Allan Holdsworth Discography and Atavachron (album): Difference between pages

From Allan Holdsworth Information Center
(Difference between pages)
No edit summary
 
No edit summary
 
Line 1: Line 1:
__TOC__
[[File:Atavachron.jpg||200px|right]]
==Allan Holdsworth discography: Original releases==
"Atavachron" is a 1986 solo album by Allan Holdsworth. Early in 1985, Allan was introduced to the [[SynthAxe]]. The SynthAxe is a guitar-like MIDI controller with fret sensors in the neck, allowing instant detection of pitch, as opposed to earlier guitar synths. Allan fell in love with the instrument, and bought one as soon as it became available. He immediately set about writing new material, and started recording "Atavachron". The album features three drummers, two keyboardists, one bassist and one singer. For most of the tracks, Allan combines SynthAxe and regular guitar. The music is all instrumental, except for one track featuring Rowanne Mark on vocals. The music leans more towards a jazz sensibility than ever, with complex themes that serve as forms to improvise over. The beats and sounds borrow quite heavily from rock music though, and "All Our Yesterdays" in particular highlights the influence classical music had on Allan in his childhood. All in all, the music really sounds like nothing else. In particular, it stands out from most "fusion" albums of the time. Playing the theme to "Non Brewed Condiment" would come to be seen as many guitarist's ultimate challenge. Tunes like "Funnels" and "Looking Glass" would become live staples for the rest of Allans career.
If you're primarily interested in Allan's work as a solo artist, click here: [[Allan Holdsworth Solo Albums]]. The discography has been updated with links to YouTube(++) versions of the albums. See notes below.
==Track listing==
{|class="wikitable sortable"
{|class='wikitable'
|+Allan Holdsworth: Atavachron ([[Allan Holdsworth Discography|D]] - [[Allan Holdsworth Solo Albums|S]])
|-  
|-  
! Album artist
!
! Album name
!style="text-align:left;"|Track title
! Year
!style="text-align:left;"|Composer
! Role
!style="text-align:left;"|Length
! Performance
|-  
|-  
| colspan=5 | <div style='text-align: center;'>[[#60s|'''1960s and 70s''']]</div>
!1.
|-
|Non Brewed Condiment
|[[Igginbottom]]
|Holdsworth
|[[Igginbottom's Wrench (album)|Igginbottom's Wrench]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_n4fHulw9OONn-vZm5Xt0wK5VAPcM0OvxA]
|3:41
|1969
|Band member
|Guitar, vocals, composer
|-
|[[Ian Carr]]
|[[Belladonna (album)| Belladonna]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_murbl2kM2bAN9P1nijRkSmj0daUqzQZ2U]
|1972
|Band member
|Guitar
|-
|[[Tempest]]
|[[Tempest (album)| Tempest]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_nnrYGDNkAJi32C7hj0S2QNm78NmI2qpxw]
|1973
|Band member
|Guitar, vocals, violin, composer
|-
|[[Soft Machine]]
|[[Bundles (album)| Bundles]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_mtoh5IGUZ1FMR-h8UDKEVVcCYIwkKyDJc]
|1975
|Band member
|Guitar, composer
|-
|[[The New Tony Williams Lifetime]]
|[[Believe It (album)| Believe It]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_mkUKJ9PhWJoBDY9eMf6tEhCqgANsFwesU]
|1975
|Band member
|Guitar, composer
|-
|[[The New Tony Williams Lifetime]]
|[[Million Dollar Legs (album)| Million Dollar Legs]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_mkUKJ9PhWJoBDY9eMf6tEhCqgANsFwesU]
|1976
|Band member
|Guitar
|-
|[[Allan Holdsworth]]
|[[Velvet Darkness (album)| Velvet Darkness]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_k2yntMRbGkZ6mbruDmNBPWNZnYXhr-Das]
|1976
|Solo artist
|Guitar, violin, composer
|-
|[[Gong]]
|[[Gazeuse! (album)| Gazeuse!]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_kV2NlmBqCwupMAj09EfJ18DF8rTaJILAE]
|1976
|Band member
|Guitar, violin, steel guitar, composer
|-
|[[Bruford]]
|[[Feels Good To Me (album)| Feels Good To Me]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_mcZ2AxnGQTao9w3TSEiB_O4NbYe-YV4AA]
|1977
|Band member
|Guitar
|-
|[[Esther Phillips]]
|[[Capricorn Princess (album)| Capricorn Princess]] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qyitQtlTO1Y]
|1977
|Session, 1 track
|Pedal steel guitar
|-
|[[Jean-Luc Ponty]]
|[[Enigmatic Ocean (album)| Enigmatic Ocean]] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=At1pE_8TlbM&list=OLAK5uy_mflsi81Z5JTJxXQj2HuDA5WRfdXGi76Uo]
|1977
|Band member
|Guitar
|-
|[[John Stevens]]
|[[Retouch (album)| Retouch]] [https://youtu.be/u-xXYBVJOGg]
|1977
|Band member
|Guitar, composer
|-
|[[Gong]]
|[[Expresso II (album)| Expresso II]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_klc2jEmBsLNX7tcTtXH2S28x8WdYS16hc]
|1978
|Session, 4 tracks
|Guitar
|-
|[[U.K.]]
|[[U.K. (album)| U.K.]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_lRmLgTPDecdD37neDBgZIhbLAqwdmkaP8]
|1978
|Band member
|Guitar, composer
|-
|[[John Stevens]]
|[[Touching On (album)| Touching On]] [https://youtu.be/sOE0Y2GfGOc] [https://youtu.be/T4ynL1JnQZQ]
|1978
|Band member
|Guitar, composer
|-
|[[Bruford]]
|[[One Of A Kind (album)| One Of A Kind]][https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_ljQGwB0zdaGhtA2GPup0XF1cx_WlK-TGo] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_mcZ2AxnGQTao9w3TSEiB_O4NbYe-YV4AA]
|1979
|Band member
|Guitar, composer
|-
|[[Gordon Beck]]
|[[Sunbird (album)| Sunbird]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_lQw5nBV9KFXzl1nsz19YJggoSTPnFsg2Y]
|1979
|Band member
|Guitar, violin
|-
|[[Pierre Moerlen's Gong]]
|[[Time Is The Key (album)| Time Is The Key]] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EunWZI0_IfQ][https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zatQWrZsDw0]
|1979
|Session, 2 tracks
|Guitar
|-
| colspan=5 | <div style='text-align: center;'>[[#80s|'''1980s''']]</div>
|-  
|-  
|[[Allan Holdsworth, Gordon Beck, Jeff Clyne, John Stevens]]
!2.
|[[Conversation Piece (album)| Conversation Piece]] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WAcusrW39X4][https://youtu.be/6a3yQE4eSdM] [https://youtu.be/a4itqsIDkdY]
|Funnels
|1980
|Holdsworth
|Band member
|6:15
|Guitar, composer
|-  
|-
!3.
|[[Soft Machine]]
|The Dominant Plague
|[[Land Of Cockayne (album)| Land Of Cockayne]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_lsOLo4NVN1EY3vh13ubu__vbXq5Ezs2_M]
|Holdsworth
|1981
|5:45
|Session
|-  
|Guitar
!4.
|-
|Atavachron
|[[Allan Holdsworth & Gordon Beck]]
|Holdsworth
|[[The Things You See (album)| The Things You See]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_nkQRYCtGIbYlg5t9B9QiMASamGEmQA3d0]
|4:45
|1981
|-  
|Band member
!5.
|Guitar, vocals, composer
|Looking Glass
|-
|Holdsworth
|[[Allan Holdsworth]]
|4:36
|[[I.O.U. (album)| I.O.U.]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_mNjYYfxHBBUTiW1OeiNVUWhZOE8DMsGvk]
|-  
|1982
!6.
|Solo artist
|Mr. Berwell
|Guitar, violin, composer
|Holdsworth
|-
|6:24
|[[Allan Holdsworth]]
|-  
|[[Road Games (album)| Road Games]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_nii333u9vUfoROc6WZDl_h2Y3OrsL-fuA]
!7.
|1983
|All Our Yesterdays
|Solo artist
|Holdsworth/Mark
|Guitar, composer
|5:26
|-
|}
|[[Jean-Luc Ponty]]
|[[Individual Choice (album)| Individual Choice]] [https://youtu.be/PXmCmuRpt1I?si=6eNf8EW6wXem67id][https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PXmCmuRpt1I&list=OLAK5uy_n-4GSBi872vhWPEvkRqZ9G89nCd2k6oLs&index=5]
|1983
|Session, 2 tracks
|Guitar
|-
|[[Jon St. James]]
|[[Transatlantic (album)| Transatlantic]] [https://youtu.be/Cov94rxdDb8] [https://youtu.be/1IF5yY4p6pQ]
|1984
|Session, 2 tracks
|Guitar
|-
|[[Allan Holdsworth]]
|[[Metal Fatigue (album)| Metal Fatigue]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_nLNkscsx2CTLo31tiq1dv7a9PXASl8bek]
|1985
|Solo artist
|Guitar, composer
|-
|[[Rege Burrell]]
|[[Victim Of Emotion (album)| Victim Of Emotion]]
|1985
|Session, 1 track
|Guitar
|-
|[[Allan Holdsworth]]
|[[Atavachron (album)| Atavachron]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_kgWfrmBLTfEpt_VGoz7xDk3ZUCj8PSfZ0]
|1986
|Solo artist
|Guitar, SynthAxe
|-
|[[Soma]]
|[[Soma (album)| Soma]] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qZBVEnLsfP8] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLaxF0X40F65j7G1jxW47fek-lHP0kN7F1]
|1986
|Session, 5 tracks
|Guitar
|-
|[[Jon St. James]]
|[[Fast Impressions (album)| Fast Impressions]] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XkFsrwafRuk] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VHToHKpu72U]
|1986
|Session, 2 tracks
|Guitar, SynthAxe
|-
|[[Krokus]]
|[[Change Of Address (album)| Change Of Address]] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nhOhty7MnQE]
|1986
|Session, 1 track
|Guitar
|-
|[[Allan Holdsworth]]
|[[Sand (album)| Sand]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_mNAYj_5SNIedcGDJMX89JFHf3rXvY7uJk]
|1987
|Solo artist
|Guitar, SynthAxe, composer
|-
|[[Stanley Clarke]]
|[[If This Bass Could Only Talk (album)| If This Bass Could Only Talk]] [https://youtu.be/fOoQI5OedEY]
|1988
|Session, 1 track
|Guitar
|-
|[[Stuart Hamm]]
|[[Radio Free Albemuth (album)| Radio Free Albemuth]] [https://youtu.be/WVqY77DxhnA]
|1988
|Session, 1 track
|SynthAxe
|-
|[[Allan Holdsworth]]
|[[Secrets (album)| Secrets]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_lDKzKLwFlgyiSZytWO6awM9qcjt2cZERc]
|1989
|Solo artist
|Guitar, SynthAxe, composer
|-
|[[Alex Masi]]
|[[Attack Of The Neon Shark (album)| Attack Of The Neon Shark]] [https://youtu.be/CPCA1jni8UQ]
|1989
|Session, 1 track
|SynthAxe
|-
|[[Strange Advance]]
|[[The Distance Between (album)| The Distance Between]] [https://youtu.be/FPpoeJY4bkw] [https://youtu.be/Gopo4skGbqE]
|1989
|Session, 2 tracks
|Guitar
|-
|[[Jack Bruce]]
|[[A Question Of Time (album)| A Question Of Time]] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JsM9_s9luUU] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LXFyZ93Z18M]
|1989
|Session, 2 tracks
|Guitar, SynthAxe
|-
|[[Allan Holdsworth & Gordon Beck]]
|[[With A Heart In My Song (album)| With A Heart In My Song]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_nP2jaGQ47Fk8f9uW2jtF5VOejs_0JLH1A]
|1989
|Band member
|Guitar, SynthAxe, composer
|-


