I used to do a light show at a venue called Sisters on the Seven Sisters Road N.London where Patto used to regularly play, in fact they might have been the ‘house band’. It was a thrill to listen to Ollie’s amazing guitar playing, which was impossible to pigeonhole as it had so many different influences… particularly jazz. It was also very unusual to see a guitarist start playing the vibraphone in the middle of a number! Unfortunately I don’t know much about his later musical career, he was not only a rare talent but also a really lovely guy!
The fact that Halsall and Holdsworth actually used to play *together in the same band* in the early 70s (Tempest) still blows my mind. Having ONE guitarist with that amount of talent and creativity in a band is *amazing.* Having TWO is just... beyond beyond. 🤯
What a revelation. He seems to be working on harmonies which the rest of the band aren't aware of. His technique matches his inventiveness. Thank you for putting this together.
If you put the time these solos were recorded into context, you can totally hear what started coming from the States in the late 70's and 80's. Really fantastic stuff and way ahead of his time.
That solo on "Give it all away "on their classic" Hold your fire "album says it all . Ollie was one of the great guitarists that should have been up there with the greats . Listen also to his extended jazzy solo on their self titled debut called "money bag "
His work on Money Bag is fantastic. Once in a while (usually at a jazz gig) when a guitarist gets particularly hot I'll hear small flashes of Money Bag, but they hardly ever stay at that level for more than a few seconds. More often than not when I BS w/ them it turns out they've never even heard of Halsall.
@@starcloud4959 l have an original Vertigo swirl label l brought at the time for £1 . 50 . Very collectable now and going for high prices but l would'nt part with it as it's such a great album . Have the CD for the bonus tracks and have an original of their first album too which is worth checking out if you have'nt heard it . Great band Patto and vocalist Mike Patto was sadly underrated as was Ollie .
Reading a guitar book and this guy was mentioned as “ The greatest guitar player You’ve never heard if” So, I never heard of him and now I’m here. Holy S&@t this guy is unreal! they were right
I first heard Ollie Halsall on a Patto album. Sweet mother of God!!! There are unsung/underrated guitarists, and then there's guitarists like Ollie! It amazes me how such an incredible musician as Halsall just flies over some people's heads ( it's those people that the birdie song was written for) because, as far as I'm aware...NOBODY WAS PULLING OFF THAT KIND OF SHIT! granted, we have/had Holdsworth! But I have seen NOTHING really said about Ollie Halsall. Great musicianship! Great tone! (As tone is acquired without hods of distortion! You can hear it all with some overdriven valves!!! To me, OLLIE HALSALL is the most unsing guitarist ever! And hands down one of the greatest
I think that you’ve only had a small sample size of guitar players then. While he is decent, there were much more proficient players. For example, Michael Schenker, Gary Moore, just to name two. Broaden your horizons.
What a great compilation.My favourite solo is on Tempest’s...Dance To My Tune...especially the live version.Also has a great..moog..solo by Ollie.Cheers for posting.
Alway loved Ollie, a true genius. For another insanely underrated guitarist, check out the incredible Bill Nelson, ex of Be Bop Deluxe and a huge solo catalogue. Bill had similar, if not greater, fluidity and an amazing sense of melody. Both seemed to draw from the same guitar history, with a lot of blues, rock, rock and roll and some jazz riffs subsumed into their incendiary playing.. This is particularly on show in the live BBD recordings, especially Life in the Air Age.
@@clouddog2393 Yes indeed hence my mentioning him over the years. The version of Landscape in Live in the Air Age is even more amazing, but my favourite solo of his has to be Crying to the Sky.
My first real job was as a teen at a place called Fishing and Hunting News, in Seattle. In the 70's everyone was a music fan with deeply held beliefs - or many were. We also had these older chicks working there who had a lot of money (why they bothered working who knows) who were knockouts and knew hell of a lot about music. They went on and on about Gary Peacock, Patto (who I had heard) Billy Cobham and others. They launched into these names after we discussed Blow by Blow which they also liked. They felt these other dudes were the next notch 'up,' from Jeff Beck, I guess. Most of the names these chicks mentioned were musicians I didn't know. Some dude who worked there (became a lawyer) knew even more. These people really knew what they were talking about but at the time, meant little to a dude who took the bus to work because I was too young to drive. I had heard Halsall...but that was it. He was a hell of a player.
This guy's an amazing player obviously, and like most people, even music nerds, I'd not really heard of him. It's odd to hear him going nuts in a very hard rock/ugly way one second, then all of a sudden it's Allan Holdsworth "that's impossible" runs played with precision. Halsall must have been cursed. To be that good at that time? With the right band he could been a phenomenon. And they said Clapton was God...
Sorry to say but they are completely different harmonically, Halsall was basically a fast rock guitarist and couldn’t really play jazz changes. Also his picking technique is completely different. If anything, he had more in common with the great Bill Nelson. That said he was a maverick genius, but very different to Holdsworth.
