Allan Holdsworth (Guitar Player 1982): Difference between revisions
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Guitar Player, December 1982 | |||
Tom Mulhern | |||
Bouncing from one band to another, album by album, was once the rule rather than the exception for Allan Holdsworth. Moments of brilliance left in his wake on LPs by jazz and progressive rock artists including [[Tony Williams]] Lifetime, [[Gong]], [[U.K.]]], [[Jean-Luc Ponty]], [[Soft Machine]], and [[Bruford]] created for Holdsworth a reputation almost exclusively as a soloist. His presence on some of the recordings was by and large similar to that of a saxophonist: sitting out and waiting until it was time to fill a certain number of bars with a flurry of creativity. Holdsworth's chordal abilities were rarely showcased, and because strict limits often governed his approach, he grew tired of his role as a mercenary soloist. | Bouncing from one band to another, album by album, was once the rule rather than the exception for Allan Holdsworth. Moments of brilliance left in his wake on LPs by jazz and progressive rock artists including [[Tony Williams]] Lifetime, [[Gong]], [[U.K.]]], [[Jean-Luc Ponty]], [[Soft Machine]], and [[Bruford]] created for Holdsworth a reputation almost exclusively as a soloist. His presence on some of the recordings was by and large similar to that of a saxophonist: sitting out and waiting until it was time to fill a certain number of bars with a flurry of creativity. Holdsworth's chordal abilities were rarely showcased, and because strict limits often governed his approach, he grew tired of his role as a mercenary soloist. | ||