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		<title>Per: Created page with &quot;A beginner&#039;s guide to  Classic Rock, May 2000  Andy Robson  As guitar gods go, Allan Holdsworth is the world&#039;s best kept secret. Over the last three decades his guitar pyrotec...&quot;</title>
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		<updated>2017-07-03T08:56:10Z</updated>

		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;Created page with &amp;quot;A beginner&amp;#039;s guide to  Classic Rock, May 2000  Andy Robson  As guitar gods go, Allan Holdsworth is the world&amp;#039;s best kept secret. Over the last three decades his guitar pyrotec...&amp;quot;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;New page&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;div&gt;A beginner&amp;#039;s guide to&lt;br /&gt;
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Classic Rock, May 2000&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Andy Robson&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
As guitar gods go, Allan Holdsworth is the world&amp;#039;s best kept secret. Over the last three decades his guitar pyrotechnics have roared, spat and sung for Jon Hiseman&amp;#039;s Tempest and Bill Bruford&amp;#039;s UK; he brought a rock swagger to Soft Machine&amp;#039;s jazz noodles, and put the bang into Gong, not to mention the phew! into the fusion of Tony Williams&amp;#039; Lifetime. Even Eddie Van Halen fell under the spell of Holdsworth&amp;#039;s furiously melodic style and wangled him a deal with Warner Brothers.&lt;br /&gt;
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Yet if Allan Holdsworth ever gets to be a rich man, it&amp;#039;ll be down to beer, not the guitar talent that left Bill Bruford wondering why Holdsworth isn&amp;#039;t a superstar in the Clapton class. Because Holdsworth&amp;#039;s more interested in real ale than the unreal nature of fame. While most American axe-meisters want to dazzle you with their record sales, Holdsworth purrs because &amp;quot;I&amp;#039;ve patented this system of hand pumping ales, using the classic swan neck they use in Yorkshire, that the micro-breweries in the USA would love. All I&amp;#039;ve got to do is sell them a few...&amp;quot;&lt;br /&gt;
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And there, of course, lies the rub. Because genius of the guitar and home brew he may be, but selling himself has never been Allan&amp;#039;s strong point. Not that the lugubrious (aka hung-over) Holdsworth seems too worried. He&amp;#039;s back in the UK for a few days, so he&amp;#039;ll have the chance to pound the ales, especially in home-town Bradford, where the Tetleys, Thwaites and Timmy Taylors await him. And, oh yes, he&amp;#039;s got a new album out, &amp;#039;The Sixteen Men Of Tain&amp;#039;, named after the mysterious guardians of the Glenmorangie distillery. Ah, booze again. Do I detect a theme?&lt;br /&gt;
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&amp;quot;I don&amp;#039;t drink a lot of hard liquor, I&amp;#039;m still a beer man,&amp;quot; grins Holdsworth, &amp;quot;but I liked the idea of a hand-crafted, high quality thing that is a single malt, and I think there&amp;#039;s something of that in the album.&amp;quot; It&amp;#039;s certainly a hand-crafted affair. Holdsworth recorded, produced and mixed the album in his own home studio. He&amp;#039;s aided and abetted by Dave Carpenter on bass and Gary Novak on drums, with Holdsworth&amp;#039;s old pal and ex-Zappa confrere Chad Wackerman also guesting. The results are jazzier, more intimate than Holdsworth&amp;#039;s assault guitar of Lifetime days, or indeed from his last group outing, &amp;#039;Hard Hat Area&amp;#039;, back in 1993.&lt;br /&gt;
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The following years weren&amp;#039;t good to Holdsworth. After &amp;#039;None Too Soon&amp;#039; in 1996, an album with long time collaborator Gordon Beck, - &amp;quot;I felt more like a guest on someone else&amp;#039;s album&amp;quot; - Holdsworth went two years without a record label. It was hardly a new situation for him after all, he&amp;#039;d lost his lucrative Warner&amp;#039;s deal back in the 80s because he refused to compromise or ditch his pals.&lt;br /&gt;
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&amp;quot;Eddie (Van Halen) brought the President of the company along to hear me and essentially got us signed,&amp;quot; he says. &amp;quot;Then it all went wrong because they wanted a different drummer and singer. But I&amp;#039;d already hired the band with Paul Williams on vocals. Ted Templeman, the producer, listened to shit over the phone - I mean, how can you listen to shit over the phone? - and said he wanted a different singer.&lt;br /&gt;
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&amp;quot;So I offered him Jack Bruce, an old mate of mine, and Ted, who never came near the studio, said &amp;#039;Yeah, great, gold record.&amp;#039; But at the last minute I switched the mixes on &amp;#039;Road Games&amp;#039;, the title track, not because Jack wasn&amp;#039;t good, he was, but because of my friendship with Paul. And then I got a phone call from Templeman while we were on the road, saying &amp;#039;That&amp;#039;s it, you&amp;#039;re fired, you&amp;#039;re off the label&amp;#039; I sacrificed my record deal because of him (Williams). A fucking miserable experience for both of us.&amp;quot;&lt;br /&gt;
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So hurrah for Gnarly Geezer, a label looking for, in Holdsworth&amp;#039;s own self-deprecating words, &amp;quot;Guys who might have got lost, or didn&amp;#039;t have the right opportunity&amp;quot;. They rescued Holdsworth from his deal-free state, released &amp;#039;The Sixteen Men Of Tain&amp;#039; (through Cream Records in Europe and awarded four stars last issue), and now he has a follow-up in the can, also a trio, but with Gary Husband, another of Holdsworth&amp;#039;s old muckers, on drums.&lt;br /&gt;
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Holdsworth&amp;#039;s solo endeavours and his work alongside Bruford and with bassist/vocalist John Wetton and keyboard player/violinist Eddie Jobson in UK - their 1978 &amp;#039;In The Dead Of Night&amp;#039; album is considered a classic - have won him many admirers around the world. But no matter how far Holdsworth travels from his native Bradford, he reckons he&amp;#039;s still &amp;#039;... the same guy playing on the new one as on any of my albums. I&amp;#039;m just a lot older and a lot wiser. I enjoy life more than ever. The women look better, the beer tastes better. The only thing that&amp;#039;s not better is when I look in the mirror. And that&amp;#039;s hell.&amp;quot;&lt;br /&gt;
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We all know that feeling. It&amp;#039;s enough to drive a fellow to drink.&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>Per</name></author>
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