@@fusionfan6883 I don't think Allan was able to play changes either at the time. Allan developed his own universe later eventually, but their roots were quite similar. That's what I hear at least. I totally hear exact same runs like around 6:44-46. One obvious thing that Ollie influenced Allan is that whammy bar thing. Allan admitted that in an interview.
He must've turned down some major bands! I know Mike Patto from Spooky Tooth, another band that should've been bigger. Ollie Halsall, though... Incredibly talented.
Either you're deaf or you don't know anything about playing guitar (or both). Anything innovative? He was the first rock guitarist to employ the hammer-on legato technique using all fretting fingers.
Camera men were idiots back in the day in the 60,s they would show a guitarist picking hand it took years for C...men to show the lead guitarist left hand playing the solo
I used to do a light show at a venue called Sisters on the Seven Sisters Road N.London where Patto used to regularly play, in fact they might have been the ‘house band’. It was a thrill to listen to Ollie’s amazing guitar playing, which was impossible to pigeonhole as it had so many different influences… particularly jazz. It was also very unusual to see a guitarist start playing the vibraphone in the middle of a number! Unfortunately I don’t know much about his later musical career, he was not only a rare talent but also a really lovely guy!
The fact that Halsall and Holdsworth actually used to play *together in the same band* in the early 70s (Tempest) still blows my mind.
Having ONE guitarist with that amount of talent and creativity in a band is *amazing.* Having TWO is just... beyond beyond. 🤯
I had that beautiful lp. Great package.
The most amazing obscure guitarist in the world. My favorite of
his playing, is on the Kevin Ayers song BLUE.
May I, as well
He just soars! I love that too!
Luckily I have the album that song appeared in, Yes We have no Mananas.. Because the studio version of that song has never been allowed on RUclips!
What a revelation. He seems to be working on harmonies which the rest of the band aren't aware of. His technique matches his inventiveness. Thank you for putting this together.
If you put the time these solos were recorded into context, you can totally hear what started coming from the States in the late 70's and 80's. Really fantastic stuff and way ahead of his time.
What a great guitarist ! Listen to him also on Kevin Ayers tracks.
That solo on "Give it all away "on their classic" Hold your fire "album says it all . Ollie was one of the great guitarists that should have been up there with the greats . Listen also to his extended jazzy solo on their self titled debut called "money bag "
His work on Money Bag is fantastic. Once in a while (usually at a jazz gig) when a guitarist gets particularly hot I'll hear small flashes of Money Bag, but they hardly ever stay at that level for more than a few seconds. More often than not when I BS w/ them it turns out they've never even heard of Halsall.
'Hold Your Fire' is an incredible mind dblowing album!!!!!!!!!!!there's nothing out there like it.
@@starcloud4959 l have an original Vertigo swirl label l brought at the time for £1 . 50 . Very collectable now and going for high prices but l would'nt part with it as it's such a great album . Have the CD for the bonus tracks and have an original of their first album too which is worth checking out if you have'nt heard it . Great band Patto and vocalist Mike Patto was sadly underrated as was Ollie .
The guitar playing on "my days are numbered" is some of the cleanest guitar I've ever heard
Reading a guitar book and this guy was mentioned as “ The greatest guitar player You’ve never heard if” So, I never heard of him and now I’m here. Holy S&@t this guy is unreal!
they were right
Just when I thought I'd heard 'em all. Wow, crazy stuff. Gotta dig into this guy's material. Some of this is rather uniquely wild.
Indeed!
I first heard Ollie Halsall on a Patto album. Sweet mother of God!!!
There are unsung/underrated guitarists, and then there's guitarists like Ollie! It amazes me how such an incredible musician as Halsall just flies over some people's heads ( it's those people that the birdie song was written for) because, as far as I'm aware...NOBODY WAS PULLING OFF THAT KIND OF SHIT! granted, we have/had Holdsworth! But I have seen NOTHING really said about Ollie Halsall. Great musicianship! Great tone! (As tone is acquired without hods of distortion!
You can hear it all with some overdriven valves!!!
To me, OLLIE HALSALL is the most unsing guitarist ever! And hands down one of the greatest
Just read about him in an interview with XTC's Andy Partridge, who cites Halsell as a major influence on his guitar playing
He had such raging energy! Gone before his time.
He is the G.O.A.T. of rock guitar
GuitarOnAmplifiedTracks?
Well, he was very good. That'd suffice.
I think that you’ve only had a small sample size of guitar players then. While he is decent, there were much more proficient players. For example, Michael Schenker, Gary Moore, just to name two. Broaden your horizons.
Not just technically amazing but also very musical.
I prefer Allan Holdsworth
I was a friend of Clive Griffiths who has some stories to tell....
What a great compilation.My favourite solo is on Tempest’s...Dance To My Tune...especially the live version.Also has a great..moog..solo by Ollie.Cheers for posting.
Never heard of this guy… Glad I did, he’s fucking awesome
Oh and another forgotten UK guitar genius is Brian Godding,. Check out his playing with Mike Westbrook, Magma and Centipede. Enjoy!