|[[Gordon Beck]]
'''Allan Holdsworth''': Guitar, SynthAxe<br>
|[[Dreams (album)| Dreams]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_mRVsuL4LfTBHbFhRMhPUS59ZMzEd3V2Dw]
'''Gary Husband''': Drums (1, 2, 4, 6)<br>
|1989
'''Chad Wackerman''': Drums (3, 7)<br>
|Producer
'''Tony Williams''': Drums on "Looking Glass"<br>
|Producer only
'''Jimmy Johnson''': Bass<br>
|-
'''Alan Pasqua''': Keyboards (3, 4, 6)<br>
|[[Carl Verheyen]]
'''Billy Childs''': Keyboards (2, 5)<br>
|[[No Borders (album)| No Borders]] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vByEvAsGtX8]
'''Rowanne Mark''': Vocals on "All Our Yesterdays"
|1989
==Summary of quotes on Atavachron==
|Session, 1 track
On "Atavachron," Allan Holdsworth introduced the revolutionary SynthAxe, an advanced synthesizer controller for guitarists. Unlike traditional guitar synthesizers, this device didn't produce its own sound but enabled Holdsworth to interface with various synthesizers using MIDI technology. This innovation marked a significant departure from his previous work, as he sought a more instrumental sound, and it also led to a shift in his band lineup, including the addition of keyboard players like Billy Childs.
|SynthAxe  
|-
|Various Artists


|[[Guitar's Practicing Musicians (album)| Guitar's Practicing Musicians]] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cLPYn3BAlH8]
Holdsworth's pursuit of his unique sound and his willingness to embrace cutting-edge technology defined his career. "Atavachron" and his subsequent album, "Sand," showcased his mastery of the SynthAxe after spending more time with it. Holdsworth's dedication to pushing musical boundaries and his deep connection to technology continued to influence his music, allowing him to create compositions that combined guitar and synthesizer elements.
|1989
 
|Session, 1 track w/ Jeff Watson
The title "Atavachron" itself was inspired by a Star Trek episode and reflected Holdsworth's penchant for deriving musical inspiration from words, concepts, or experiences. Despite facing challenges with record distribution and limited support from record companies, Holdsworth remained committed to his artistic vision and continually evolved his music.
|Guitar
 
|-
Throughout his career, Holdsworth's experimentation with synthesizers and innovative instruments like the SynthAxe played a pivotal role in shaping his distinctive sound and musical style, allowing him to break new ground in the world of guitar playing and composition. ''[This summary was written by ChatGPT in 2023 based on the quotes below.]''
| colspan=5 | <div style='text-align: center;'>[[#90s|'''1990s''']]</div>
 
|-
=Quotes on Atavachron=
|[[MVP]]
 
|[[Truth In Shredding (album)| Truth In Shredding]] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a-Mv7co3nXU]
==[[Allan Holdsworth’s New Horizons (Downbeat 1985)]]==
|1990
 
|Band member
On his latest Enigma album, '''Atavachron''', the revolutionary guitarist takes one step further toward Mars with a new and revolutionary piece of hardware, the SynthAxe. The product of several years of painstaking research, the SynthAxe is England’s answer to the guitar synthesizer. But unlike that popular Roland product, the SynthAxe makes no sound of its own. What it is, basically, is a controller for synthesizers, capable of interfacing with Fairlights, Synclaviers, or any MIDI-equipped synths. This thing is strictly high-tech to the max, and Holdsworth feels it positively renders all other guitar synthesizers obsolete.
|Guitar, SynthAxe
 
|-
==[["...Where No Guitarist Has Gone Before..." (Cymbiosis 1986)]]==
|[[Steve Tavaglione]]
 
|[[Blue Tav (album)| Blue Tav]] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V8vgkMIXOrI]
His new album, '''Atavachron''', admirably adds to his achievements, and reveals Holdsworth’s continuing quest for his own unique sound. Like any true pioneer, Holdsworth is never content with the typical tools of his trade. Indeed, synthesizers and more recently, the MIDI (Musical Instrument Digital Interface), have opened up new avenues of musical exploration for him. You’d think with the myriad possibilities available through these technological little wonders, there’d be enough to keep anyone busy. This Englishman, as you already know (or will understand after reading the following interview), is not just anyone. Nor is his new instrument, the SynthAxe, just any musical instrument: there is the familiar fretboard that can be played by a guitarist, but it is a synthesizer controller, not a guitar.
|1990
 
|Session, 1 track
Cymbiosis: Well, your new album, '''Atavachron''', because of the SynthAxe, has a distinctly different sound from Metal Fatigue, the one prior.
|Guitar/SynthAxe
 
|-
Holdsworth: Yeah, I think there’s two reasons for that. One is because I’ve been thinking over the last couple of years that when I reviewed all the albums, I’d never feel quite so happy with the vocal tracks. Not because of the vocals, because Paul [Williams] sings great. It wasn’t that. It’s just because, musically, they seem to be more watered down or more fickle. They just didn’t seem to be what I wanted. And I wanted to do an instrumental thing, so when I got the SynthAxe, I was thinking in those terms. So when I started to write the music, it just came out more instrumental. And, second, because I was playing some of the synth parts and playing guitar, I realized we should definitely get a keyboard player in the band.
|[[Andrea Marcelli]]
 
