Flat Tire (album): Difference between revisions

From Allan Holdsworth Information Center
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{|class='wikitable'
|+Allan Holdsworth: Flat Tire
|-
!1.
|The Duplicate Man (Intro)
|Holdsworth
|1:52
|-
!2.
|The Duplicate Man
|Holdsworth
|4:41
|-
!3.
|Eeny Meeny
|Holdsworth
|4:48
|-
!4.
|Please Hold On
|Holdsworth
|4:01
|-
!5.
|Snow Moon
|Holdsworth
|8:04
|-
!6.
|Curves
|Holdsworth
|5:35
|-
!7.
|So Long
|Holdsworth
|5:31
|-
!8.
|Bo Peep
|Holdsworth
|3:46
|-
!9.
|Don't You Know
|Holdsworth
|9:12
|}
After “Tain”, Allan got divorced, and had to give up his home studio. He therefore recorded this album almost exclusively with his SynthAxe in a temporary dwelling, as it did not require the complex setup of guitar recording. The music is brooding and quirky, with the fitting subtitle “Music for a Non-Existent Movie”. Tracks like “Eeny Meeny” and “Bo Peep” still feature some of Allan’s jazziest solos, with the aid of Dave Carpenter’s acoustic bass.
After “Tain”, Allan got divorced, and had to give up his home studio. He therefore recorded this album almost exclusively with his SynthAxe in a temporary dwelling, as it did not require the complex setup of guitar recording. The music is brooding and quirky, with the fitting subtitle “Music for a Non-Existent Movie”. Tracks like “Eeny Meeny” and “Bo Peep” still feature some of Allan’s jazziest solos, with the aid of Dave Carpenter’s acoustic bass.