As a young rock guitarist back in the 80s, I was a fan of EVH, then Yngwie came along, so I played his stuff just because few could at the time. When I heard Allan, I was still playing Metal and Hard Rock, but I walked away from every rock guitarist right then. I would close my eyes, lay on my bed and just listen to him, dreaming to be that good. His influence started showing up in my Metal playing and people starting asking me after the show "man WTF was that?! Where did you learn to play that way?" Guitarists in the scene started labeling me a virtuoso! I hate to selfishly admit that I miss those days when Allan was that secret no one else (at least in Metal) knew about. Just me and Allan🤣😂
I Met Allan when i was 16, playing to about 12 people. From that day, exchanged emails and he forever remained, the sweetest,humble and beautiful human being and his music is a document of that....Miss you Al
@@SirJamestheIII You're absolutely right. I think they both have a lot in common in their playing. In a just world they would be household names. Well, they are household names...in my household, because I live in a house of music.
I had the pleasure and honor of being one of Brett's students during my days in Musicians Institute. He is an incredible genius of a musician and all around great guy. He's completely unaware of his own genius and was always so humble. I would have been incredibly lucky had I had a fraction of his greatness.
What Brett says near the end about how Allan should have been given a government grant to write and record his music is something I've always felt. I used to almost obsess about how, "This guy should not have to tour as much as he does to pay the bills! Someone should give him a few million bucks to relax and do his own thing in the studio!" I would say this to my guitar students and friends. But of course, that's not how the music business works. In a better world a record company would have recognized his unique groundbreaking genius and really helped him out. It was nice that we all got to see him perform and meet him. But it would have been much better if he performed when he felt like it and not because he had to in order to survive.
art is something states should grant and fund as much as education, healthcare etc. it's not an utopia, I know in some nordic countries this happens, and also in Cuba, so basically capitalism is the problem
why would a music company or the government go into a clearly losing business? The problem is that there is no DEMAND for this stuff or not enough at least. The people are just too stupid, as is often the problem. That is the sole root cause problem.
Nzinn73 Look at Danny Gatton. World class talent does not necessarily equal commercial appeal, obviously. It's kind of sad. You need to be good and have opportunity, I guess. If you can play and sing and write, you might be successful, or happen across the right gig.
What a beautiful and heartfelt tribute to the genius that IS Allan Holdsworth. When players of the calibre of Brett and Frank Gambale struggle to comprehend what Allan was playing,then you know that he was on a level way above everyone else and completely in a class of his own.
Met Allan at Iridium, NYC 4-5 years before he passed. We hung out at the bar and I just remember his gigantic hand completely engulfing mine when we shook hands. Such a warm, sweet guy. And he completely killed it as usual on stage that night. Total Mastery. RIP Allan
Thank you Brett for a genuine and humble tribute to Allan's music! and it's sad that people like Allan never really had the success in money and in other ways but all the greats died penniless and without the success they deserved. I thing the music industry could do with a relieve fund to help people out when needed if they could put away their egos and images away in a cupboard for a while! I never thought that Eric Clapton would have become a household name and in the same breath completely ignorant of Jack Bruce and Ginger Baker but that's life I suppose. Thank you for carrying on Allan's thing for want of a better word but in your own way. Regards Jon
Brett. Your own music is an inspiration. I was so happy to meet Allan Holdsworth in Buffalo. I just wish that the music that he could play was as satisfying to him as it was miraculous to his audience. Instead, he was sitting at the bar almost crying in his beer because he felt that he had not played well enough. Meanwhile, me and my mates were beyond astonished by his musicality and soul evident in his two sets. And I could not believe how approachable and humble he was as a human being. Perhaps he was from an advanced civilization who landed here but was never aware that he came from some far away place. I imagine that he is there now and brought his beer making talents with him too. Thanks for your reflections mate!
a very late comment, just came across this video. thanks Brett... I have a signed copy of your album Dark Matter. I love hearing how the influences percolate through great players such as yourself. thanks for a touching tribute. Allan is one of the untouchables.