|[[Silent Will (album)| Silent Will]] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jPvz_fu0SVg] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RF-nT54UkFY]
Cymbiosis: You’ve gone away from keyboards in the past, especially after your U.K. and Bruford days.
|1990
 
|Session, 3 tracks
Holdsworth: They were basically keyboard dominated situations, and I wanted to reverse the roles and use the guitar. For example, with Bill [Bruford], he’d always use the synthesizer above the guitar for a chordal section, just because he thought the synthesizer sounded better than the guitar. I needed to get that out of my system and escape from all the synth things. So we did the I.O.U., Road Games, and Metal Fatigue—three trio albums. So I’ve had four or five years of trio and I really felt that I wanted to do something else.
|Guitar/SynthAxe
 
|-
Cymbiosis: And so you recruited Billy Childs.
|[[Level 42]]
 
|[[Guaranteed (album)| Guaranteed]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_nrfn7VqE-oPmvfq2koEjyreBTnXTVndiQ]
Holdsworth: Yeah. Originally, Alan Pasqua was the guy I first thought of in the band, because I just love the guy. I can’t say enough good things about him. He’s an incredible musician.
|1991
 
|Band member
Cymbiosis: You’ve worked with him quite a bit in the past?
|Guitar
 
|-
Holdsworth: No, I worked with him with Tony Williams, which is the only time. (I was definitely suffering from novice behavior in those days). And it was nice to get back together to play with him again. So I asked him to play on Metal Fatigue. He played a solo on " The Un-Merry- Go-Round". On "'''Atavachron'''", because I’d written and recorded most of the music on synthesizer, I wanted to get somebody else to come and play solos. So Gary Willis, the bass player on "The Un-Merry-Go- Round”, introduced me to the piano player, Billy Childs, and he sounded great. And through working Bunny Brunei, I met Kei Akagi, who’s fantastic. He’s the guy who’s in the band now.
|[[Chad Wackerman]]
 
|[[Forty Reasons (album)| Forty Reasons]] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R5lgDEt6nBQ&list=OLAK5uy_kdVdNCgzNyTB61N_gPVOxGo5EhaaqUi7E]
Cymbiosis: He’s the one we saw you with at the Roxy [L.A., 14 March 1986].
|1991
 
|Band member
Holdsworth: That’s right, and Kei was actually going to play on some of the album, but he wasn’t available at the time. We couldn’t coordinate it, and so I asked Alan and he played on two tracks, "'''Atavachron'''" and "Mr. Berwell". Billy Childs played on "Funnels."
|Guitar
 
