T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1519.1 | synthaxe is a weird thing to play. | HAMER::COCCOLI | eat the homeless | Thu Oct 12 1989 18:15 | 16 |
|
Sure are.
Loved his work with U.K.. I also have a Bruford album with him
and Jeff Berlin which is phenomenal. Don't have any of his solo's.
I even have a couple synth patches for my midiguitar named after
him and modeled after his UK sound.
How about a discography?.
Rich
|
1519.2 | new release | PNO::HEISER | here come the big guitars! | Thu Oct 12 1989 20:12 | 4 |
| Guitar World has an ad for his new album, sorry I don't remember the
title but at least you know he's has a new one out.
Mike
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1519.3 | A favorite of mine (aren't they all?) | CSC32::G_HOUSE | Spam Monkey Shin Dance | Thu Oct 12 1989 20:33 | 9 |
| Holdsworth is truly amazing! If you like his recorded work, definately
check out his live show if you can, it'll blow your mind. I've never
before been to a show where someone left me standing in the doorway (on
the way in) with my mouth literally hanging open.
I have several of his solo efforts (IOU, Road Games, Metal Fatigue) and
I really enjoy listening to them.
Greg
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1519.4 | too much information... | BTOVT::BEST_G | Walking this dream everlasting | Thu Oct 12 1989 23:06 | 19 |
|
Allan came to Burlington, VT about three or four years ago, before they
changed "Hunt's" into a 50's club.
The opening act was the Adam Stark Trio, a sort of semi-local,
temporary set-up. The guitarist was this dwarf guy, about four feet
tall. He was amazing. I had only heard Allan's "Metal Fatigue" album
at the time, and Adam Stark was playing like I was expecting Allan to
play. I thought, what's Allan going to do to improve on this?
Allan blew the guy away. I've never heard so many notes, so tastefully
played in one night. "Devil take the Hindmost" seemed about twice as
fast as the studio version. Allan just spewed out notes at top speed
all night and I never got bored of it. The band was incredible also,
though I didn't catch all the names.
I recommend it. ;-)
Guy
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1519.5 | A Few Titles | AQUA::ROST | Chickens don't take the day off | Fri Oct 13 1989 10:52 | 27 |
|
Brief discography from memory:
Solo:
Velvet Darkness (CTI)
Road Games (Warner Bros. EP)
IOU (Enigma)
Metal Fatigue (Enigma)
Atavachron (Enigma)
Sand (Enigma)
With Bill Bruford:
Feels Good To Me (Polydor/EG)
One of A Kind (Polydor/EG)
Master Strokes (compilation, JEM/EG)
miscellaneous:
two albums with Tony Williams on CBS (mid 70s, titles, anyone??)
UK (Polydor/EG)
one album with Soft Machine (Bundles??..no US release, anyway)
one album with Gong (Expresso??)
Brian
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1519.6 | Secrets | MARLIN::DIORIO | No, I'm not bored...really...Zzzzzzzzzzzzz | Fri Oct 13 1989 12:24 | 3 |
| His new album (at least I assume it's his new album) is called "Secrets".
Mike D
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1519.7 | Bobbie and Alan | MILKWY::JACQUES | | Mon Oct 16 1989 14:42 | 22 |
| If I am not mistaken (wouldn't be the first time) he backed up
Bob Wier (of Grateful Dead Fame) in Bob's side band "Bobby and
the Midnights" and played on both albums:
"Bobby and the Midnights"
"Where the beat meets the street"
These albums show a differant side to Allan than most fans are used
to (more country-bluesy sounding). It also show a differant side to
Bob Wier as well. If I am not mistaken, he also toured with Bob as
well.
Guitar player magazine did an interview with Alan Holdworth within
the last year or so. Anyone remember the exact issue ?? If not, I
can check it out tonight and post it later.
He has been endorsing Mesa Boogie quad preamp/simulclass power amps
in the latest rags. Doesn't one of the Japanese guitar makers (Ibanez?,
Yamaha?) offer an Alan Holdsworth model?
Mark
|
1519.8 | | PNO::HEISER | here come the big guitars! | Mon Oct 16 1989 15:25 | 5 |
| Ibanez makes the AH model. I've also noticed the M/B endorsements.
