


With Tony Williams New Lifetime
Believe It!, Columbia, 1975.
Million Dollar Legs, Columbia, 1976.

Solo
Velvet Darkness, CTI, 1976.
I.O.U., Enigma, 1982.
Road Games, Warner Brothers, 1983.
Metal Fatigue, Enigma, 1985.
Atavachron, Enigma, 1986.
Sand, Relativity, 1987.
Secrets, Intima, 1989.
Wardenclyffe Tower, Restless, 1992.
Best Works Collection, Jimco, 1992.
Just for the Curious (instructional), CPP Media, 1993.
Hard Hat Area, Polydor, 1996.
I.O.U. Live, Purple Pyramid, 1997.
The Sixteen Men of Tain, Polydor, 1999.
None Too Soon, Polydor, 2000.
Flat Tire-Music for a Non-Existent Movie, Megazoidal, 2001.
All Night Wrong, Sony, 2002.
Then!, Alternity, 2003.

With U.K.
U.K., Polydor, 1978.
U.K./Danger Money/Night after Night (CD reissue), R&R, 1999.

Sources
Periodicals
Guitar Player, February 1993; April 1998; January 2004; November 2004; October 2005.

Online
Abstract Logix, http://www.abstractlogix.com/interview_view.php?idno=80 (February 15, 2007).
Allan Holdsworth Official Website, http://www.therealallanholdsworth.com (January 18, 2007).
All Music Guide, http://www.allmusic.com (January 18, 2007).
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  • Genres: Rock

Biography

Guitarist Allan Holdsworth is widely considered to be one of the finest instrumentalists in all of jazz fusion, yet has never truly received the recognition that he so rightfully deserves. Born on August 6, 1946, in Bradford, Yorkshire, Holdsworth was originally taught music by his father, who was a pianist. Holdsworth didn't pick up the guitar until he was 17 years old, but learned the instrument quickly. After playing in local outfits (and learning the violin), Holdsworth relocated to London, where he was taken under the wing of saxophonist Ray Warleigh. By 1972, Holdsworth had joined progressive rockers Tempest, appearing on the group's self-titled debut a year later before joining Soft Machine in December 1973 -- and radically changing the latter outfit's sound to guitar-based fusion in the process. U.S. drummer Tony Williams discovered Holdsworth around this time, which led to an invite for the up-and-coming guitarist to replace John McLaughlin in Williams' Lifetime project -- Holdsworth abruptly left Soft Machine in March of 1975, subsequently appearing on the Williams recordings Believe It and Million Dollar Legs. But Holdsworth's union with Williams was a brief one, as the guitarist joined up with French-English prog rockers Gong for such albums as 1976's Gazeuse! (released as Expresso in the U.S.) and 1978's Expresso II, in addition to guesting on recordings by Jean-Luc Ponty, Bill Bruford, Gordon Beck, Jack Bruce, and UK.

Also in the late '70s, Holdsworth launched a solo career, which over the years has seen the release of nearly 20 albums (a few standouts include 1983's Road Games, 1985's Metal Fatigue, 1994's Hard Hat Area, and 2000's The Sixteen Men of Tain), as the guitarist has been joined by such acclaimed musicians as Paul Williams (a former bandmate of Holdsworth's in Tempest), Gary Husband, Chad Wackerman, Gary Husband, Jimmy Johnson, Steve Hunt, and Alan Pasqua, among others. In the mid-'80s, Holdsworth was one of the first musicians to use a Synthaxe, a guitar that contained a breath controller that proved to be a cross between a synthesizer, guitar, and saxophone (Holdsworth was awarded Best Guitar Synthesist from 1989 through 1994 in the readers' poll of Guitar Player magazine). In the '90s, Holdsworth also created his own signature guitar model with the Carvin company. In the mid-'90s, Holdsworth briefly shifted away from his fusion originals and recorded an album with longtime musical partner Gordon Beck that dipped into jazz standards. The Sixteen Men of Tain (2000) marked another shift, in that it was the first Holdsworth release to feature an all-acoustic rhythm section. This was followed in 2002 by All Night Wrong, his first official live release. Then! Live in Tokyo was next, featuring Holdsworth's 1990 live band, which was followed by Against the Clock, a career retrospective, in 2005. ~ Greg Prato, Rovi
Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Allan Holdsworth