|-
==[[Castles Made Of Sand (Guitarist 1987)]]==
|[[Paz]]
|[[Love In Peace (Amour Empaz) (album)| Love In Peace (Amour Empaz)]] [https://youtu.be/YGJ1qHmLzjI]
|1991
|Session, 1 track
|Guitar
|-
|[[Jeff Watson]]
|[[Lone Ranger (album)| Lone Ranger]] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oh5051j9f24]
|1992
|Session, 1 track
|Guitar
|-
|[[Andrea Marcelli]]
|[[Oneness (album)| Oneness]] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1wKU44GtXu4] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lHoGFJ1b2rU]
|1992
|Session, 2 tracks
|Guitar/baritone guitar
|-
|[[Allan Holdsworth]]
|[[Wardenclyffe Tower (album)| Wardenclyffe Tower]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_mfXfTQDtRCTgF4qqbtnrRIhSLEgvcSonY]
|1993
|Solo artist
|Guitar, SynthAxe, composer
|-
|[[Allan Holdsworth]]
|[[Wardenclyffe Tower+3 (album)| Wardenclyffe Tower +3]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_mfXfTQDtRCTgF4qqbtnrRIhSLEgvcSonY]
|1993
|Solo artist
|Guitar, SynthAxe, composer
|-
|Various Artists
|[[Come Together (album)| Come Together]] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GdBAmfpSzg0]
|1993
|Session, 1 track
|Guitar
|-
|[[Chad Wackerman]]
|[[The View (album)| The View]] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9wA1NuGzwLE&list=OLAK5uy_m__NIwBoYEyIc5XX55PEDIfr7WaU6NJXA]
|1993
|Session, 6 tracks
|Guitar
|-
|[[Allan Holdsworth]]
|[[Hard Hat Area (album)| Hard Hat Area]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_nsy89_9h0ew6-HPCnVMYcByi1hD-hfbv4]
|1993
|Solo artist
|Guitar, SynthAxe, composer
|-
|[[Allan Holdsworth]]
|[[Just For The Curious (album)| Just For The Curious]]
|1993
|Solo artist
|Guitar, composer
|-
|[[Gongzilla]]
|[[Suffer (album)| Suffer]] [https://hansfordrowe.bandcamp.com/album/suffer] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lnjj9gdIPyM] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Za1yhbC5zE] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tUA1vyx2Nfg] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NEeqz9tYuBw]
|1995
|Session, 4 tracks
|Guitar
|-
|[[Allan Holdsworth]]
|[[None Too Soon (album)| None Too Soon]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_kZarGrO0pktIEFqO_ZzquRrbVTU0uFyts]
|1996
|Solo artist
|Guitar, SynthAxe
|-
|[[Anders Johansson, Jens Johansson & Allan Holdsworth]]
|[[Heavy Machinery (album)| Heavy Machinery]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_n0phkLD1hW_-sR60Z92ha_s3VHX7NtNHA]
|1996
|Band member
|Guitar
|-
|[[Gorky Park]]
|[[Stare (album)| Stare]] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WDhhJgvsbhM]
|1996
|Session, 1 track
|Guitar
|-
|[[Allan Holdsworth]]
|[[I.O.U. Live (album)| I.O.U. Live]]
|1997
|Solo artist
|Guitar, composer
|-
|[[Steve Hunt]]
|[[From Your Heart And From Your Soul (album)| From Your Heart And From Your Soul]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_kV9d7t_aEehXj_SpIeDv7MeK0I5DnkCdc]
|1997
|Session, 1 track
|Guitar
|-
| colspan=5 | <div style='text-align: center;'>[[#00s|'''2000s''']]</div>
|-
|[[Allan Holdsworth]]
|[[The Sixteen Men Of Tain (album)| The Sixteen Men Of Tain]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_kC7Fs-HuK8mPBWO7LCharCVGOXTRO6yPE]
|2000
|Solo artist
|Guitar, SynthAxe, composer
|-
|[[Allan Holdsworth]]
|[[Flat Tire (album)| Flat Tire]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_k6BJDwjHtzCrTgAQgVms-u18RTlUVaz1U]
|2001
|Solo artist
|Guitar, SynthAxe, composer
|-
|[[Allan Holdsworth]]
|[[All Night Wrong (album)| All Night Wrong]][https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_koWPQHPezl3Qjv6Ug-i9vIpwkwvuApQ84]
|2002
|Solo artist
|Guitar, SynthAxe, composer
|-
|[[Allan Holdsworth]]
|[[The Sixteen Men Of Tain - Special Edition]]
|2003
|Solo artist
|Guitar, SynthAxe, composer
|-
|[[Soft Machine]]
|[[BBC Radio 1971-1974 (album)| BBC Radio 1971-1974]] [https://youtu.be/Cg-77PTEdd8]
|2003
|Band member
|Guitar
|-
|[[Soft Works]]
|[[Abracadabra (album)| Abracadabra]] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OKFxpcPbPl4]
|2003
|Band member
|Guitar, composer
|-
|[[Atlantis]]
|[[Pray For Rain (album)| Pray For Rain]] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wPu95tGsIVc]
|2003
|Session, 1 track
|Guitar
|-
|[[Allan Holdsworth Group]]
|[[Then! (album)| Then!]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_m9sxEV8YY3zjrTG1NxyOSGZzGSD_p4eLQ]
|2003
|Solo artist
|Guitar, composer
|-
|[[Derek Sherinian]]
|[[Mythology (album)| Mythology]] [https://youtu.be/QphYl0uVA7M] [https://youtu.be/P7eP8IQ1EiA]
|2004
|Session, 2 tracks
|Guitar
|-
|[[K2]]
|[[Book Of The Dead (album)| Book Of The Dead]] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UX0RC8g47Kk]
|2004
|Session, 4 tracks
|Guitar
|-
|[[Riptyde]]
|[[Sonic Undertow (album)| Sonic Undertow]] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i9dPtDE2svY] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4t-C1SF_UoM]
|2004
|Session/featured soloist
|Guitar
|-
|[[David Hines]]
|[[Nebula (album)| Nebula]] [https://youtu.be/e392-JrHtYQ] [https://youtu.be/AfHCk-Cnq1A]
|2005
|Session, 2 tracks
|Guitar
|-
|[[Allan Holdsworth]]
|[[Against The Clock (album)| Against The Clock]] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4b2jtBGjqtk] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i1bfU23Nxnc]
|2005
|Solo artist
|Guitar, SynthAxe, composer
|-
|[[Tempest]]
|[[Under The Blossom: The Anthology (album)| Under The Blossom: The Anthology]] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=shCXlOIqX-A&list=OLAK5uy_karxIGlvBlO7yV6WeLqhMklG-Q6SSQ5LI]
|2005
|Band member
|Guitar
|-
|[[Soft Machine]]
|[[Floating World Live (album)| Floating World Live]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_mK0t417CvbSQQtwbh9AbubPWwG-0ZkL2g]
|2006
|Band member
|Guitar, violin, composer
|-
|[[Bruford]]
|[[Rock Goes To College (album)| Rock Goes To College]] [https://youtu.be/5gZW1_6zFuo]
|2006
|Band member
|Guitar
|-
|[[Planet X]]
|[[Quantum (album)| Quantum]] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eJxF-s96Igc] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pFHeWzRKAm8]
|2007
|Session, 2 tracks
|Guitar
|-
|[[Jean-Luc Ponty]]
|[[The Acatama Experience (album)| The Acatama Experience]] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y-3OBrSP1Bk]
|2007
|Session, 1 track
|Guitar
|-
|[[Dan Carlin & Friends]]
|[[Prowlin’ (album)| Prowlin’]] [https://myspace.com/dancarlinfriends/music/song/el-gato-fandango-14396227-14197411]
|2007
|Session, 1 track
|Guitar, SynthAxe
|-
|[[Chris Buck]]
|[[Progosaurus (album)| Progosaurus]] [https://soundcloud.com/chris-tewa-buck/04-kanines]
|2008
|Session, 1 track
|Guitar
|-
|[[Holdsworth, Pasqua, Haslip, Wackerman]]
|[[Blues For Tony (album)| Blues For Tony]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_lJravqTnpPo-wXxUBwmbOPiEvqAve3IRI]
|2009
|Band member
|Guitar, composer
|-
|[[Danny Thompson, Allan Holdsworth, John Stevens]]
|[[Propensity (album)| Propensity]] [https://youtu.be/XG8qSB2T3nY]
|2009
|Band member
|Guitar, composer
|-
|[[Snew]]
|[[Highway Star (single)| Highway Star]] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oRsH2vmnvEg]
|2009
|Session, 1 track
|Guitar
|-
|[[Paul Korda]]
|[[Early Years (album)| Early Years]] [https://youtu.be/V6RIwi7g8f8]
|2009
|Session, 1 track
|Guitar
|-
|[[Eric Keyes]]
|[[No One Knows My Thirst (single)| No One Knows My Thirst]] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=27kYosWNs-8]
|2009
|Session, 1 track
|Guitar
|-
| colspan=5 | <div style='text-align: center;'>[[#10s|'''2010s''']]</div>
|-
|[[Gary Husband]]
|[[Dirty And Beautiful Volume 1 (album)| Dirty And Beautiful Volume 1]] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iB8xXMlwfcQ&list=OLAK5uy_mmq2pMBvZG1mj40e4AmqRToa5qruyInGI]
|2010
|Session, 3 tracks
|Guitar
|-
|[[Corrado Rustici]]
|[[Deconstruction Of A Postmodern Musician (album)| Deconstruction Of A Postmodern Musician]] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NIxJM-EH128]
|2010
|Session, 1 track
|Guitar
|-
|[[Level 42]]
|[[Living It Up (album)| Living It Up]]
|2010
|Session, 1 track
|Guitar
|-
|[[Gary Husband]]
|[[Dirty And Beautiful Volume 2 (album)| Dirty And Beautiful Volume 2]] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gztpfeUt-1Q&list=OLAK5uy_naI_LWF56JnEALSUy7m0jV-TNATLuNDuw]
|2012
|Session, 1 track
|Guitar
|-
|[[Chad Wackerman]]
|[[Dreams Nightmares And Improvisations (album)| Dreams Nightmares And Improvisations]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_k23Q3R7MYoWm_H-2aO9misg-2lRMIxR3A]
|2012
|Band member
|Guitar, SynthAxe, Starr Switch
|-
|[[Soft Machine]]
|[[Switzerland 1974 (album)| Switzerland 1974]]
|2015
|Band member
|Guitar, composer
|-
|[[U.K.]]
|[[Ultimate Collector's Edition (album)|Ultimate Collector's Edition]]
|2016
|Band member
|Guitar, composer
|-
|[[Allan Holdsworth]]
|[[Tales From The Vault (album)| Tales From The Vault]] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z1fg5Sz3U20]
|2016
|Solo artist
|Guitar, SynthAxe, composer
|-
|[[Allan Holdsworth]]
|[[Eidolon (album)| Eidolon]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_nOqOoumsVQSe5Cr2VGtMtYl_553B81ipw]
|2017
|Solo artist
|Guitar, SynthAxe, composer
|-
|[[Allan Holdsworth]]
|[[The Man Who Changed Guitar Forever (album)| The Man Who Changed Guitar Forever]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_m4a8AIzTNTpGJ4VxOSTa5XMCs4a2xegAs]
|2017
|Solo artist
|Box Set
|-
|[[MSM Schmidt]]
|[[Life (album)| Life]] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QNMT23xiqII] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HApldZ5Amro]
|2017
|Session, 2 tracks
|Guitar
|-
|[[Allan Holdsworth]]
|[[Live In Japan 1984 (album)|Live In Japan 1984]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_nc1vpSnTDbywaByEA6yublcAzJhqaZfx8]
|2018
|Solo artist
|Guitar, composer
|-
|[[Peter Lemer]]
|[[Jet Yellow (album)|Jet Yellow]] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gnt-Cxulgvo]
|2019
|Session, 1 track.
|Guitar
|-
|[[Allan Holdsworth]]
|[[Warsaw Summer Jazz Days '98 (album)|Warsaw Summer Jazz Days '98]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_ksYKQKD12vI0eGyQojps--QZPMgcozkNU]
|2019
|Solo artist
|Guitar, composer
|-
| colspan=5 | <div style='text-align: center;'>[[#20s|'''2020s''']]</div>
|-
|Holdsworth/Warleigh/Mathewson/Spring
|[[Warleigh Manor]] [https://jazzinbritain1.bandcamp.com/album/warleigh-manor-the-ron-mathewson-tapes-vol-1]
|2020
|Group member
|Guitar, violin, composer
|-
|PAZ with The Singing Bowls of Tibet
|[[Live In London '81: The Ron Mathewson Tapes Vol. 2]] [https://jazzinbritain1.bandcamp.com/album/live-in-london-81-the-ron-mathewson-tapes-vol-2]
|2020
|Group member
|Guitar
|-
|[[Allan Holdsworth]]
|[[Frankfurt '86 (album)|Frankfurt '86]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_m40V-y8AxwnaCOwE-NDeTVmYsxPkmT1GY]
|2020
|Solo artist
|Guitar, SynthAxe, composer
|-
|Lockwood/Beck/Holdsworth/Jenny-Clark/Romano
|[[The Unique Concert]] [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gm7KvOwDoQ8&list=OLAK5uy_mmqYTjX1ovZMpHXsolDPCWbXHl3J5cu2c&index=1]
|2020
|Group member
|Guitar, composer
|-
|[[Soft Works]]
|[[Abracadabra In Osaka]] [https://softmachine-moonjune.bandcamp.com/album/abracadabra-in-osaka-elton-dean-allan-holdsworth-hugh-hopper-john-marshall]
|2020
|Group member
|Guitar, composer
|-
|Allan Holdsworth
|[[Leverkusen '97]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_mAmeCx2u0Wb3-5tWUVN9196EelnY4sLsI]
|2021
|Solo artist
|Guitar, composer
|-
|Allan Holdsworth
|[[Leverkusen 2010]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_lHGXX1MQvAF_0gS2Q-5HiDzG8mxdL_uKg]
|2021
|Solo artist
|Guitar, composer
|-
|Nucleus
|[[Live At The BBC (Nucleus album)]]
|2021
|Session
|Guitar
|-
|Allan Holdsworth
|[[Jarasum International Jazz Festival 2014]] [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_mjeAzg3KcSqeUQ6coMTKzzwJiXFXYtrfs]
|2022
|Solo artist
|Guitar, composer
|-
|[[Holdsworth, Pasqua, Haslip, Wackerman]]
|[[Proto-Cosmos (live album)]] [https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLc1P3CKuVsD7F-zr-KqxAOpkZyiMacc3Q]
|2022
|Band member
|Guitar, composer
|}


One of the most revered musicians of our time and probably most talked about guitarist in these pages, Allan Holdsworth, has recorded a new album ‘Sand’ Because he refuses to either compromise his music or bow to commercial pressures Allan is again facing the prospect of ‘no deal’ Neville Marten asked about ‘Sand’…


Basically it’s a big leap forward for me with the SynthAxe. For the previous album ‘'''Atavachron'''’ I’d only had the SynthAxe a short time before we started recording. In fact, we actually came back off the road and I was waiting at home for it to arrive so that I could start working on the album and I didn’t write anything until I got it. So I was thrown in at the deep end in a lot of ways, because I was dealing with the Axe, dealing with the synthesisers and trying to write at the same time. I’m not saying it turned out to be a bad album because there are things about it that I like, but generally speaking I made a lot more progress on the new album, because I’ve had the Axe for so much longer.


