Country Artist Reacts to Progressive Jazz Guitarist Allan Holdsworth - Amazing!

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  • Опубликовано: 13 апр 2023
  • Country Artist Reacts to Progressive Jazz Guitarist Allan Holdsworth - Amazing!
    Intro Song - Wingin It: • Wingin It
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    This is a reaction video used to educated and give my feedback on the song and Artists
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Комментарии • 108

  • @TheOhiowolf
    @TheOhiowolf 11 месяцев назад +16

    100 years from now, on a spaceship, when almost all our music is gone and forgotten. They will still be studying Holdsworth and ruining their hands trying to do those stretches and incredible long runs.

  • @guyhommeNYC
    @guyhommeNYC 3 месяца назад +9

    I've seen Allan live a half dozen times in the last 40 years of his career. Starting in 1976, with the New Tony Williams Lifetime . Then in Germany a few times, on the 1986 tour which has a live album. Then, with Stanley Clarke in an explosive performance in an old bombed out Nazi bunker that happened to have great acoustics, with the roof blown off... I know...insane. The band was staying at a hotel near my office, a group of friends drank and dined with them all night long. 10 years later, i saw Allan for the last time, and he remembered the whole thing. Such a sweet and humble man. You could discuss anything with him. I cried when learning of his death.

  • @captainsnarky6949
    @captainsnarky6949 Год назад +15

    Thanks for not constantly interrupting the flow of the video with random pauses like every other Reacts channel.

  • @BringerOfBloood
    @BringerOfBloood 4 месяца назад +6

    I love how you just watch in awe. That's the best reaction one can have to Allan

  • @michaelshifflett76
    @michaelshifflett76 Год назад +28

    I can see why Eddie Van Halen loved this guy so much!!

    • @jamesalllan7806
      @jamesalllan7806 8 месяцев назад +4

      Its why everybody loved him so much.

    • @michaelstrong4956
      @michaelstrong4956 7 месяцев назад +1

      If you listen to the Fair Warning album, you can hear Holdsworth's influence on Edward...especially on the guitar the solo from "Push Comes To Shove."

    • @HarveyMushman888
      @HarveyMushman888 2 месяца назад +1

      He said he had a hard time stealing anything from Allan...lol

  • @stephanodsilva
    @stephanodsilva Год назад +6

    That is so cool that you looked at this music with an open heart and mind. Breaking barriers right there.

  • @NeilRaouf
    @NeilRaouf Год назад +6

    Allan is a creative Icon

  • @wesworach7441
    @wesworach7441 Год назад +20

    Allan was in his own musical heaven & improvisational world impossible to copy or even come close to his Mastery !!!

  • @rafanj824
    @rafanj824 Год назад +8

    This video of "Looking Glass" live was my first Allan Holdsworth experience. His playing and the incredible performance of the band blew my mind completely, never heard nothing like that before. Now listen to "Tokyo Dream" in the Eidolon album and be warned: the solo is like a journey to a strange, but strikingly beautiful planet, an out of this world experience!!!

  • @ianstaines4395
    @ianstaines4395 5 месяцев назад +2

    i had the pleasure of seeing allan Holdsworth playing for level 42 back in the 90's in London, , truly amazing!

  • @JamieAllan
    @JamieAllan 16 дней назад

    i only saw Allan play once, when he was for a short time in the band UK with Bruford,Wetton and Jobson, all awesome musicians. They were superb, I'd have loved to have seen what else they could have done. Inevitably the constraints of rock pushed him back to jazz. I talked to Bill Bruford about him many years later, but before he passed and he said Allan was a lovely guy and a gracious musician. He's missed.

  • @bottleforty1
    @bottleforty1 Год назад +10

    You didn't just ease in. You went directly to the master. Every guitar player in the know, knows of Allen Holdsworth. The first time I heard him was with The Tony Williams Lifetime. That was in 1976. I was blown away.