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Allan Holdsworth

Holdsworth in the 1970s
Background information
Born (1946-08-06) 6 August 1946 (age 65)
Bradford, West Yorkshire, England[1]
Genres Jazz fusion, jazz, instrumental rock, progressive rock
Occupations Musician, composer, producer
Instruments Guitar, SynthAxe
Years active 1969–present
Labels Eidolon Efformation
Associated acts 'Igginbottom, Tempest, Bill Bruford, U.K., The New Tony Williams Lifetime, Gordon Beck, Chad Wackerman, HoBoLeMa
Website therealallanholdsworth.com
Notable instruments
SynthAxe

Allan Holdsworth (born 6 August 1946) is an English guitarist and composer. He has released twelve studio albums as a solo artist and played a variety of musical styles spanning a period of more than four decades, but is best known for his work in jazz fusion. A player noted for his advanced knowledge of the fretboard and unique playing, Holdsworth is cited as an influence by such renowned rock and instrumental guitarists as Eddie Van Halen,[2] Joe Satriani,[3] Greg Howe,[4] Shawn Lane,[5] Richie Kotzen,[6] John Petrucci[7] and Alex Lifeson.[8] Frank Zappa once lauded him as "one of the most interesting guys on guitar on the planet".[9]

Contents

Recording career

Early career and 1970s

Holdsworth first recorded in 1969 with the band 'Igginbottom on their lone release, Igginbottom's Wrench (later reissued under the group name of "Allan Holdsworth & Friends"). In 1971 he joined Sunship, an improvisational band featuring keyboardist Alan Gowen, future King Crimson percussionist Jamie Muir and bassist Laurie Baker. They played live but would never release any recorded material.[10] Next came a brief stint with jazz rock band Nucleus, with whom Holdsworth played on their 1972 album, Belladonna; likewise with progressive rock band Tempest, on their self-titled first studio album in 1973.[11] His playing can also be heard on a live BBC Radio concert from that year, which was released several decades later in 2005 as part of Under the Blossom: The Anthology, a Tempest compilation album.

During the middle part of the decade, Holdsworth went on to work with various well-known progressive rock and jazz fusion artists. These included Soft Machine (Bundles), The New Tony Williams Lifetime (Believe It and Million Dollar Legs), Pierre Moerlen's Gong (Gazeuse! and Expresso II) and Jean-Luc Ponty (Enigmatic Ocean). He has often since expressed his enjoyment of the experience gained with all of these groups, in particular his time spent with drummer Tony Williams.[10][11][12] 1976 brought about the first of Holdsworth's many frustrations with the music industry, when CTI Records released a recording of a rehearsal session with which he was involved, passing it off as an official studio album entitled Velvet Darkness. This angered Holdsworth, who says he still loathes the album intensely and wishes it was never made public.[10]

As the 1970s wore on, Holdsworth was recruited by drummer and Yes founder Bill Bruford to play on his 1978 debut album, Feels Good to Me. Shortly afterwards, Bruford formed the progressive rock supergroup U.K. with keyboardist/violinist Eddie Jobson and bassist John Wetton. As they were looking for a guitarist, Holdsworth was brought in on the recommendation of Bruford. Despite getting along well with them personally and enjoying the recording of their 1978 self-titled album, Holdsworth claims that his time spent with the group was "miserable" due to numerous musical differences whilst on tour, namely Jobson and Wetton's desire for Holdsworth play his solos to an organised structure for each show; something to which he vehemently objected.[10][12]

Whilst U.K. continued with different musicians, Bruford returned to the core line-up of his solo band now simply named Bruford, with Holdsworth retained as guitarist. Their second album, One of a Kind, was released in 1979 and featured extensive contributions by Holdsworth, but by this point he wished to pursue his own musical aspirations and soon left the group, albeit with some reluctance.[10][13]

1980s

Holdsworth's first significant collaborator was jazz pianist Gordon Beck, with whom he first played on Beck's Sunbird album in 1979. Their first collaborative release, The Things You See, followed in 1980, which was a largely similar effort but without percussion or bass. They would later work together again in the decades to come. Soon afterwards, Holdsworth joined up with drummer Gary Husband and bassist Paul Carmichael in a trio that became known as False Alarm. This was to be Holdsworth's first outing as a bandleader and, after the acquisition of former Tempest singer Paul Williams, the band was renamed I.O.U. Their self-titled debut album was released independently in 1982, followed by a mainstream reissue through Enigma Records in 1985.[14]