He was the feature interview in Guitar World back in June.
Mike
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1519.9 | AH and Phil Lesh in a Duel to the Death??? | AQUA::ROST | Chickens don't take the day off | Tue Oct 17 1989 10:25 | 7 |
|
re: .7
Whacha been smokin' Mark?? 8^) 8^) 8^)
Bobby Cochran (also an Ibanez endorser) was second guitarist in Bobby
and the Midnights....
|
1519.10 | egg on my face!! | MILKWY::JACQUES | | Wed Oct 18 1989 13:34 | 8 |
|
Oh, (he said, as he hung his head in shame). Like I said, ain't
the first time, and won't be the last.
Unfortunatly, I ain't been smokin' anything lately. I'm just
a natural space case.
Mark
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1519.11 | olde stuffe | POBOX::KOTSCHARJANA | | Thu Oct 19 1989 21:43 | 4 |
|
I've got a Billy Colbham album called LIFETIME/BELIEVE IT!
which has Allan doing some amazing guitar stunts.
Worth looking for!
|
1519.12 | Tony Williams Lifetime... | VIDEO::BUSENBARK | | Fri Oct 20 1989 09:58 | 3 |
| I believe if you check that's Tony William's not Cobham..
and Holdsworth sounds great.... He also did a stint with Jean Luc
Ponty.... Enigmatic Ocean another excellent selection....
|
1519.13 | Secrets | MARLIN::DIORIO | No, I'm not bored...really...Zzzzzzzzzzzzz | Mon Oct 23 1989 12:19 | 12 |
| I bought "Secrets". It's got some great tunes on it. Especially "Joshua"
and "Maid Marion", which were written by the keyboard player, Steve Hunt.
Steve Hunt is a monster on keyboards, and his tunes are the best on the
album. "Spokes", written by Allan Holdsworth, is also an excellent tune.
Great album that not only shows off Allan's incredible guitar chops, but
also incredible keyboard and writing chops by Steve Hunt.
Allan Holdsworth is currently touring Europe in support of this album.
Steve Hunt is playing keyboards for this tour. Should be a great show.
Mike D.
|
1519.14 | Secrets tour postponed. | MARLIN::DIORIO | No, I'm not bored...really...Zzzzzzzzzzzzz | Tue Oct 24 1989 11:05 | 4 |
| Got word last night that Allan Holdsworth broke a finger, and so the tour
has had to be rescheduled. Probably be postponed for about 6 weeks or so.
Mike D
|
1519.15 | sounds the same, anyroadup | HUNEY::MACHIN | | Tue Apr 17 1990 07:21 | 5 |
| As an aside, I remember he used to play Strat-type guitars, but the
latest looks like a Vee -- or is is one of those headless Steinberger
jobs? Anyone know?
Richard.
|
1519.16 | Steinberger | FSTVAX::GALLO | Bass: The Final Frontier | Tue Apr 17 1990 12:51 | 9 |
|
re: guitar
Looks like a Steinberger to me. He was the cover story in
GP a coupla months back. I'll take a look tonight to make sure.
-Tom
|
1519.17 | Steinberger | COOKIE::G_HOUSE | Greg House - DTN 523-2722 | Tue Apr 17 1990 20:32 | 5 |
| Yeah, definately a Steinberger. He had Ibanez build him some custom ones a
few years ago and he endorced them for quite some time. Lately it's been
Synth-Axe and Steinbergers mostly.
Greg
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1519.18 | | TALOFA::HARMON | Paul Harmon, ACMSxp Engineering | Wed May 31 1995 09:02 | 4 |
| Has Allan recorded any albums without a keyboard player - just guitar, bass
and drums?
Paul
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1519.19 | this could be good | RICKS::CALCAGNI | more zip stupid juice | Mon Jun 05 1995 10:15 | 7 |
| Hot concert tip - Allan Holdsworth at Scullers (Cambridge MA), July 6.
I've heard an unconfirmed rumor that he'll be doing jazz standards(!)
at this show, which would make sense given the kind of room Scullers
is. More details as they come in.