    • @Khayyam-vg9fw
      @Khayyam-vg9fw 8 месяцев назад +2

      I first heard him on Soft Machine's "Bundles" in 1975. I'd never heard anyone play like that before, at least, not on guitar. You can hear the influence of John Coltrane, of course, but I suspect that Allan had listened to Tubby Hayes, too.

    • @caprise-music6722
      @caprise-music6722 3 месяца назад +1

      His work on Lifetime is insane

    • @guyhommeNYC
      @guyhommeNYC 3 месяца назад +1

      Yeah! I saw that tour in 1976, after wearing out the groves in that Tony Williams album!

  • @EccentricAuntWanda1
    @EccentricAuntWanda1 Год назад +18

    Holdsworth was particularly awesome on the Bruford albums. He was a long time Carvin guitar guy and is playing a signature model here.

    • @lawrencedick2336
      @lawrencedick2336 Год назад +2

      Allan played on one album with Bruford in the amazing band called U.K., with Eddie Jobson on keys and electric violin; (U.K. released 2 other great albums with Terry Bozzio, from Zappa's band, on drums, but sadly without Allan); and most beautifully with French prog/fusion violinist Jean-Luc Ponty on some of JLP's best albums. Allan has been in my top 3 guitarists since the late 1970s.
      Also the number-1 musician who I never managed to see live.
      The older I get, the closer AH comes to being my favorite recording artist ever. (Well, except for Karen Carpenter.)

    • @milesdust3465
      @milesdust3465 Год назад +4

      Hmm. He was particularly awesome in general according to me.

    • @andrewwilson888
      @andrewwilson888 Год назад

      @@milesdust3465 I second that. Always amazing.

    • @caprise-music6722
      @caprise-music6722 3 месяца назад +1

      His playing on the Tony Williams records is also absolutely sensational

    • @williamortner1202
      @williamortner1202 2 месяца назад

      One of a kind is my all time favorite

  • @Joeh1154
    @Joeh1154 9 месяцев назад +4

    I had the distinct pleasure to have heard Holdsworth in the mid 1980's at NYC's "Bottom Line" venue. The line up was Jimmy Johnson, Chad Wackerman and Alan Pasqua. The only tunes I had heard prior were the songs "Road Games' and "Metal Fatigue.' Seeing the band live was a life changing experience. There was just so much musicianship happening on that stage and it was staggering. The catalogue of music he left behind will have players scratching their heads in wonderment for quite a while. A truly unique spirit who went his own way musically, fame and money be damned. We are all the better for it. RIP to the master, Allan Holdsworth.

    • @guyhommeNYC
      @guyhommeNYC 3 месяца назад

      I've seen Allan live a half dozen times in the last 40 years of his career. Starting in 1976, with the New Tony Williams Lifetime . Then in Germany a few times, on that 1986 tour you see in the video. Then, with Stanley Clarke in an explosive performance in an old bombed out Nazi bunker that happened to have great acoustics, with the roof blown off... I know...insane. the band was staying at a hotel near my office, a group of friends drank and dined with them all night. 10 years later, I saw Allan for the last time, and he remembered the whole thing. Such a sweet and humble man. You could discuss anything with him. I cried when learning of his death.

  • @Gee-no
    @Gee-no Год назад +9

    You really did speak about how freaking amazing Allan Holdsworth is!! That solo was un-F@ing-believable. I grew up listto Allan when I learned guitar at 13. Even tho I was a metalhead I wanted to be a Holdsworth jazz metalhead.
    Did you hear those glassy close chords in the intro? I used to actually tears in my eyes from that stuff (still do). So sad he passed away a few years ago. He will truly be missed.
    The bassist and drummer are tops in the industry too and no slouches. Lol.

    • @ElrondHubbard_1
      @ElrondHubbard_1 Год назад

      I think this is my favorite version here, maybe you'll like it if you don't know it already: ruclips.net/video/bqFSsGf0A50/видео.htmlm

    • @Gee-no
      @Gee-no Год назад +1

      @@ElrondHubbard_1 I'll listen right now. Thanks.👍🏻

  • @brucec8348
    @brucec8348 Год назад +4

    Love the look on Travis' face while Alan got into his section ... like "whaaat the f@@@ck" ... 😅. Yep..that's Holdsworth.