Immediately after I.O.U.'s release, guitarist Eddie Van Halen brought Holdsworth to the attention of Warner Bros. Records executive Mo Ostin. Van Halen had previously enthused about Holdsworth in an issue of Guitar Player magazine, saying "That guy is bad! He's fantastic; I love him", and that Holdsworth was "[t]he best, in my book".[2] This resulted in the Warner Bros. release of Road Games in 1983. It was produced by longtime Van Halen executive producer Ted Templeman, and received a nomination for Best Rock Instrumental Performance at the 1984 Grammy Awards. Holdsworth, however, has always disliked the EP because of creative issues which arose with Templeman.[12] At that time, the latest incarnation of the I.O.U. band consisted of drummer Chad Wackerman (who, along with Husband, would become a regular Holdsworth bandmember for the next three decades) and bassist Jeff Berlin. Former Cream singer Jack Bruce provided vocal duties, as well as a returning Paul Williams.

Having relocated permanently to Southern California and acrimoniously parted ways with Warner Bros.,[14] Holdsworth signed to Enigma for the 1985 release of Metal Fatigue (along with the aforementioned I.O.U. reissue). It was during this time that Flim & the BB's bassist Jimmy Johnson joined the band and, like Husband and Wackerman, has remained a regular member of Holdsworth's touring bands to this day. Making his last appearance on vocals was Paul Williams, with whom Holdsworth claims to have fallen out due to the selling of live bootlegs by the former.[1]

The Atavachron album in 1986 was a landmark, in that it was the first to feature Holdsworth's work with a brand new instrument named the SynthAxe. This unusually designed MIDI controller[15] (different to that of a guitar synthesizer) would become a staple of Holdsworth's playing for the next fifteen years, during which he would effectively become the public face of the instrument. The next year saw the release of a fourth album, Sand, which featured no vocals and showcased further SynthAxe experimentation. A second collaboration with Gordon Beck, With a Heart in My Song, followed in 1988.

In the late 1980s, Holdsworth set up his own recording studio named The Brewery in North County, San Diego, which would become one of the main recording locations for all of his studio albums beginning with Secrets in 1989, and throughout the 1990s. In a 2005 interview, he stated that he no longer owned the studio following his divorce in 1999.[1][11][12] Secrets introduced pianist Steve Hunt, who went on to play keyboard as a member of Holdsworth's touring band, and for two further albums.

1990s

A collaboration in 1990 with fusion guitarist Frank Gambale came about in the form of Truth in Shredding, an ambitious collaborative project put together by Mark Varney (brother of Shrapnel Records founder Mike Varney) through his Legato Records label.[16] In December of that year, following the death of Level 42 guitarist Alan Murphy in 1989, Holdsworth was recruited by the band to play as a guest musician during a series of concerts at London's Hammersmith Odeon. With former I.O.U. partner Gary Husband now being the drummer for Level 42, these factors all led to Holdsworth contributing guitar work on five tracks for their 1991 album, Guaranteed. Holdsworth would also play on Chad Wackerman's first two studio albums, Forty Reasons (1991) and The View (1993).

Holdsworth's first solo album of the decade was 1992's Wardenclyffe Tower, which continued to feature the SynthAxe but also displayed his newfound interest in self-designed baritone guitars built by luthier Bill DeLap.[17] With the 1994 release of Hard Hat Area, Holdsworth's touring band for that and the following year was composed of Steve Hunt, Husband and bassist Skúli Sverrisson. A collaboration in 1996 with brothers Anders and Jens Johansson resulted in Heavy Machinery, an album which featured considerably more hard-edged playing from Holdsworth than was usual. In the same year, he was once again joined by Gordon Beck on None Too Soon, which comprised interpretations of some of Holdsworth's favourite jazz standards.[18]

2000s–present

The decade began positively with The Sixteen Men of Tain in 2000, but it would turn out to be Holdsworth's last album recorded at The Brewery. Immediately afterwards, he abruptly slowed down his solo output due to events within his personal life.[11][12][19] A pair of official live albums, All Night Wrong and Then!, were released in 2002 and 2003, respectively, along with a double compilation album, The Best of Allan Holdsworth: Against the Clock, in 2005.