You missed the work he did with The Rutles.
fuoriclasse Ollie ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
Unforgottable, 🙏🏻
Alway loved Ollie, a true genius. For another insanely underrated guitarist, check out the incredible Bill Nelson, ex of Be Bop Deluxe and a huge solo catalogue. Bill had similar, if not greater, fluidity and an amazing sense of melody. Both seemed to draw from the same guitar history, with a lot of blues, rock, rock and roll and some jazz riffs subsumed into their incendiary playing.. This is particularly on show in the live BBD recordings, especially Life in the Air Age.
Bill was very underated too . His solo on "Adventures in a Yorkshire Landscape "on their "Axe Victim "album is just beautiful and evocative .
@@clouddog2393 Yes indeed hence my mentioning him over the years. The version of Landscape in Live in the Air Age is even more amazing, but my favourite solo of his has to be Crying to the Sky.
Bill has cited Ollie as an influence.
great guitar player ... totally new to me ... never heard his name before
You’ve got to be kidding….
My first real job was as a teen at a place called Fishing and Hunting News, in Seattle. In the 70's everyone was a music fan with deeply held beliefs - or many were. We also had these older chicks working there who had a lot of money (why they bothered working who knows) who were knockouts and knew hell of a lot about music. They went on and on about Gary Peacock, Patto (who I had heard) Billy Cobham and others. They launched into these names after we discussed Blow by Blow which they also liked. They felt these other dudes were the next notch 'up,' from Jeff Beck, I guess.
Most of the names these chicks mentioned were musicians I didn't know. Some dude who worked there (became a lawyer) knew even more. These people really knew what they were talking about but at the time, meant little to a dude who took the bus to work because I was too young to drive. I had heard Halsall...but that was it. He was a hell of a player.
Patto, tempest 2 " super" groupes pour ce guitariste - vibraphoniste execptionnel !
This guy's an amazing player obviously, and like most people, even music nerds, I'd not really heard of him. It's odd to hear him going nuts in a very hard rock/ugly way one second, then all of a sudden it's Allan Holdsworth "that's impossible" runs played with precision. Halsall must have been cursed. To be that good at that time? With the right band he could been a phenomenon. And they said Clapton was God...
I can hear echoes of those amazing runs in the playing of Allan Holdsworth.
Me too . Both ploughed similar musical territories .
They played together in a twin guitar configuration of Tempest. There's a BBC concert of it.
@@guitarchannel5676yes it was amazing .
Sorry to say but they are completely different harmonically, Halsall was basically a fast rock guitarist and couldn’t really play jazz changes. Also his picking technique is completely different. If anything, he had more in common with the great Bill Nelson. That said he was a maverick genius, but very different to Holdsworth.
@@fusionfan6883 I don't think Allan was able to play changes either at the time. Allan developed his own universe later eventually, but their roots were quite similar. That's what I hear at least. I totally hear exact same runs like around 6:44-46. One obvious thing that Ollie influenced Allan is that whammy bar thing. Allan admitted that in an interview.
Saw him with Jon Hiseman's Tempest in 1973.
You can keep EC and JP; this guy rocks!
Guy was a musical FREAK: great on guitar, vibes, keys, and - I believe - drums.
What about Carlos Rios on “ Brother to Brother “ by Gino Vanelli and Ollie Halsall on “ Give it Away”…💙
Where is that magical SG? R.i.p halsall
Harg...! Bloody left handed !
Also a great vibraphone player...
Patto are the reason why I found Zep to be “lame” in my teenage years !! Those in “the know” knew Patto !!!!😂
Who is he playing with on OGWT at 5:34?
Neil Innes. Momma Bee is from Innes’ album.
@@claymor8241 thank you.
I also think his best playing was with Kevin Ayers
Song at 6:21 ????
This is "May I?" by Kevin Ayers. Usually a great highlight for Halsall's playing.
THANK YOU!!!!!!!!!!@@thinklikeakey
Incedibly Zappa.
He must've turned down some major bands! I know Mike Patto from Spooky Tooth, another band that should've been bigger. Ollie Halsall, though... Incredibly talented.
playback
Really?give meJeff Beck anyday..I dont hear anything innovative or special here at all,just a lot of fiddling about to no discernable end product.
You make a valid point or two, but even if that's fiddling, it's astonishingly virtuosic fiddling. A jazzer playing rock.
Comparing this to Jeff Beck is like comparing a watermelon to a box of nails.
You keep Beck, Hi ho Silver lining and all.
Ha ha spot on@@pastorpresent7774
Either you're deaf or you don't know anything about playing guitar (or both). Anything innovative? He was the first rock guitarist to employ the hammer-on legato technique using all fretting fingers.
Camera men were idiots back in the day in the 60,s they would show a guitarist picking hand it took years for C...men to show the lead guitarist left hand playing the solo
Who copied who Olli sounds like Jeff Beck or does Jeff Beck sound like Olli
Neither sounds anything like the other.