Watched this to the end, and, to my slight surprise, it made me cry. I was lucky enough to see Allan perform seven times. I feel blessed, thankful, and humbled to have had the opportunity to have been in his presence. I will go to my grave wishing I could play like that.
This is probably the best tribute to Allan Holdsworth especially the legacy part. It's so right! Dear Brett, obviously it's not just notes you can put together in a very nice way, you can put the words as well
Thanks for the wonderful tribute, Brett. Holdsworth's genius was impossible to quantify to non-musicians. I hope that he someday gets the respect he always deserved. Sad that he won't be able to see the mark he makes on the music of the future. His music and musical ideas represent the most advanced system of 12 tone harmony in musical history. I hope that, someday, advanced music theorists give him the respect he deserved.
I'm not a musician but i live where Allan was brought up. I hear in his music this location. It was part of his personality and musical language. my favourite musician of all time. thanks Brett!
Two notes played by Allan Holdsworth moves a mountain of emotions in me. When I first dropped the needle on my first Allan Holdsworth's album "Atavachron" ( Non-Brewed Condiments) I looked at my friend next to me and I said "what did just happen?" Thank you Brett for your tribute to Allan.
I feel your pain brother! I met Allan many times. At various NAMM shows, different clubs that he would play. I even saw him at a movie theater with his family going to see the movie "Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home" He sat right behind me with his family. We talked a bit after the movie and said he would love to do a soundtrack for a movie. He was in his own league! A very nice and humble spirit. We had a beer together at Catalina's Bar and Grill in Hollywood, CA. He was promoting his Road Games EP. We talked about cycling! I was introduced to Allan from the UK album. Nobody heard of him. This was back in 1978. When I heard the solo on "In The Dead of Night" I couldn't believe my ears! I have been a fan ever since. Thank you for posting this. To this day still, I'm trying to figure out what he is doing on that fretboard!
Thank you Brett.Lovely words.I am sixty years old and became a fun of Allan's in the early seventies in a recording with a band called Soft Machine.To say that i was blown away is an understatement!!,his soloing was so different to everybody else and so fast!.In years to come i was to attend several concerts and guitar clinics by Allan,and always enjoyed what he did i loved the sound of his guitar,soloing or cording.i liked his jokes and he always came across as a very humble man.You know Brett something you said is so correct,he was so much ahead of everybody else.He wrote some incredible melodies(ballads if you like),at first i didn't understand what he was trying to say but after coming back and hearing time and time again an amazing melody appeared and many times i would cry in joy of recognition that this human being had an amazing ability to write music that was so far off centre that it required full attention to comprehend.How did he do that?.Anyway he will be sadly missed ,a legend has died .Hopefully his music will live on forever.RIP Allan Holdsworth.
What a great tribute. Allan was truly a one of a kind musician, the likes we'll struggle to hear again. I first heard him on that astounding solo on that same UK track and it remains one of my all time favourites. I would also give a shout out to Beezebub from Bruford as well. His solo work started with Metal Fatigue for me and I was hooked. Allan's influence on some of my other favourite guitarists (EVH, Scott Henderson, Alex Lifeson, John Petrucci) was pretty profound and we're all the richer for hearing it.
I agree with you 100% You forgot to mention one very important player and thats Marshal Harrison, an incredible Titan on the guitar and a true Holdsworth fan. Check him out and your jaw will be on the floor, just ask Garsed.