His eleventh album, Flat Tire: Music for a Non-Existent Movie, was released in 2001 and remains his most recent studio effort. Holdsworth once mentioned that a new studio album entitled Snakes and Ladders was slated for a 2008 release on guitarist Steve Vai's Favored Nations label, but as of 2012 this has not come about. Further new material with Chad Wackerman and Jimmy Johnson was also said to be in the works.[11] In a 2010 interview, he again claimed to have enough material for two albums, which he planned to begin recording after a show in Tel Aviv, Israel.[12]

Throughout the latter half of the 2000s he toured both North America and Europe extensively, and played as a guest on albums by numerous artists. In 2004 he was featured on keyboardist Derek Sherinian's album, Mythology, as well as in 2007 with the latter's progressive metal supergroup Planet X, on Quantum.

In 2006 he performed with pianist Alan Pasqua, Wackerman and bassist Jimmy Haslip as part of a live tribute act in honour of the late Tony Williams; a DVD (Live at Yoshi's) and double album (Blues for Tony) of this tour were released in 2007 and 2009, respectively. Throughout 2008–10, he toured with drummers Terry Bozzio and Pat Mastelotto, and bassist Tony Levin as HoBoLeMa, a supergroup playing improvised experimental music. On 3 November 2011, Holdsworth performed in Mumbai, India as part of drummer Virgil Donati's touring band.[20] March, April and May of 2012 features extensive touring for Holdsworth, in a trio format with Donati and Haslip, in the US and Europe.[citation needed]

Compositions and style

Holdsworth's solo compositions are primarily instrumental, but vocals were prominent on all his 1980s albums except Sand. Two of his most recurring singers were Paul Williams (featured on I.O.U., Road Games and Metal Fatigue) and Rowanne Mark (Atavachron and Secrets). Additionally, he himself sang on Igginbottom's Wrench and The Things You See. In his early career he occasionally played violin[1] (Velvet Darkness, Sunbird, The Things You See and I.O.U.) and acoustic guitar (Velvet Darkness, U.K., Gazeuse! and Metal Fatigue), but claims not to be proficient at the latter;[19] this being due to its percussive tonal quality, and hence a lack of desire to play an instrument which isn't optimised for legato playing (as explained below).[17]

He has a distinctive style that involves a strong scalar sense, combining elements of jazz and progressive rock. The harmonic structure of his pieces can be highly abstruse, with frequently shifting tonal centres, and his soloing follows from a self-taught advanced modal framework derived directly from his unusually-voiced chords. His phrasing almost always features striking yet subtle transitions between notes that often work contrary to the listener's expectations of consonance and dissonance, with wide and unpredictable intervallic leaps. In his solos he predominantly uses various legato techniques such as slides, hammer-ons and pull-offs (the latter being a personalised method which works more akin to a 'reversed' hammer-on);[21] all of which result in an extremely fluid lead sound. One of the reasons for his renowned emphasis on legato, as opposed to picking, stems from a desire to make the sound between picked and legato notes indistinguishable.[22]

Another of his most identifiable traits is the use of rich, fingerpicked chords (often awash with delay, chorus and other complex effects), which are articulated and sustained using volume swells to create sounds reminiscent of the horn and saxophone.[23] He has said that he prefers both of these instruments to the guitar, the latter of which was not his first choice of instrument upon receiving one from his father when beginning to play.[24][25][26] It was because of this unfamiliarity with the guitar, combined with attempting to make it sound more like a saxophone, that he originally began to use legato without realising that it was not a common method of playing at the time.[17] Furthermore, he was influenced greatly by such saxophonists as John Coltrane, Cannonball Adderley, Michael Brecker and Charlie Parker,[26][27][28] whilst some of his favourite guitarists were Django Reinhardt, Joe Pass, Wes Montgomery, Jimmy Raney, Charlie Christian and Hank Marvin.[25][28]

Equipment

Over the course of his career, Holdsworth has worked with many different guitar manufacturers in a lifelong quest to evolve his unique sound—the latter of which he feels he has never been able to perfect.[13] From the late 1960s through to his time spent with Tony Williams in the mid-1970s, his main instrument was the Gibson SG.[1][29] He then switched to playing custom Fender Stratocaster guitars that were modified with humbucker pickups, whilst also endorsing DiMarzio pickups; during this time he was pictured in a contemporary DiMarzio catalogue (around 1981) playing one of his modified Stratocasters. He continued to play this type of design in the early 1980s, developing custom models with Charvel and Jackson that feature on I.O.U. and Road Games.