  • @timgrady4630
    @timgrady4630 Год назад +3

    Astounding virtuosity , in every respect .
    Holdsworth is so highly esteemed by all the finest , for self evident reasons .
    Gorgeous tune , on top of that .
    Gary Novak - at the drumkit - is on any serious Short List .

  • @sonanderson6351
    @sonanderson6351 Год назад

    Thanks for your insight, amazing reaction..

  • @jibsmokestack1
    @jibsmokestack1 11 месяцев назад

    Instant subscription! One for reacting to Allan, 2 for the analysis!

  • @efficientguitar
    @efficientguitar Год назад +10

    Awesome! There is an old video of Allan playing with Soft Machine with his white SG that he said he lost, he was playing like a demon already in the late 60s before many of the heroes we love. Well, even Zappa regarded him as the best in the universe, which is... totally accurate.

    • @kevfreeman5482
      @kevfreeman5482 Год назад +1

      I remember that guitar well, and that video, from the late seventies I think! unfortunately I haven't been able to find that video! Do you have any links?

    • @efficientguitar
      @efficientguitar Год назад +2

      @@kevfreeman5482 yes, I had my dates wrong, I was referring to the 1974 video with soft machine. Although, i´ve just found an older recording of him, from 1966 ruclips.net/video/hpEIgGQqnNI/видео.html
      . The soft machine video is this one, even though there are a couple more: ruclips.net/video/5vxwwOvdm_M/видео.html&pp=ygUUYnVuZGxlcyBzb2Z0IG1hY2hpbmU%3D

    • @kevfreeman5482
      @kevfreeman5482 Год назад +1

      @@efficientguitar Brilliant! Thanks so much for that my friend!!🙏🏻🙏🏻👍👍😊

    • @Khayyam-vg9fw
      @Khayyam-vg9fw 8 месяцев назад +3

      @@kevfreeman5482 As a 16-year-old I saw and heard him play it with Pierre Moerlen's Gong at the 1976 Reading Festival. I used to follow him around the London jazz circuit in the late 70s and early 80s, by which time he'd moved on to Strats.

    • @kevfreeman5482
      @kevfreeman5482 8 месяцев назад

      @@Khayyam-vg9fw Gong! Wow, that takes me back! Did you ever see Gong with Steve Hillage?

  • @nickdavies1457
    @nickdavies1457 Год назад +4

    Thanks for this reaction and review. I have played guitar for 48 years and will never come close to this guy. I can play just about anyone else. He is the absolute master. Fred and Devil take the Hindmost are great go to tracks with a more sophisticated, rounded tone. Thanks again

    • @Khayyam-vg9fw
      @Khayyam-vg9fw 8 месяцев назад +1

      Allan Holdsworth was a supreme guitarist but he was something more than that: he was an all-round musical genius.

  • @CitizenKang
    @CitizenKang 10 месяцев назад

    Glad you appreciate this kind of music!

  • @casey570
    @casey570 Год назад +4

    Allan has so much great stuff, both on his own and with others. Try "Devil Take the Hindmost" from Allan's album Metal Fatigue. Also, any of these cuts from the album Believe It from The New Tony Williams Lifetime : Mr Spock, Red Alert, Fred, Proto-Cosmos.

  • @andrewmcgee1001
    @andrewmcgee1001 6 месяцев назад +2

    'The Abingdon Chasp' song by AH on a Bill Bruford album is so hauntingly beautiful. Also 'City Nights' and 'Devil take the Hindmost'..there's really so much to explore. Thanks so much for your analysis.