/rick
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1519.20 | | AD::TAREILA | | Wed Jun 07 1995 08:09 | 10 |
|
re .18
2 releases that I know of without keyboards (for the most part):
Road Games (Only 6 songs on this one, no keyboards at all)
I.O.U (8 songs total, But there is 1 short keyboard solo on the release)
/marc
|
1519.21 | | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | My other piano is a Steinway | Mon Jun 12 1995 09:57 | 4 |
| I don't think there's keyboards on Metal Fatigue....
In fact,... I was under the impression that most of his solo albums
didn't have keyboards.
|
1519.22 | | TALOFA::HARMON | Paul Harmon, ACMSxp Engineering | Mon Jun 12 1995 10:08 | 5 |
| The only one I have is "Wardenclyffe Tower" (sp?), and it has keyboards;
I assumed that was his standard format in recent years. Sounds like I
should give some others a try.
Paul
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1519.23 | Scullers 7/6/95 | RICKS::CALCAGNI | salsa shark | Fri Jul 07 1995 09:42 | 36 |
| Wow! Holdsworth and company *smoked* Scullers last night. The Boston
Globe earlier this week repeated the statement that Holdsworth would be
doing 'standards' at this gig. Ha ha! I guess they had to tell em
that to get booked into the room :-) This was typical Holdsworth stuff,
same lineup as the one that played Nightstage a few years ago. If
anything, I thought this show was even better than the last.
Alan seemed to do more straight guitar work this time around, although
there was still plenty of guitar-synth as well. I really love what he
does with the guitar-synth; he has a real, developed, expressive voice
on it (as opposed to the noodling you hear from some players). Alan was
just using the one standard headless guitar, no sign of the extended scale
instrument he's used before. Besides several racks full of expensive
processing gear, I saw a Boogie head, a Boogie combo, and a Dual-Rectifier
head onstage.
True confessions time: I spent most of the night totally absorbed by
the rhythm section. Bassist Sculli Sverisson and the aptly named
Chad Wackerman on drums were absolutely phenomenal; tight, incredibly
complex grooves that nevertheless swung like crazy. Even our guitarist
Paul said he was zoning on Wackerman for much of the night. Last time
I saw Sculli, he pushed me over the edge to start playing 6-string bass.
He seemed even better this time around.
One comment on the room. They sat as in the corner, behind the kybd
amps, with no visibility and poor sound. I got up and stood in the
doorway for most of the night, where the view was better and the sound
superb. Even at that, about 1/4 of the room had obstructed view from
a large support column. At 18 bucks a pop, this is UNACCEPTABLE!
On the plus side, both shows were packed. It's nice to know that
middle-aged guitarists playing obscure, challenging, instrumental
music can still draw a crowd.
/rick
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1519.24 | That was YOU??? | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | My other piano is a Steinway | Fri Jul 07 1995 10:35 | 14 |
| Omigod!
I'm assuming you were at the 8pm show, not the 10pm?
I think we sat NEXT to each other but didn't recognize each other.
Tom Benson and I sat at the table right behind the keyboard players
rack. I remember a party coming in at sitting at the table you were at
and some of them left and never came back. I had figured they had
said "geez, these guys just play too many notes and lack emotion, let's
go see if we can find a place that has blues". They certainly
looked like that type. ;-)
db
|
1519.25 | Sorry, but that wasn't synth | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | My other piano is a Steinway | Fri Jul 07 1995 10:39 | 10 |
| > Alan seemed to do more straight guitar work this time around, although
> there was still plenty of guitar-synth as well.
Actually there was ZERO "guitar synth".
I don't think he even had one there.
He gets that synthy sound with various processing gear: delays,
choruses, compressor/limiters, etc. and technique (volume swells,
etc.).
|
1519.26 | yep | RICKS::CALCAGNI | salsa shark | Fri Jul 07 1995 10:48 | 11 |
| Yeah, that was us. I thought I saw you at the show. Alternate Quartet was
there in full force; I munched a few of our drummer's nachos :-) then split
to go stand in the back for the rest of the night. Sound was much better
back there, although I still couldn't see the drummer :-( There were some
other people we didn't know who had even worse seats in the corner; they
also left to seek better ones. I complained to the management, am supposed
to call back today and they said they'll 'accomodate' me.
