Posted on 04/20/2017 9:21:54 AM PDT by real saxophonist
Guitarist Allan Holdsworth Dies at 70
Influenced by Trane, played with lightning-fast, effortlessly fluid technique
Guitarist Allan Holdsworth, whose lightning-fast, effortlessly fluid, Trane-influenced technique set a new standard for virtuosity during the fusion and progressive-rock era, died April 16 of a heart attack per correspondence received from MoonJune Musics Leonardo Pavkovic. Holdsworth was 70.
Best known for his jazz-fusion work with Jean-Luc Ponty, Soft Machine and the New Tony Williams Lifetime as well as numerous releases as a leader, Holdsworths influence ran deep among musicians and especially guitarists of all stripesEric Johnson, Alex Lifeson, Stanley Jordan and Eddie Van Halen have all cited him as a major influence.
Born Aug. 6, 1946 in Bradford, West Yorkshire, England, Holdsworth learned music theory and jazz appreciation from his father, a pianist, but the route to the guitar was circuitous; a passion for bicycle racing gave way to an interest in the saxophone, but his family could not afford to buy one. An uncles gift of an acoustic guitar, and a desire to emulate the legato phrasing of John Coltrane, put Holdsworth on the path to developing a unique left-hand technique that allowed him to create long, horn-like passages with clean articulation that both inspired and awed musicians and listeners alike.
After a stint playing with local bands and also dabbling in violin, Holdsworth moved to London in the late 60s, initially playing with Igginbottoms Wrench, his fast legato style utilizing hammer-ons and complex chording already in full display on their self-titled (and only) release.
The 1970s found Holdsworth playing in progressive rock outfits Nucleus and Tempest before joining Soft Machine in 1974, his trademark sound adding new dimensions on the album Bundles. By 1975 hed been recruited by Tony Williams to join the New Lifetime and stayed long enough to provide guitar wizardry on two albums, Believe It and Million Dollar Legs.
The next year, Holdsworthperhaps unknowinglyrecorded his first effort as a leader, Velvet Darkness on the CTI label. Per his recollection of events, he and his bandmates (bassist Alphonso Johnson and drummer Narada Michael Walden) were merely rehearsing in preparation to record, when CTI founder Creed Taylor abruptly wrapped up the preliminary session and took the tapes.
After this unsatisfying experience, a diet of session work made better fare, with Holdsworth working on albums by a variety of rock and jazz acts including Bill Brufords One of a Kind, progressive-rock supergroup U.K.s self-titled debut and Jean-Luc Pontys Enigmatic Ocean (and a few years later, Individual Choice).
The 1980s proved a more fruitful decade, with Holdsworth continuing his session work while also releasing I.O.U. (1982), Metal Fatigue (1985) and 1986s Atavachron, an album that for the first time featured Holdsworth playing SynthAxe, a unique guitar-based synth controller that provided him a new palette of tones and chordal possibilities. On 1987s Sand, he dug even deeper into the SynthAxes potential, with his trademark fluid solo passages and extended chord forms transformed into synth riffs and washes of sound. Two years later, he released Secrets, often considered a capturing of Holdsworths peak as a player and composer.
The next two decades saw him continuing to explore the technology while still retaining his signature guitar sound on a number of solo/leader releases including Wardenclyffe Tower, Hard Hat Area, None Too Soon, Heavy Machinery, The Sixteen Men of Tain, All Night Wrong (a live album) and Blues for Tony. He also found time to develop and patent The Fizzbuster, a device for pouring cask ales, another long-time interest.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wxsce9sBLCM
And with the Tony Williams Lifetime, about 35 years earlier:
LATER
Defines FLUID. 5-G is a mind blowing piece of work. I’ll look for a link. RIP. To this master guitarist. Sigh
Had a couple of ales with him after a Birchmere show back in the late 90’s. Nice fellow. Great show.
I also ventured up to the Baked Potato north of San Diego and caught him. It too on was yet another great show.
There are a number of good vids up on YouTube.
Easily my favorite guitarist. Defined smooth, innovative effortless-sounding leads. It’s sad to say goodbye to this era one by one.. RIP, Alan.
Saw him perform three times. Last time, he stayed at the bar (Bottom Line NYC) after the show and I got to shake his hand and thank him - his claw devoured mine lol! No one on earth sounds like him - huge influence. RIP
Do you mean this 5-G? Listening to the bass line makes my fingers tired.
.
Oh my. Absolutely one of a very rarified class of true guitar innovators...Django, Charlie Christian, Lennie Breau (not so much influence) Wes Montgomery, McLaughlin, Hendrix, Van Halen.....Holdsworth.
Each of these may not have been the absolute first to play in their particular style, but they both became the masters of those styles and undeniably influenced or at least inspired countless guitar players.
Holdsworth could be tough to listen to. I actually walked out on one of the three times I saw him. “Heard enough, already”.
Holdsworth's contribution in UK's "In the Dead of Night" is still one of most amazingly beautiful guitar solos I have ever heard.
I saw him with UK in late 1970s. Amazing guitarist. Really sad to lose him at a relatively young age.
Another Great has passed from this earth.
RIP.
Thanks for the link! Yes indeed, awesomeness!
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