Jean Luc Ponty's Enegmatic Ocean album also has some great Allan Holdsworth playing on it. UK and Ponty are where I discovered Allan. 6 billion people on the planet at that time and only one Allan Holdsworth. No other guitar player at that time played or sounded like him. Just like Jimi and Eddy, Allan was in a class all buy himself and even more than the others.
note to self.. add Brett Garsed to list of awesome guitarists.. thanks for the vid : ) we saw Allan downtown Orlando FL in the late 80s in a small pub with Chad on drums.. Allan walked in the front door with his headless axe strapped on his back, just a humble chap! A great memory.. RIP Allan
Beautiful Brett, thank you. Allan's music has been the soundtrack to my life ever since Igginbottom, and I totally agree that it is music of the soul and not a PHD thesis, as some narrow minded critics would suggest. Technically I could not fathom what Allan was doing but the music spoke to me at an emotional level and took me on a journey to places that would otherwise have been hidden from me but for Allan's genius. If you, and the venerable John McLaughlin amongst others, freely admit you could not fully grasp Allan's immense harmonic universe, then that in itself shows it is the music of the stars and not the physics lab. And lest people forget, whilst naturally the first point of amazement is Allan's soloing, he was so uniquely innovative in any number of areas of the guitar. You have mentioned his chordal genius, and he was also an innovator in sound too, developing over the course of his life a number of evolving guitar sounds that indelibly influenced the guitar world. For example, his unique approach to the whammy influenced rockers and fusion guitarists alike, and also encouraged guitarist to incorporate it into a hybrid accessible style that spoke to musos as well as your everyday listener - the much missed Alan Murphy was a great example of this. So many diverse guitarists were influenced by Allan, for example the wonderful Phill Keaggy on his Wind and the Wheat album (and the incredible solos on his track Sounds from the Getting Closer album, and the amazing modern player that echoes Allan in her own unique way, Susan Weinert (just check out her IOU inspired Running Out Of Time album. And how interesting it was to see truly world class guitarists grappling with the impossible task of taking over from Allan, such as the incredible John Etheridge in Soft Machine (listen to John manfully grappling with Hazard Profile on British Tour ’55) and the criminally underrated John Clarke on Bruford’s Live Tapes (I corresponded with John a year or two ago after his retirement from music and a more humble musician you could never wish to meet - I think he was amazing on those latter Bruford albums). Allan’s music, and his influence on guitar, will resonate forever, and it is not too much to say that he is up there with the giants such as Mozart, Coltrane and the like. And thank you Brett at personal level for developing your own style which harks to Allan but also expresses your own unique approach to the instrument - long may you continue to blaze your own particular path whilst honoring the musical giant that was Allan Holdsworth.
When Steve Vai, Eddy Van Halen, Shawn Lane and Brett Garsed cannot fully understand what Allan was doing it proves he was in contact with something else no other musician could tune in. We all have FM radio in our heads and Allan had XM radio in his.
Couldn't agree more about your comment re the emotion in his playing. I've always ended up in tears listening to the 4.15 Bradford Executive.....it's just pouring out of him on that track. It's like a wailing animal at times. First time I heard him was the intro to Nevermore.......wtf. Totally hooked ever since. I've been fortunate to see him live a number of times with friends, who also dig his playing. So although sad, many great memories.
Ah, Nevermore...brilliant acoustic intro from Allan. I transcribed about 1/3 of his solo in that one trading licks with Jobson. Took me 1.5 yrs to be able to play it. I should get on with the rest of it.
Great video. The one thing that nobody can deny is that Allan was untouchable at knowing the fundamentals to the core, then throwing it to the side and playing with his heart.
Brett you're incredible. Player and gentleman. I've followed you for many years, and always loved your fluid style, much like Allan. Thank you. RIP Allan.
I like how Allan once said, "not to learn licks, because that can limit improvising " something to that extent .. I am just beginning to understand that, and it's fantastic..
Brett your humility, recognition and reverence to the great Alan Holdsworth is humbling to watch. Wonderful to listen to. What a player and innovator he was. Thanks for that...it 's pure gold....beautiful.
The greatest of his generation, or any generation for that matter. A hundred years from now new musicians will be listening to his music in total awe and amazement. RIP Allan.