Sorry I missed you guys; would have like to meet Tom too.
/rick
|
1519.27 | | RICKS::CALCAGNI | salsa shark | Fri Jul 07 1995 10:52 | 8 |
| >> He gets that synthy sound with various processing gear: delays,
>> choruses, compressor/limiters, etc. and technique (volume swells,
>> etc.).
That's pretty impressive then; it was very synth-like. But yeah, I was
wondering why I couldn't see any obvious synth-pickup connection on the
guitar.
|
1519.28 | | STAR::BENSON | My other fiddle is a Strad | Fri Jul 07 1995 11:12 | 85 |
| Yeah, db and I were right at the edge of the stage, but with a view
of Allan partially obscured by keyboards. But in way that was good -
as a result I paid more attention to the whole of the band rather than
obsessing on what Holdsworth was doing!
My main gripe was that it was just too short.
RE: Synth - to my knowledge, the Delap guitar has no synth pickup, and
he doesn't bring the Synthaxe around anymore.
RE: Rack, he also had a "Harness", the new "reactive load device" he
builds and sells. (If memory serves, he designed the "Juice Extractor"
a few years ago, and some company (Rocktron?) marketed it, but he
claimed they ruined it. So this one he builds himself.)
Attached is a mail message from Jeff Preston, moderator of the
Holdsworth mailing list, with some info on both the Harness and on the
Synthaxe. His Synthaxe was stolen at a gig last year, and a kind
philanthropist gave him a new one.. of all people, the Stone Temple Pilots!
Date: Mon, 1 May 1995 14:32:24 -0400 (EDT)
From: Jeff Preston <[email protected]>
Subject: Harness ordering information / Amazing SynthAxe story
For everyone who was wanting ordering info for the Harness (Allan's
new, individually-crafted reactive load device), here's the address
for orders:
Allan Holdsworth
c/o Guitars West
1099 San Marcos Blvd.
San Marcos, Ca. 92069.
The price is $399 each, and checks should be made out to Allan
Holdsworth, for the time being. Claire said he is in the process of
setting up a company for the whole thing, so this information may
change in the near future -- I will update that info when it becomes
available.
Amazing SynthAxe story...
Claire responded to a question I had about the new Roland device
that he demonstarted at the Anaheim NAMM show a few months ago --
namely, was he taking it on tour? She said that oddly enough, he
hasn't heard from Roland since then, and he no longer has the unit
in question. However, she went on to say that he had acquired another
SynthAxe. It seem that one of the members of Stone Temple Pilots
lives in the San Diego area, and heard about the theft of his last
SynthAxe controller back in November. So, Stone Temple Pilots
BOUGHT Allan another one! Since we are all ultimately the
beneficiaries of this outstanding philanthropic gesture, I propose
that we come up with a note of appreciation to send to the members
of Stone Temple Pilots -- can someone get me an address?
Jeff
--
Jeff Preston \\\ Moderator of the Allan Holdsworth discussion forum
to subscribe \\\ e-mail: [email protected]
Web Page URL \\\ http://suppcoo.morehead-st.edu/atav/docs/home.html
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Mon, 1 May 1995 19:40:31 -0400 (EDT)
From: Jeff Preston <[email protected]>
Subject: Updated Harness order info
Paolo Valladolid was kind enough to provide me with the text of the
Harness advertisement in _GP_... it seems there is an unspecified
shipping and handling charge added to the $399 price of the unit
itself, but since Paolo included the phone number to Guitars West,
I rang them up and asked. The shipping and handling (UPS ground) is
$26 in North America; $36 elsewhere. So make those checks out for
$425 (or $435, if you live outside the U.S. or Canada).
Jeff
--
Jeff Preston \\\ Moderator of the Allan Holdsworth discussion forum
to subscribe \\\ e-mail: [email protected]
Web Page URL \\\ http://suppcoo.morehead-st.edu/atav/docs/home.html
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
1519.29 | more gear-head stuff | RICKS::CALCAGNI | salsa shark | Fri Jul 07 1995 11:37 | 16 |
| Last time, Sculli was using a 6-string Tobias (pre-Gibson I believe)
through SWR gear. At last night's show, he had a 6-string Curbow
through a Yamaha head (possibly tube, not sure) and a 2x15 Mesa cab.