(Note: A first draft of compilations is found here: [[Allan Holdsworth discography: Noteworthy compilations]])
==[[Guitar Synths in Jazz (Music Technology 1987)]]==


==A note on the YouTube links==
His last solo album, '''Atavachron''', marked a turning point in Allan’s career, featuring much more synthesizer than is generally expected on a ‘guitarist’ album. His involvement with the SynthAxe is largely responsible for this development, since it has allowed him to step into a role generally reserved for keyboard players. But the changes in his music are not merely in the tonalities of the lead and backing instruments; the character of his compositions has definitely evolved in new directions since his plunge into synthesizers without forsaking the nuances of his playing style altogether.
In March 2020, YouTube links were added to the discography. YouTube was chosen as it is presumably the most widely available resource available to audiences all over the world. I have tried to locate officially licensed versions where available. I have tried to link to full album playlists where this seemed most pertinent, and to single tracks where this seemed most pertinent, but you may need to do some extra clicking to get to Allan's tracks. In some single cases, I have made links to other platforms. I hope you enjoy. The official "channel" named as "Allan Holdsworth Topic" is found here: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCiyDXNsExWcKTDv_EsBJ_Dw


==Discography notes==
==[[I want to reach people with my music – common people. (Sym Info 1987)]]==
There are many ways of doing a discography. For this version, the following applies:


The listing includes music released officially on vinyl, compact disc and digitally. Though some records were released officially, their legality was contested by Allan, and some were withdrawn from the market, such as reissues of “Velvet Darkness”. More information on this will eventually appear in the articles.  
For those who are still unfamiliar with this instrument: the SynthAxe is a just a couple of years old string-instrument, which looks somehow like a guitar with a neck in a somewhat strange hook on the body, and which is being used to control a synthesizer. The last time the SynthAxe was for Holdsworth clearly an instrument for some variation of his guitar-play, now the proportions were almost even.


Outright bootlegs will not be listed. Films and books will go on a separate list. Allan in the capacity of producer, engineer or other tasks will go on a separate list (with some notable exceptions.)
Holdsworth: “I think that at this moment I’m capable to play the SynthAxe a whole lot better. On the last LP, “'''Atavachron'''”, I just got it before we started recording and I had to play and try to fathom the instrument at the same moment, which didn’t make things easier. On my new LP, “Sand”, I almost play just SynthAxe.


The list is categorized by artist, album name, year of release, Allan’s role, and by the type of performance, as follows:
Lets talk about something more pleasant and go back to your last LP but one, “'''Atavachron'''”. Recently I saw a replay of one of the episodes of Star Trek in which on a certain moment some kind of alien says to Spock, pointing to a machine: ‘This, mr. Spock, is the '''Atavachron'''’
*Artist and album name are listed as it appears on the cover. This means that ”Belladonna”, for example, is listed as an Ian Carr release, and not Nucleus.
*The albums are listed chronologically on the year of original release. The chronology is sometimes dubious, but is intended to show the records roughly in the order they were released.
*Allan is listed according to whether he appears as a band member, a session musician, or a solo artist. These definitions are somewhat subjective, but as a general rule, albums with only one or two tracks will count as sessions. On these albums, the number of tracks where Allan appears is listed. Where Allan appears throughout the album he will generally be listed as band member. He is listed as a solo artist on recordings released in his own name alone.
*For the performance category, Allan is listed as to whether he contributed with guitar, SynthAxe, violin or vocals. Albums featuring his compositions are also noted.


The list does not contain albums with re-releases and compilations of previously released material, except where the new releases also contain previously unreleased music. That means that the Tempest anthology “Under The Blossom” is listed, for example, as it contains previously unreleased recordings from the BBC. Also, “Wardenclyffe Tower +3” is listed as a separate release. An exception is made for the 2017 box set.
"I love that episode, the idea of a machine with which the population of that planet goes back to its own history to escape the destruction of that planet. In any case I’m a Star Trek-fan. I also love that word: ‘Atava’ from "Atavistic’ and ‘Chron’ form ‘Chronological’. ‘All Our Yesterdays’ was the title of that episode, and I’ve used it for one of the tracks, a reflective piece of music. I try to visualize music; mostly it’s a word or a happening and that gives me inspiration for a piece of music. On my new LP there’s a song ‘4:15 Bradford Exect’. I was born in Bradford an often took the train from London to visit my family. In this song I’ve tried to play a guitarsolo from seven minutes without one repetition, just like the constant changing landscape out of a driving train. With "'''Atavachron'''" it was something familiar. In the late evening I often sit in the studio. And than, with all the lights out, the only thing that gives some light are the little lamps of the mixing consule. Than it’s not hard at all to imagine you’re in a spaceship."


Updates, errors and omissions: A discography will usually be based on some subjective criteria, which may also be revised. Some revisions are in order: Some albums by U.K. released after the band broke up need to be added to the list. There are special editions of some albums featuring previously unreleased material that need to be added for consistency, such as the special edition of “Sixteen Men Of Tain”.
==[[HUMBLE GUITAR MASTER ALLAN HOLDSWORTH ALWAYS STRUGGLES TO PAY THE RENT]]==


==BBC sessions==
For his three Town Pump dates, Holdsworth will be focusing on material from his new album '''Atavachron'''. Named after a word he heard in a Star Trek episode, the new LP features a newly developed instrument called the Synth Axe. “It’s like the next generation of machines that guitarists can play to control synthesizers,” says Holdsworth. As well as his trusty Synth Axe, Holdsworth will be joined on stage by drummer Chad Wackerman, bassist Jimmy Johnson, and keyboardist Billy Childs (formerly with saxman Freddie Hubbard).


Allan did a number of sessions for the BBC. These have been heavily bootlegged, but never officially released, with some exceptions. Here is a list of known unreleased sessions: [[Allan Holdsworth BBC sessions]].
Although the '''Atavachron''' album is distributed on Enigma/Capitol Records in the U.S., a Canadian release has not yet been made of the new LP, so even the most devoted Holdsworth fans will be hearing his new tunes fro the first time. Lack of record company support and poor distribution has not helped promote Holdsworth’s name in the least. In fact, the first album he made with his own band, I.O.U., was mainly a mail-order item when it first came out in ’82. His previous albums Road Games (’84) and Metal Fatigue (’85) are also hard–or impossible–to find in some countries.


==Unreleased albums==
==[[Allan Holdsworth’s Untold Secrets + Worthy Quotes (Guitar Player 1990)]]==
Allan made numerous references to albums that he was working on that were not finished. One of these projects was referred to as [[Snakes And Ladders]].


Allan recorded a full album's worth of guitar parts for Soma's second album. At present, this album remains unreleased, but bootleg copies of rough mixes circulate. More information can be found on the [[Soma]] page.
"Endomorph"


==Non-appearances==
Like a lot of kids, when I was growing up I was kind of stubborn, and although I obviously loved my parents, I didn’t always show it - kids can be like that. I think they knew I loved them and cared about them, but I was just not very good at telling them. After my dad passed away, I started feeling unusually sad, particularly so because I was always left wondering if he ever did know how much I loved him.