In 1984 he developed his first signature guitars with Ibanez, known as the AH-10 and AH-20. These instruments have a semi-hollow body made from basswood with a hollow cavity underneath the pickguard, and can be heard on Metal Fatigue and Atavachron. His long association with Steinberger guitars began in 1987: these are made from graphite and carbon fibre, and distinctively have no headstock. With designer Ned Steinberger, he developed the GL2TA-AH signature model. He started playing customised headless guitars made by luthier Bill DeLap in the 1990s, which included an extended-range baritone model with a 38-inch scale length.[17] However, he has since said that he only owns one of the latter instruments (with a 34-inch scale).[1] He has also developed a line of signature guitars with Carvin, including the semi-hollow H2 in 1996 and the completely hollow HF2 Fatboy in 1999.[30]

On Atavachron, Holdsworth first recorded with the SynthAxe; a fretted, guitar-like MIDI controller with keys and string triggers instead of a strung neck, and a tube that dynamically alters note volume and tone via breathing in a similar manner to a talk box.[31] Sound-wise, he uses patches which are mainly Oberheim synthesizers, as he considers them to be "great sounds".[32] Although he has used the SynthAxe on all his solo releases since Atavachron and still enjoys using his two remaining ones in the studio, he says he no longer wishes to make it such an integral part of his playing—especially live—mainly because of it being so rare (only a thousand units are said to still exist), and difficult to maintain and repair as a result.[1][10][27][32]

Personal life

Holdsworth has lived in California permanently since the early 1980s, and often mentions cycling as one of his favourite pastimes.[27][32] He is also a keen aficionado of beer, with a particular fondness for Northern English ale.[25][28] Such is his taste for ale that he went as far as experimenting with brewing his own in the 1990s and inventing a specialised beer pump named "The Fizzbuster" which, in his own words, creates "a beautiful creamy head".[18][32] With ex-wife Claire he has three children named Louise, Samuel (who was named after Allan's father) and Emily; all three live in Southern California.[citation needed] He has a daughter from his first marriage to Angela Slater named Lynne, who resides in England.[citation needed] He became a grandfather in December 2010 when his daughter Louise gave birth to a baby girl named Rori.[33]

Discography

Studio albums

Live albums

Collaborative albums

Videos

  • 1992: REH Video: Allan Holdsworth (VHS, reissued on DVD in 2007)
  • 2002: Live at the Galaxy Theatre (DVD)
  • 2007: Live at Yoshi's (DVD)

