John Stevens

From Allan Holdsworth Information Center
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John Stevens was a British drummer. Allan appears with him on four records: "Touching On", "Re-Touch", "Conversation Piece" and "Propensity". Allan had a strained relationship with Stevens, as Allan argued that only "Touching On" was released with his permission, and that he did not get paid his dues for any of the albums released.

All the albums feature spontaneous collective improvisation.

John Stevens

There was an unauthorized release of a live radio broadcast that was never intended to be a record. Despite its original purpose as a broadcast, it was turned into a record without authorization.

Holdsworth mentioned recording an album as a group with John Stevens, Jeff Kline, and Jeff Young. While the group members themselves didn't consider the recording to be very good, it was initially agreed to use certain tracks from the session.

The frustration arose when someone took not only the agreed-upon tracks but also everything else recorded that day, including material that no one wanted to release. This unauthorized release, titled "Touching On," ultimately carried Holdsworth's name on the album cover, even though it started as a group effort.

Holdsworth expressed frustration and concern about unauthorized releases, especially when dealing with smaller, less financially powerful artists. These releases can undermine artists' control over their work and lead to financial losses.

Holdsworth mentioned John Stevens in a critical light, indicating that he felt Stevens acted unethically by licensing and releasing material without proper consultation or agreement from the musicians involved.

Creating Imaginary Backdrops (Innerviews 1993)

What other unauthorized releases are out there?

Oh, there’s tons of them, tons of them. There was one that was a live radio broadcast—it was just a broadcast. It wasn’t supposed to be a record! They made that into a record. We did one album as a group with John Stevens, Jeff Kline and Jeff Young and it wasn’t very good. But everyone agreed and said "Okay, use those tracks." But what happened is that guy went back again and took everything else we had done that day, including everything nobody wanted, and released that as well. It’s almost like you can’t leave anything around for anyone man, or they’ll use it!

What was that called?

It was called Touching On I think.

And that was released as an album under your name?

Yeah, it started out as a group. But now the same album has my name on top. So, I’d have to say that is the most frustrating thing of all. To be in a position where you’re trying to survive and keep some quality and be true to what you believe is good and try to get record deals and then to have people do that kind of stuff is pretty low. Unfortunately, they take advantage of the fact that there are people out there that will buy it and they know we’re so small we can’t do anything about it to stop them. Nobody can do that to Madonna or Michael Jackson, because the record company would just crucify whoever it was. There would be no way they could ever do that. But when you’re in a little Mickey Mouse situation like we are, you don’t make enough money to stop people from stealing stuff from you.

I didn’t realize the extent you were affected by things like this.

It’s my biggest nightmare, yeah.

No Secrets (Facelift 1994)

It has always struck me as astonishing that Holdsworth’s work with UK, a real prototype supergroup of the Asia variety, could exist so closely chronologically alongside the John Stevens albums involving him from the same era. The records which appeared under John Stevens’ name (‘Touching On’ and ‘Retouch’) are challenging, unstructured blurs of instrumentation, but for all that, not without appeal. But, when I asked Allan about what he could remember about the free work with Stevens, he had this to say:

"The only thing I remember about John Stevens is that he was a bit of an asshole! Because he ripped everyone off. What we did was we went into the studio and recorded a completely spontaneous record with Ron Matthewson, Jeff Young and myself. And because it was all spontaneous music we all got together at the end and decided which tracks, which parts of those spontaneous pieces were useless - because it was a Spontaneous Music record. So we did that so that was fine and that was ‘Touching On’. I don’t particularly like it but that’s what it was. That’s what happened.

But then John Stevens went on to license all the other crap, all the outtakes, and quite frankly I hope I don’t run into him! Because I think that’s a really terrible thing to do. He didn’t ask anybody - he didn’t contact any of the other musicians as far as know, he just did a deal. He probably got paid for it. Nobody saw any money for it, not that it would have mattered, because if he’d asked me I would have said no, because they were outtakes. To me that’s what outtakes mean - not useable.

"So I’m as disgusted with John Stevens as I am with a lot of the record companies, who are doing the same thing to a lot of the people who pass on, like Jaco Pastorious. I think it’s completely degrading what they’ll do to people after they’ve gone. I think if the musician wanted them to be part of his thing they would have already been out."