Allan is credited on some works where he does in fact not appear:
I tried writing some lyrics for this piece, but I couldn’t express them. I called Rowanne, played it for her and explained the feeling, and that I wanted the title to be "Endomorph," something that’s trapped inside something else, just the way I felt. She wrote it, and like she usually does, she just put a big frog in my throat. She did the same thing with "All Our Yesterdays," from '''Atavachron''': I was just in tears, man. It was incredible. She’d written words that said more than I would have imagined I ever could have. The problem was that I’d written it for me, and it was just outside her range. She could sing it up an octave, but I wanted the melody to be inside the register of the chords. We tried transposing it, and it started not sounding dark or somber enough. I remember my dad used to say, "This tune sounds great in this key." Then he’d play it in a lot of different keys and say, "But listen - it doesn’t sound right in this one." Sometimes you can get away with a half-step in either direction, but even then it often doesn’t work. I tried it again myself, and I couldn’t do it, man. I might have been able to 10, 15 years ago, but I was just croaking and sounding terrible. A few people tried, and then Craig Copeland, whom I met through Chad - who introduced me to Rowanne, as well - came in, and he really sang it great.


[[Speed(Movie)|Speed]]: Allan is credited as soloist on the soundtrack for the movie "Speed". Apparently, the score composer was a fan, and commissioned some work from Allan. He delivered some SynthAxe material, which was ultimately not used in the final film. It may have had to do with some technical issues. http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0390380/?ref_=nv_sr_2
Under the second verse there’s a weird, ominous undercurrent.


Steve Morse Band: Stand up. Allan was slated to appear on Steve Morse's album "Stand Up", but for some reason he was not able to deliver his tracks in time. Curiously, the cassette tape cover was already sent to the printer when this happened, and thus the cassette cover lists Allan as appearing on "English Rancher". https://www.discogs.com/Steve-Morse-Band-Stand-Up/release/8933270
It was actually a resampled voice. It was taken way out of key, completely off, then we took other samples at different notes, mixed them together, and made another sample as the combination of all of them in that one note. Sonically, it wasn’t as nice as I would have liked, but it did the job inasmuch as it had the spooky vibe about it - there’s a lot of air in the sound. I’d also been working with the Steinberg Tx7 programmer, to get something to simulate the unique sound of a PPG synthesizer. I did two PPGish sounds and blended those with the voice sound That was the bulk of the piece.


Also, there has been a persistent rumour that Allan played on Donovan's "Hurdy Gurdy Man". This rumour has been disproved by Allan himself and his associates. It's probably worth an article of itself, though.
Did the piece come off with the kind of emotional breadth you’d intended?


==Other discographies==
I don’t know. By the time I finish an album, I’m numb. I don’t even know whether any of it’s good. You think, "Oh, Jesus, what did I just play? Was that the biggest load or what?" There’s no way to know. You just say, "I think it was alright," and try again the next day. But sometimes you just have to get away from it. You have to remember what it was feeling like to you when you first did it. I usually come up with the idea really quick, so if the feeling is strong enough in the beginning, when I strike on something I think is okay, it will usually return later. Quite often I work to a point where I just can’t tell. I won’t listen to it for a while, and then I’ll hear it later and go, "Yeah. It was alright."
There are a number of sites that present Holdsworth discographies. Below, I have included links to some of these, with a few comments.


[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allan_Holdsworth#Discography '''Wikipedia Discography''']: The Wikipedia discography is at the time of writing divided up into "Solo albums", which are subdivided into studio, live and collaborations, and the third main category is "With other artists", with the latter ordered in a format it took me some time to figure out. It starts with the group Igginbottom and lists their 1969 album. Then, it moves chronologically until we come to Soft Machine. All of Allan's albums with the Softs are then listed chronologically, before Allan's albums with Tony Williams are listed chronologically. I find this format confusing. Furthermore, due to its policy on "notability", Wikipedia does not list all albums featuring Allan. Most critically, some albums released posthumously are not listed as a result of this policy.
==[[Legato Land (Guitar Techniques 1996)]]==


[https://www.discogs.com/artist/254012-Allan-Holdsworth?filter_anv=0&subtype=Instruments-Performance&type=Credits '''Discogs Discography''']: Discogs is a user-submitted site, which means it contains a lot of entries, but which also means that it's prone to errors. That said, Discogs is probably the main source used for the discography on this site. It allows sorting and filtering by many criteria. The link provided lists appearances chronologically, much like the present discography. However, it includes compilations, which makes it somewhat confusing to me. The site lists some outright bootlegs, which I find to be a drawback. You can search for other things than appearances, such as listings for production. With a little clicking around, you can find complete lineups for recordings, composer credits and lots of other stuff. There are some minor errors, but overall, this is my favorite. I haven't checked recently, but I think it contains all of the listings on this site.
Although Allan has been associated with a number of different guitars and amps over the years, his passion for The Synthaxe guitar synthesiser remains undiminished.


I spotted the following errors: Allan is listed as appearing on Steve Morse Band's "Stand Up". The wrong track is listed on Masi's "Attack Of The Neon Shark". Allan is listed on "Hurdy Gurdy Man".
"I had a guitar that had a Roland pickup on it for a while, years before I played the Synthaxe, but I didn’t like the ‘pitch to glitch’ I was getting. You know, the spurious blurting and stuff, especially if you played a percussive patch like a piano or a xylophone. So I spoke to Tom Mulhearn [sic], who was writing for Guitar Player magazine over in America at the time, and asked if he knew of any synthesiser controller that didn’t use pitch. He called me back a few months later and told me there’s this company called Synthaxe and they’re in England. So when I was over in England again I went over to see them and check it out and I just fell in love with it. The key pad part of it was, in my opinion, a stroke of genius. In fact, for me they could have almost got rid of the trigger strings and had a new instrument that had a neck like a guitar, but all of the strings would be triggered from the keys. I used to like it because I didn’t think about the guitar when I was playing it.


[https://www.allmusic.com/artist/allan-holdsworth-mn0000002252/credits '''AllMusic Discography'''] Allmusic is similar to Discogs in many respects. From what I understand, the listings are editorial, which should ideally mean less errors. However, this is not necessarily the case. For example, AllMusic lists Dononvan's "Hurdy Gurdy Man", although the claim that Allan played on this record has been refuted (which I should probably write about!). It also lists Allan as playing on a Kip Winger album, which I have no other info on. The credits also mix appearances, songwriting, production and everything else into one list. That said, it's a good source, especially for cover versions, although not all the composer listings are correct.
"It amazed me how many guitar players would pick up the Synthaxe and say, Can you make it sound like a guitar? I’d just stand there, tearing my hair out going, Yeah, yeah, spend $10,000 on something and make it sound like a $500 Strat! [laughs] With the Synthaxe, I just wanted an instrument that I could really control. I didn’t really have it down in the beginning. I’d first used it on ‘'''Atavachron'''’ and I’d waited until I got the Synthaxe before I started writing the music. I now realise that I shouldn’t really have done that. On ‘Sand’ I started using the breath controller and found a way to make it sound like me. I had always wanted to play the saxophone and so the breath controller brought me closer to what I want to do than the guitar can. In many ways the Synthaxe liberated me from that sound, you know, having to use distortion to get sustain. I absolutely hate distortion, but I have to use it to get sustain. It’s like a necessary evil. I hate all of the spurious sounds that are in betwee n the notes when you’ve got your amplifier cranked up. With the Synthaxe there was none of that. It was totally clean and I could take a note out from nothing and blow it out to maximum velocity and bring it all the way down to nothing again. I just wish I could do that on a guitar."


[[File:Ahc.jpg|center]]
==[[Untitled (Guitar Magazine? 2001)]]==


[[Allan Holdsworth - A Listening Guide]]
Q: What is your favorite album on your own, as a member and solo project?


A: First of all, the newest one. And others are solo albums; ìWardenclyffe towerîîI.O.U.îîAtavacronîîSandî and ìSecretsî.