Books

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Milkowski, Bill (2005-10-05). "A Conversation with Allan Holdsworth (#80)". Abstract Logix. Retrieved 2012-02-04.
  2. ^ a b Obrecht, Jas (April 1980). "Young Wizard of Power Rock". Guitar Player. New Bay Media. Retrieved 2012-02-04.
  3. ^ Brown, Pete (2007). "3 Questions – Joe Satriani". The Punch-In. TrueFire. Retrieved 2012-02-04.
  4. ^ Burk, Greg (2008-07-10). "Record review and artist interview: Greg Howe.". MetalJazz. Retrieved 2012-02-04.
  5. ^ Hallebeek, Richard (March–April 2001). "Shawn Lane + lesson". richardhallebeek.com. Retrieved 2012-02-04.
  6. ^ Hallebeek, Richard (2002-03-19). "Richie Kotzen". richardhallebeek.com. Retrieved 2012-02-04.
  7. ^ "Biography". johnpetrucci.com. Retrieved 2012-02-04.
  8. ^ Guitar World Staff (2012-01-12). "60 Minutes with Alex Lifeson and Geddy Lee of Rush". Guitar Player. New Bay Media. Retrieved 2012-02-04.
  9. ^ Goldwasser, Noë (April 1987). "Zappa's Inferno". Guitar World. Future US. Retrieved 2012-02-04.
  10. ^ a b c d e f Prasad, Anil (1993-01-15). "Creating imaginary backdrops". Innerviews. Retrieved 2012-02-07.
  11. ^ a b c d e Prasad, Anil (2008). "Harnessing momentum". Innerviews. Retrieved 2012-02-04.
  12. ^ a b c d e f Brinn, David (2010-11-10). "Fusion, rock and something else". The Jerusalem Post. Retrieved 2011-01-05.
  13. ^ a b "Bio & History". therealallanholdsworth.com. Retrieved 2012-02-07.
  14. ^ a b Mycock, Martin (March 1990). "Allan Holdsworth: In the 80's". Facelift (3). Retrieved 2012-02-04.
  15. ^ Hollis, John (1997-12-12). "SynthAxe". Hollis Communications. Retrieved 2012-02-04.
  16. ^ Monk, Laurie (2010-06-13). "Mark Varney: Legato interview with Laurie Monk". Truth In Shredding. Blogger. Retrieved 2012-02-04.
  17. ^ a b c d Hoard, Chris; Preston, Jeff (February 1994). "Allan Holdsworth: An Interview". The Allan Holdworth Information Center. Retrieved 2012-02-04.
  18. ^ a b Douse, Cliff (December 1996). "Legato Land". Guitar Techniques. Retrieved 2012-02-04.
  19. ^ a b Feuillerat, Olivier (June 2003). "Interview with Allan Holdsworth". Oneiric Moor 2007. Retrieved 2012-02-04.
  20. ^ Administrator (2011-09-26). "Virgil Donati Band in India feat. Allan Holdsworth". Virgil Donati Messageboard. virgildonati.com. Retrieved 2012-20-04
  21. ^ Mulhern, Tom (December 1982). "A Style Apart". Guitar Player. New Bay Media. Retrieved 2012-02-04.
  22. ^ Admin (2010-01-29). "Allan Holdsworth on Not Sweep-Picking…". WoodyTone!. Retrieved 2011-02-04.
  23. ^ Warnock, Matt. "Allan Holdsworth Style Legato Pattern". guitarinternational.com. Retrieved 2012-02-04.
  24. ^ Holdsworth, Allan (1992). "Legato Playing". REH Video: Allan Holdsworth. CPP Media Group. Retrieved 2012-02-11.
  25. ^ a b c Adelson, Steve (2000-09-01). "Interview with Allan Holdsworth". Twentieth Century Guitar. Archived from the original on 2006-12-14. Retrieved 2012-02-04.
  26. ^ a b Hallebeek, Richard (2003-03-17). "Allan Holdsworth (2003)". richardhallebeek.com. Retrieved 2012-02-04.
  27. ^ a b c Morrison, Mike (2006-02-09). "Allan Holdsworth Interview". therealallanholdsworth.com. Retrieved 2012-02-04.
  28. ^ a b c Ablx Staff (2004-08-19). "Allan Holdsworth Interview (#15)". Abstract Logix. Retrieved 2012-02-04.
  29. ^ Hoard, Chris (1987). Allan Holdsworth: Reaching for the Uncommon Chord. Hal Leonard Corporation. pp. 23–25. ISBN 978-0-634-07002-0.
  30. ^ "Semi-Hollow & Acoustic Electric Guitars". carvin.com. Archived from the original on 2011-07-08. Retrieved 2012-02-04.
  31. ^ Laukens, Dirk. "Allan Holdsworth's Guitar Gear". jazzguitar.be. Retrieved 2012-02-04.
  32. ^ a b c d Hallebeek, Richard (1996-05-11). "Allan Holdsworth (1996)". richardhallebeek.com. Retrieved 2012-02-04.
  33. ^ "News". therealallanholdsworth.com. Retrieved 2012-02-04.

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Mentioned in

Believe It (1975 Album by Tony Williams)
Windows (1984 Album by Windows)
Glenn Alexander (1987 Album by Glenn Alexander)
Believe It [Bonus Tracks] (2004 Album by Tony Williams)
Expresso (1976 Album by Gong)