  • @allanmakela3011
    @allanmakela3011 Год назад +2

    Nice commentary on this genius,met him once,congenial,and softspoken,his song on live in tokyo dvd called Metal Fatigue would be a great choice for revue,he had a musical world of his own making,very rare attribute

  • @radkon67
    @radkon67 Год назад +1

    Good onya for checking it out, bruv. #_#

  • @davidgerlach1132
    @davidgerlach1132 5 месяцев назад

    Excellent video. I love Allen.

  • @hybrydsanity5857
    @hybrydsanity5857 Год назад +3

    great interpretation !!! especially from someone from such a different musical world , being open minded expands our ideas no matter what genre we choose and love to play.
    I loved Holdsworth but don't play anything like him for the most part lol.

  • @inksterrabbit2898
    @inksterrabbit2898 10 месяцев назад +1

    Haha! Everyone that tries to do a reaction to AH can just watch in amazement. They definitely don’t have the first-ever explanation of how he plays.

  • @shredfactor7
    @shredfactor7 Год назад +2

    My first experience with Allan was his Metal Fatigue album. It just blew me away!! He was such a fine player. I suggest checking out that album for some great musicianship!

    • @ElrondHubbard_1
      @ElrondHubbard_1 Год назад +2

      My friends and I walked into Sound Warehouse and saw Metal Fatigue with some kind of "ED Van Halen says HELL YEAH!" sticker on it and a couple of lifelong fans were born that day.

  • @michaellewchuk8272
    @michaellewchuk8272 2 месяца назад

    I hope people watching understand how unique and insane this guy is on guitar.

  • @danieltroch2296
    @danieltroch2296 Год назад +2

    Although it has become a very popular item to watch people listening to music while they pull al kinds of faces and say words as “insane, mindblowing” e.d. , you’re face stays normal but your commentary is much more interesting and contemplative. I always was a great guitar - lover, but when I heard A.H. play guitar for the first time it was a complete new experience for me and he still amazes me with his music. First time was his solo in Jean-Luc Ponty’s song Nostalgia … I suggest to try to listen to this song.

    • @ElrondHubbard_1
      @ElrondHubbard_1 Год назад

      Have you heard Ponty's Point of No Return w/ Allan from just a few years ago? Up there with the Individual Choice tracks, in my opinion.

  • @ProspectorAl
    @ProspectorAl 10 месяцев назад +1

    Check out Jean-Luc Ponty's Enigmatic Ocean. Allan plays a bunch on that and Daryl Stuermer as well. Gret combo!

    • @guyhommeNYC
      @guyhommeNYC 3 месяца назад

      And Patrice Rushen! Edit; sorry, she was on the album before,,,called AURORA.

  • @HarveyMushman888
    @HarveyMushman888 2 месяца назад

    He had that WTF look in his eyes like everyone who hears an Allan Holdsworth solo for the first time...

  • @KBH27
    @KBH27 Год назад +2

    Not sure of his name, but the drummer was killing it.

  • @roydaviescoleman1
    @roydaviescoleman1 10 месяцев назад

    Dali's Rainy Taxi. Allan's baritone there is sublime.

  • @planetpjr
    @planetpjr 10 месяцев назад

    check out "Joshua" from the Secrets album. Use good headphones and play it loud.

  • @virgilrobertsjr7870
    @virgilrobertsjr7870 5 месяцев назад

    I saw Allan Holdsworth twice. First, with Tony Williams and Lifetime at the Childe Harold in Washington DC in the mid to late 70's, and they were supreme!
    The 2nd time I saw him and his group at the Birchmere in Virginia, and they were sensational as well! Not sure of the time frame?
    ☆☆☆☆☆
    💯

  • @thebullgoose6099
    @thebullgoose6099 7 месяцев назад

    Creme de la Alan? His tune, "Fred" is the way to go: beautiful; deceptively simple; takes you on a trip and brings you home stunned, but all the better for it. His solo lures you in quietly then makes its way up through the gears to give you a sustained and increasingly brutal yet enjoyable spanking. There aren't all that many true originals, but I know Alan was one.