His only effect was a Lexicon Alex that he used to get a chorused
fretless-like sound. I don't think there was much stage miking going
on, the bass may have been just live through the 2x15. If so, it was
quite impressive sounding for just coming off the stage; no complaints
at all about the level, clarity or mix.
Re the Curbow, I thought it sounded great, although I think his tone
was a bit better at the previous show with the Tobias. Still, no
complaints; the low B string was well balanced with the rest of the
strings and punched out nicely. The Curbow uses something called
"Rockwood" for the neck; it's a trademarked name, and may be some
sort of wood/synthetic composite.
|
1519.30 | howz he get dat sounds mang? | CRONIC::PCUMMINGS | Play that crazy people music! | Fri Jul 07 1995 13:00 | 9 |
| Last nite was awesome! Bought Chad's CD "Forty Reasons" afterwards and
it is great! Really challanging stuff.
re; the gtr-synth; I didn't think he was using one either. Looked
like a standard 1/4" cable coming out of his axe, despite the weigh
kool sounds!
pc
|
1519.31 | The synth-sound trick is really quite easy | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | My other piano is a Steinway | Fri Jul 07 1995 14:09 | 26 |
| Rick,
The synthy sound is a a trick that I (at least) attribute to Steve Morse
because I first saw him do it way before anyone else.
You need a delay set to a long delay setting (like at least .5 seconds,
much more if possible), a fair amount of regeneration, throw in a
chorus afterwards and some reverb.
What you do is play "volume swells" - meaning you turn off the volume
(either with your volume knob or a volume pedal before the delay),
strike a chord and then immediately turn on the volume. Turn
off the volume before each subsequent chord/note.
There are lots of variations you can add, like how fast you let the
volume out, how long a delay, etc.
It doesn't take much equipment nor practice to get some really cool,
very synth-sounding sounds.
On a clean channel, it sounds sorta like strings, on a distorted
channel, it sounds sorta like brass.
Try it - you'll flip out over how cool it is.
db
|
1519.32 | | RICKS::CALCAGNI | salsa shark | Fri Jul 07 1995 15:05 | 5 |
| Perhaps the fact that it's really guitar and not guitar-synth
contributed to what I'd call the 'human' aspect of his playing.
Although I was under the impression that current g-s technology is
pretty good and fairly expressive. In any event, he sounded great.
|
1519.33 | | ODIXIE::CERASO | | Sat Jul 08 1995 13:03 | 12 |
| I envy you guys. Holdsworth has been a favorite of mine for many years
and a tremendous influence on my guitar style. Does anyone know or have
a list of the tour dates/locations? I would appreciate any info.
I think Holdsworth gets that "synthy" sound by using a pitch shifter
and long multi-tap delays with either manual volume swells or slow
attack delays from a noise gate. I have several patches on my Digitech
GSP-2101 that use these effects to get that type of sound(one is a
factory preset named "Holdsworthian 5ths").
CERASO
|
1519.34 | early Holdsworth | RICKS::CALCAGNI | salsa shark | Tue Aug 01 1995 10:09 | 20 |
| On the recommendation of a friend, I picked up a copy of Soft Machine's
"Bundles" (import CD only). This was fairly late in the Soft's
catalog, their 8th or 9th record, and I believe their only one with
Holdsworth. It was recorded around 1975.
The music is typical of the Canterbury style of British progressive
rock, with lots of jazz influences and space for improv. The
arrangements, and especially the keyboard sound, are somewhat dated but
if you can get past that there is some excellent early Holdsworth
here. In particular the opening cut "Hazard Profile" is one of the
early landmarks in his career. After a short intro section, the band
drops into a simple vamp and Alan proceeds to absolutely burn for about
10 minutes straight. The solo is full of ideas, unexpected turns,
false endings; several times you think he's finished, only to have him
come back even harder. Supposedly this track was cut with an ES-175
through a Marshall stack! A great sound and a stunning display of
Alan's magic at a young age. Recommended.
/rick
|