==Tribute albums and covers==
==Links==


There has been released several tribute albums to Allan, and here is a short list:
https://threadoflunacy.blogspot.no/2017/08/18-atavachron-1986.html
*[[The_Things_I_See_-_Interpretations_of_the_Music_of_Allan_Holdsworth|Gary Husband: The Things I See (Interpretations Of The Music Of Allan Holdsworth)]]
*Allan's Legacy: [[The_Nineteen_Men_Of_Tain|The Nineteen Men Of Tain]]
*[[Above_and_Below:_The_Music_of_Allan_Holdsworth|Above and Below: The Music of Allan Holdsworth]]
*[[Y.O.U._(tribute_album)|Y.O.U. (tribute album)]]


Additionally, there have been recorded several cover versions or interpretations of Allan's tunes. This website does not have the ambition to list them all, but a few notable ones are:
https://www.discogs.com/master/147720-Allan-Holdsworth-Atavachron
*https://www.discogs.com/release/9883161-Prism-1977-Live-At-Sugino-Kodo
*https://www.discogs.com/release/6681637-Refuge-Trio-Refuge-Trio
*https://www.discogs.com/release/13592153-The-Trio-Of-Stridence-Auditur-Periculosum
*https://www.discogs.com/release/11219052-Kjetil-Jerve-Tim-Thornton-5-Anders-Thor%C3%A9n-Circumstances
*https://www.discogs.com/release/19045534-Logan-Kane-Nonet-NopeScience


[[Category:Solo albums]]
[[Category:Discography]]
[[Category:Discography]]

Revision as of 09:11, 31 October 2023

"Atavachron" is a 1986 solo album by Allan Holdsworth. Early in 1985, Allan was introduced to the SynthAxe. The SynthAxe is a guitar-like MIDI controller with fret sensors in the neck, allowing instant detection of pitch, as opposed to earlier guitar synths. Allan fell in love with the instrument, and bought one as soon as it became available. He immediately set about writing new material, and started recording "Atavachron". The album features three drummers, two keyboardists, one bassist and one singer. For most of the tracks, Allan combines SynthAxe and regular guitar. The music is all instrumental, except for one track featuring Rowanne Mark on vocals. The music leans more towards a jazz sensibility than ever, with complex themes that serve as forms to improvise over. The beats and sounds borrow quite heavily from rock music though, and "All Our Yesterdays" in particular highlights the influence classical music had on Allan in his childhood. All in all, the music really sounds like nothing else. In particular, it stands out from most "fusion" albums of the time. Playing the theme to "Non Brewed Condiment" would come to be seen as many guitarist's ultimate challenge. Tunes like "Funnels" and "Looking Glass" would become live staples for the rest of Allans career.

Track listing

Allan Holdsworth: Atavachron (D - S)
Track title Composer Length
1. Non Brewed Condiment Holdsworth 3:41
2. Funnels Holdsworth 6:15
3. The Dominant Plague Holdsworth 5:45
4. Atavachron Holdsworth 4:45
5. Looking Glass Holdsworth 4:36
6. Mr. Berwell Holdsworth 6:24
7. All Our Yesterdays Holdsworth/Mark 5:26

Allan Holdsworth: Guitar, SynthAxe
Gary Husband: Drums (1, 2, 4, 6)
Chad Wackerman: Drums (3, 7)
Tony Williams: Drums on "Looking Glass"
Jimmy Johnson: Bass
Alan Pasqua: Keyboards (3, 4, 6)
Billy Childs: Keyboards (2, 5)
Rowanne Mark: Vocals on "All Our Yesterdays"

Summary of quotes on Atavachron

On "Atavachron," Allan Holdsworth introduced the revolutionary SynthAxe, an advanced synthesizer controller for guitarists. Unlike traditional guitar synthesizers, this device didn't produce its own sound but enabled Holdsworth to interface with various synthesizers using MIDI technology. This innovation marked a significant departure from his previous work, as he sought a more instrumental sound, and it also led to a shift in his band lineup, including the addition of keyboard players like Billy Childs.

Holdsworth's pursuit of his unique sound and his willingness to embrace cutting-edge technology defined his career. "Atavachron" and his subsequent album, "Sand," showcased his mastery of the SynthAxe after spending more time with it. Holdsworth's dedication to pushing musical boundaries and his deep connection to technology continued to influence his music, allowing him to create compositions that combined guitar and synthesizer elements.

The title "Atavachron" itself was inspired by a Star Trek episode and reflected Holdsworth's penchant for deriving musical inspiration from words, concepts, or experiences. Despite facing challenges with record distribution and limited support from record companies, Holdsworth remained committed to his artistic vision and continually evolved his music.

Throughout his career, Holdsworth's experimentation with synthesizers and innovative instruments like the SynthAxe played a pivotal role in shaping his distinctive sound and musical style, allowing him to break new ground in the world of guitar playing and composition. [This summary was written by ChatGPT in 2023 based on the quotes below.]

Quotes on Atavachron

Allan Holdsworth’s New Horizons (Downbeat 1985)

On his latest Enigma album, Atavachron, the revolutionary guitarist takes one step further toward Mars with a new and revolutionary piece of hardware, the SynthAxe. The product of several years of painstaking research, the SynthAxe is England’s answer to the guitar synthesizer. But unlike that popular Roland product, the SynthAxe makes no sound of its own. What it is, basically, is a controller for synthesizers, capable of interfacing with Fairlights, Synclaviers, or any MIDI-equipped synths. This thing is strictly high-tech to the max, and Holdsworth feels it positively renders all other guitar synthesizers obsolete.

"...Where No Guitarist Has Gone Before..." (Cymbiosis 1986)

His new album, Atavachron, admirably adds to his achievements, and reveals Holdsworth’s continuing quest for his own unique sound. Like any true pioneer, Holdsworth is never content with the typical tools of his trade. Indeed, synthesizers and more recently, the MIDI (Musical Instrument Digital Interface), have opened up new avenues of musical exploration for him. You’d think with the myriad possibilities available through these technological little wonders, there’d be enough to keep anyone busy. This Englishman, as you already know (or will understand after reading the following interview), is not just anyone. Nor is his new instrument, the SynthAxe, just any musical instrument: there is the familiar fretboard that can be played by a guitarist, but it is a synthesizer controller, not a guitar.

Cymbiosis: Well, your new album, Atavachron, because of the SynthAxe, has a distinctly different sound from Metal Fatigue, the one prior.

Holdsworth: Yeah, I think there’s two reasons for that. One is because I’ve been thinking over the last couple of years that when I reviewed all the albums, I’d never feel quite so happy with the vocal tracks. Not because of the vocals, because Paul [Williams] sings great. It wasn’t that. It’s just because, musically, they seem to be more watered down or more fickle. They just didn’t seem to be what I wanted. And I wanted to do an instrumental thing, so when I got the SynthAxe, I was thinking in those terms. So when I started to write the music, it just came out more instrumental. And, second, because I was playing some of the synth parts and playing guitar, I realized we should definitely get a keyboard player in the band.

Cymbiosis: You’ve gone away from keyboards in the past, especially after your U.K. and Bruford days.

Holdsworth: They were basically keyboard dominated situations, and I wanted to reverse the roles and use the guitar. For example, with Bill [Bruford], he’d always use the synthesizer above the guitar for a chordal section, just because he thought the synthesizer sounded better than the guitar. I needed to get that out of my system and escape from all the synth things. So we did the I.O.U., Road Games, and Metal Fatigue—three trio albums. So I’ve had four or five years of trio and I really felt that I wanted to do something else.

Cymbiosis: And so you recruited Billy Childs.

Holdsworth: Yeah. Originally, Alan Pasqua was the guy I first thought of in the band, because I just love the guy. I can’t say enough good things about him. He’s an incredible musician.

Cymbiosis: You’ve worked with him quite a bit in the past?

Holdsworth: No, I worked with him with Tony Williams, which is the only time. (I was definitely suffering from novice behavior in those days). And it was nice to get back together to play with him again. So I asked him to play on Metal Fatigue. He played a solo on " The Un-Merry- Go-Round". On "Atavachron", because I’d written and recorded most of the music on synthesizer, I wanted to get somebody else to come and play solos. So Gary Willis, the bass player on "The Un-Merry-Go- Round”, introduced me to the piano player, Billy Childs, and he sounded great. And through working Bunny Brunei, I met Kei Akagi, who’s fantastic. He’s the guy who’s in the band now.

Cymbiosis: He’s the one we saw you with at the Roxy [L.A., 14 March 1986].

Holdsworth: That’s right, and Kei was actually going to play on some of the album, but he wasn’t available at the time. We couldn’t coordinate it, and so I asked Alan and he played on two tracks, "Atavachron" and "Mr. Berwell". Billy Childs played on "Funnels."

Castles Made Of Sand (Guitarist 1987)

One of the most revered musicians of our time and probably most talked about guitarist in these pages, Allan Holdsworth, has recorded a new album ‘Sand’ Because he refuses to either compromise his music or bow to commercial pressures Allan is again facing the prospect of ‘no deal’ Neville Marten asked about ‘Sand’…

Basically it’s a big leap forward for me with the SynthAxe. For the previous album ‘Atavachron’ I’d only had the SynthAxe a short time before we started recording. In fact, we actually came back off the road and I was waiting at home for it to arrive so that I could start working on the album and I didn’t write anything until I got it. So I was thrown in at the deep end in a lot of ways, because I was dealing with the Axe, dealing with the synthesisers and trying to write at the same time. I’m not saying it turned out to be a bad album because there are things about it that I like, but generally speaking I made a lot more progress on the new album, because I’ve had the Axe for so much longer.