  • @normanshute7162
    @normanshute7162 Год назад +4

    Hey Travis glad you found Alan , he’s one of those guys if you were to add some different effects to his guitar he’d be considered a shredder with those improvised runs of his. 😊

  • @Alix777.
    @Alix777. 8 месяцев назад

    I love the studio version, sounds more sci-fi

  • @NIGHTFRIGHT2011
    @NIGHTFRIGHT2011 7 месяцев назад

    Possibly the only time I've heard Allan make a mistake(1.32) and 10 seconds later he gives a wry smile and shake of the head to his bandmates.Incidentally, Tony Williams played drums on the original track from the Atavachron album.

  • @andresmarino2788
    @andresmarino2788 Год назад

    From this concert I would have chosen Letters of Marque

  • @TM-jo4wz
    @TM-jo4wz Год назад +1

    Well there was structure
    I heard the changes.
    Bass and drums are great.
    Of course Alan H.

  • @robinfereday6562
    @robinfereday6562 8 месяцев назад +4

    Zappa, Van Halen,Hendrix,Joe Satriani, Brian May, and many others rated Allen as an all time great if not the greatest But Rolling Stone magazine don’t rate him in the top 250 greatest guitarist 😂😂😂

    • @Had2Listen
      @Had2Listen 4 месяца назад

      What an injustice to Alan and more so to the world! Shame on them !

    • @FelipeV3444
      @FelipeV3444 Месяц назад

      Normies didn't know about Allan! Lol

    • @AutisticVaxtard
      @AutisticVaxtard 23 дня назад

      Or Yngwie. He wasn't on that 250 list either

  • @rogersingleton9462
    @rogersingleton9462 10 месяцев назад +1

    Devil Take the Hindmost

  • @elox32
    @elox32 2 месяца назад

    His music is not random, chaotic, or crazy. That’s just a reflection of some listeners perspective and experience with his music. Listen to more diverse music and you’ll see!

  • @lex.cordis
    @lex.cordis Год назад +6

    Man, it's unfortunate that this is the video that always is people's go-to for "reacting" to Allan's music. It's just not the best example, but what can you do. Honestly, The 4.15 Bradford Executive or Joshua would be better examples.

  • @hawkgodman
    @hawkgodman Год назад +2

    You should check out the Brufford albums, especially Feels Good To Me and Gradually Going Tornade. GGT Holdwsworth was replaced by John Clark who mimicked Alan. Its nonetheless brilliant. But Feels so good is my favorite album of all time. Along with GGT. This video would have been much better with Chad Wackerman on drums, he is much crisper playing that kind of a million notes a second stuff. This guy was aesome, but a bit to... messy for me. even though it was perfect. Just sounded too much for me.

    • @ElrondHubbard_1
      @ElrondHubbard_1 Год назад

      I've always thought it best to go straight to Master Strokes instead. Just my opinion.
      I recommended the Warsaw 98 version of Looking Glass in another comment. Have a favorite? The one here is definitely not the best.

    • @hawkgodman
      @hawkgodman Год назад +1

      @@ElrondHubbard_1 To be honest, my listening was limited. After discovering the ones I mentioned, I did try to dig a little deeper but got sidetracked into U.K. Although I did listen to quite a bit of King Crimson with Brufford. I will definitely (Im getting back into drumming myself) give the ones you mention a listen. I also love the Hells Bells one too.

    • @ElrondHubbard_1
      @ElrondHubbard_1 Год назад

      @hawkgodman i believe Master Strokes is like a combo of two Bruford albums with Holdsworth (i was wrong. See next reply, please.)
      Edit: Oh... I almost forgot, i didn't mean for you, I meant when recommending to Holdsworth "noobs". Looks like John Clark is on two tracks.
      I love, well, the UK with Holdsworth too (not so much the one without him). I've been "on a kick" with Time to Kill live w/ Allan for a couple of years now (boots) - that track, I like it a lot. I do love Allan's style or whatever w/ UK.
      Cheers 🍻

    • @ElrondHubbard_1
      @ElrondHubbard_1 Год назад

      @hawkgodman this might get deleted because I copied and pasted from the net), but it might stay in your notifications:
      " Master Strokes 1978-1985. The Story. "Master Strokes 1978-1985" is a 'best of' retrospective featuring the music of monster fusion drummer Bill Bruford from the late '70s to early '80s period. Of particular interest to guitar fans is the superb legato stylings of Allan Holdsworth on eight of the CD's fourteen tracks. "

  • @GCKelloch
    @GCKelloch 10 месяцев назад

    Judging by his sig Carvin guitar, and his looks, this clip must be in the '00s, or even '10s, and I think the alcohol was already affecting his ideas and ability by then. He was even better than this in the '80s and '90s. I was an early Holdsworth fanatic. Man, do I miss him.

  • @stevenewcomer8837
    @stevenewcomer8837 5 месяцев назад

    Have you ever thought about being an auctioneer? 🙂 Man you talk fast. 😮

  • @thehairygull
    @thehairygull 3 месяца назад

    Big Influence on Meshuggah

  • @ElrondHubbard_1
    @ElrondHubbard_1 Год назад

    This is like 96 or 97 not the 80s. I'd have picked a different live performance. Probably this, for Looking Glass:
    ruclips.net/video/bqFSsGf0A50/видео.htmlm

  • @Slumbert
    @Slumbert Год назад +2

    Zappa called him the best. David Gilmour Maybe a little better composer.
    Goodsall is also up there...

    • @AlvaroLL23
      @AlvaroLL23 6 месяцев назад +1

      gilmour doesn't even come close to allan's incredible compositions, listen to the solos of 415 bradford executive, tokyo dream, the sixteen men of tain… He was also incredible in his progressive rock bands like UK, Soft Machine… He created his own musical language, there will be no one else like him

  • @vbassone
    @vbassone 10 месяцев назад

    This is 1997.

  • @yoba6037
    @yoba6037 8 месяцев назад

    Nice if you to film yourself watching an actual good video tbh

  • @tracyanderson4304
    @tracyanderson4304 Год назад

    They don’t somehow meld together … these songs are woven together with precision … very little if anything is left to chance….

  • @ErikShen2907
    @ErikShen2907 6 месяцев назад +1

    NON BREWED CONDIMENT!!!

  • @Wizardofgosz
    @Wizardofgosz 10 месяцев назад

    Definitely not the 80s. He wasn't playing his Carvin signature model then because they didn't exist. And he wouldn't have made any mistakes in the 80s. As he got older and the drinking took hold his technique suffered.
    This was 1997.

  • @Samsgarden
    @Samsgarden 2 месяца назад

    Naturally you ceased playing country after this.

  • @gaggle57
    @gaggle57 Год назад +1

    What percentage of people who excessively rave about a 30 second clip of Allan Holdsworth go home and listen to MORE than 30 seconds of Holdsworth music?
    🤣🤣

    • @fusionfan6883
      @fusionfan6883 Год назад +8

      I do and have done all my life since I bought his first album in 1969. Also, increasingly we are seeing so many young guitarists embracing Allan's music, over time he will be the preeminent influence for improvising guitarists, if he isn't already.

    • @lex.cordis
      @lex.cordis Год назад +6

      Since I discovered Holdsworth about 5 years ago, I have barely listened to _anything_ else. Seriously. His music brings me to tears. Not everybody has ears, man. Just stick to blues licks.

    • @michaelgaboardi9817
      @michaelgaboardi9817 Год назад +4

      I’ve listened to his music almost everyday for years- just cus you don’t get it doesn’t mean others don’t

    • @michaelgaboardi9817
      @michaelgaboardi9817 Год назад +3

      @@lex.cordis I feel exactly the same way. Listening to tunes like Eidolon, Home, Above and Below, spheres of innocence and many others never fail to make me teary eyed.

    • @sixslinger9951
      @sixslinger9951 10 месяцев назад

      he bores me to tears. i appreciate his talent but God the guitar wankery gets on my nerves after a couple minutes.