Guitar Synths in Jazz (Music Technology 1987)

His last solo album, Atavachron, marked a turning point in Allan’s career, featuring much more synthesizer than is generally expected on a ‘guitarist’ album. His involvement with the SynthAxe is largely responsible for this development, since it has allowed him to step into a role generally reserved for keyboard players. But the changes in his music are not merely in the tonalities of the lead and backing instruments; the character of his compositions has definitely evolved in new directions since his plunge into synthesizers without forsaking the nuances of his playing style altogether.

I want to reach people with my music – common people. (Sym Info 1987)

For those who are still unfamiliar with this instrument: the SynthAxe is a just a couple of years old string-instrument, which looks somehow like a guitar with a neck in a somewhat strange hook on the body, and which is being used to control a synthesizer. The last time the SynthAxe was for Holdsworth clearly an instrument for some variation of his guitar-play, now the proportions were almost even.

Holdsworth: “I think that at this moment I’m capable to play the SynthAxe a whole lot better. On the last LP, “Atavachron”, I just got it before we started recording and I had to play and try to fathom the instrument at the same moment, which didn’t make things easier. On my new LP, “Sand”, I almost play just SynthAxe.”

Lets talk about something more pleasant and go back to your last LP but one, “Atavachron”. Recently I saw a replay of one of the episodes of Star Trek in which on a certain moment some kind of alien says to Spock, pointing to a machine: ‘This, mr. Spock, is the Atavachron

"I love that episode, the idea of a machine with which the population of that planet goes back to its own history to escape the destruction of that planet. In any case I’m a Star Trek-fan. I also love that word: ‘Atava’ from "Atavistic’ and ‘Chron’ form ‘Chronological’. ‘All Our Yesterdays’ was the title of that episode, and I’ve used it for one of the tracks, a reflective piece of music. I try to visualize music; mostly it’s a word or a happening and that gives me inspiration for a piece of music. On my new LP there’s a song ‘4:15 Bradford Exect’. I was born in Bradford an often took the train from London to visit my family. In this song I’ve tried to play a guitarsolo from seven minutes without one repetition, just like the constant changing landscape out of a driving train. With "Atavachron" it was something familiar. In the late evening I often sit in the studio. And than, with all the lights out, the only thing that gives some light are the little lamps of the mixing consule. Than it’s not hard at all to imagine you’re in a spaceship."

HUMBLE GUITAR MASTER ALLAN HOLDSWORTH ALWAYS STRUGGLES TO PAY THE RENT

For his three Town Pump dates, Holdsworth will be focusing on material from his new album Atavachron. Named after a word he heard in a Star Trek episode, the new LP features a newly developed instrument called the Synth Axe. “It’s like the next generation of machines that guitarists can play to control synthesizers,” says Holdsworth. As well as his trusty Synth Axe, Holdsworth will be joined on stage by drummer Chad Wackerman, bassist Jimmy Johnson, and keyboardist Billy Childs (formerly with saxman Freddie Hubbard).

Although the Atavachron album is distributed on Enigma/Capitol Records in the U.S., a Canadian release has not yet been made of the new LP, so even the most devoted Holdsworth fans will be hearing his new tunes fro the first time. Lack of record company support and poor distribution has not helped promote Holdsworth’s name in the least. In fact, the first album he made with his own band, I.O.U., was mainly a mail-order item when it first came out in ’82. His previous albums Road Games (’84) and Metal Fatigue (’85) are also hard–or impossible–to find in some countries.

Allan Holdsworth’s Untold Secrets + Worthy Quotes (Guitar Player 1990)

"Endomorph"

Like a lot of kids, when I was growing up I was kind of stubborn, and although I obviously loved my parents, I didn’t always show it - kids can be like that. I think they knew I loved them and cared about them, but I was just not very good at telling them. After my dad passed away, I started feeling unusually sad, particularly so because I was always left wondering if he ever did know how much I loved him.

I tried writing some lyrics for this piece, but I couldn’t express them. I called Rowanne, played it for her and explained the feeling, and that I wanted the title to be "Endomorph," something that’s trapped inside something else, just the way I felt. She wrote it, and like she usually does, she just put a big frog in my throat. She did the same thing with "All Our Yesterdays," from Atavachron: I was just in tears, man. It was incredible. She’d written words that said more than I would have imagined I ever could have. The problem was that I’d written it for me, and it was just outside her range. She could sing it up an octave, but I wanted the melody to be inside the register of the chords. We tried transposing it, and it started not sounding dark or somber enough. I remember my dad used to say, "This tune sounds great in this key." Then he’d play it in a lot of different keys and say, "But listen - it doesn’t sound right in this one." Sometimes you can get away with a half-step in either direction, but even then it often doesn’t work. I tried it again myself, and I couldn’t do it, man. I might have been able to 10, 15 years ago, but I was just croaking and sounding terrible. A few people tried, and then Craig Copeland, whom I met through Chad - who introduced me to Rowanne, as well - came in, and he really sang it great.

Under the second verse there’s a weird, ominous undercurrent.

It was actually a resampled voice. It was taken way out of key, completely off, then we took other samples at different notes, mixed them together, and made another sample as the combination of all of them in that one note. Sonically, it wasn’t as nice as I would have liked, but it did the job inasmuch as it had the spooky vibe about it - there’s a lot of air in the sound. I’d also been working with the Steinberg Tx7 programmer, to get something to simulate the unique sound of a PPG synthesizer. I did two PPGish sounds and blended those with the voice sound That was the bulk of the piece.

Did the piece come off with the kind of emotional breadth you’d intended?

I don’t know. By the time I finish an album, I’m numb. I don’t even know whether any of it’s good. You think, "Oh, Jesus, what did I just play? Was that the biggest load or what?" There’s no way to know. You just say, "I think it was alright," and try again the next day. But sometimes you just have to get away from it. You have to remember what it was feeling like to you when you first did it. I usually come up with the idea really quick, so if the feeling is strong enough in the beginning, when I strike on something I think is okay, it will usually return later. Quite often I work to a point where I just can’t tell. I won’t listen to it for a while, and then I’ll hear it later and go, "Yeah. It was alright."

Legato Land (Guitar Techniques 1996)

Although Allan has been associated with a number of different guitars and amps over the years, his passion for The Synthaxe guitar synthesiser remains undiminished.

"I had a guitar that had a Roland pickup on it for a while, years before I played the Synthaxe, but I didn’t like the ‘pitch to glitch’ I was getting. You know, the spurious blurting and stuff, especially if you played a percussive patch like a piano or a xylophone. So I spoke to Tom Mulhearn [sic], who was writing for Guitar Player magazine over in America at the time, and asked if he knew of any synthesiser controller that didn’t use pitch. He called me back a few months later and told me there’s this company called Synthaxe and they’re in England. So when I was over in England again I went over to see them and check it out and I just fell in love with it. The key pad part of it was, in my opinion, a stroke of genius. In fact, for me they could have almost got rid of the trigger strings and had a new instrument that had a neck like a guitar, but all of the strings would be triggered from the keys. I used to like it because I didn’t think about the guitar when I was playing it.

"It amazed me how many guitar players would pick up the Synthaxe and say, Can you make it sound like a guitar? I’d just stand there, tearing my hair out going, Yeah, yeah, spend $10,000 on something and make it sound like a $500 Strat! [laughs] With the Synthaxe, I just wanted an instrument that I could really control. I didn’t really have it down in the beginning. I’d first used it on ‘Atavachron’ and I’d waited until I got the Synthaxe before I started writing the music. I now realise that I shouldn’t really have done that. On ‘Sand’ I started using the breath controller and found a way to make it sound like me. I had always wanted to play the saxophone and so the breath controller brought me closer to what I want to do than the guitar can. In many ways the Synthaxe liberated me from that sound, you know, having to use distortion to get sustain. I absolutely hate distortion, but I have to use it to get sustain. It’s like a necessary evil. I hate all of the spurious sounds that are in betwee n the notes when you’ve got your amplifier cranked up. With the Synthaxe there was none of that. It was totally clean and I could take a note out from nothing and blow it out to maximum velocity and bring it all the way down to nothing again. I just wish I could do that on a guitar."

Untitled (Guitar Magazine? 2001)

Q: What is your favorite album on your own, as a member and solo project?

A: First of all, the newest one. And others are solo albums; ìWardenclyffe towerîîI.O.U.îîAtavacronîîSandî and ìSecretsî.

Links

https://threadoflunacy.blogspot.no/2017/08/18-atavachron-1986.html

https://www.discogs.com/master/147720-Allan-Holdsworth-Atavachron