Watched this again, with gratitude for all the music Allan Holdsworth made, and appreciation for the way you've articulated not only these key aspects of his playing but also the admiration we all have for his monster talent. Combine that talent with Allan's humility? Out of this world.
I saw Allan in 1991 at a dive bar in Sacramento, and I bought a CD that night that was produced by Mike Varney. That was the first time I heard of Brett Garsed and Shawn Lane. Ever since then, these are the top three players I admire to this day. They all have this ability to move so fast and fluid, but retain a very musical touch to their playing. RIP Allan!
Nice tribute, Brett! I don't play guitar or any instrument, and I couldn't agree more when you say that one doesn't have to intellectually "understand" Holdsworth's music to love it on an emotional level and to simply revel in its awesomely fluid virtuosity, as I've been doing for over thirty-five years. Thanks for posting this.
Wonderful Brett. "If anyone should've been given a grant just to write and record music...". You're so right. Just a short anecdote, I met Allan once in a very small club in London, early 90's. Pre-internet days so I found out just by luck and was living nearby at the time. I was a huge fan because growing up I always picked up Guitar Player magazine whenever I could and he rightly got a lot of exposure in it. I was young and traveled a lot back then and always took my walkman and a few Holdsworth tapes wherever I went. IOU, Metal Fatigue, Secrets. etc. Secrets was my personal favorite btw. It got me through some lonely times. So anyway, I went to the club and saw his band live. If I remember, Steve Smith was on drums ( I might be wrong about this it was a long time ago), plus bass player plus Allan. They were so tight I'd never seen anything to compare. Even though it was a small club the sound was incredible and the intensity was unbelievable. I can remember to this day that when Allan ramped into his solos that the drum kit was moving across the stage and Steve would regularly have to pull back his hi hat or bass drum or whatever. The point is that those guys were super talented and playing their hearts out for Allan because he was utterly genius. But here's the main bit. After the show Allan was standing at the bar having a beer - just standing there like a normal person - and after a few minutes I plucked up the courage to go speak to him. Not a single part of him was above himself. He took the time to talk to me and was right down to earth. I did a geeky fan thing by asking him to sign my IOU CD which I have to this day. I can tell you that he was a true gentleman and acted like he was completely unaware of his unbelievable talent. We've lost a good one in every respect. Apologies, not such a short anecdote after all but I wanted to share. RIP Allan.
This is such a moving, sincere and beautiful tribute to Allan's music and playing! Especially the legacy part expresses exactly how I relate to Allan's music on an emotional level. It always spoke directly to me despite me clearly not "understanding" his music in any sort of "analytical" or "stringent theory" way. Thank you for this beautiful tribute!
Awesome tribute to one of the most amazing musicians ever to grace the planet. Thank you for posting this. I became a fan after hearing the UK album then the IOU days and all of his other solo stuff. There will never be another like him. Rest in peace Allan we miss you so.
Thank you Brett for this Video. It once more demonstrates how important Allans legacy is for todays best guitar players. You can not praise Allans work high enough. He not only influenced musicians, he also intoduced new playing techniques, new sounds, chords, never heard before and he added something to the music itsself what from now on will be part of music as long as mankind exist.
Well said Brett, a great tribute. Allan Holdsworth was so advanced, human kind will take a couple of decades to even come close to his way of thinking, forget playing that will take another couple of decades or even centuries.
I'm sorry I only just stumbled across this. It is a heartfelt and moving tribute to someone who opened my eyes to a new world of music...by someone who is an exceptional guitarist in his own right. Thanks Brett.
Brilliant tribute and explanation. I’m a 60 year-old, self-taught fusion drummer but you make perfect sense and I feel the same way about Allan. When I first heard him with Tony W. back in 1975 it was a revelation-almost religious. I also heard the melancholy and empathy underneath the rivers of fire. Thx so much.☮️
I am not sure if watching and listening to all these great players, inspires me to continue to play guitar, or to quit. It is like climbing the mounting even when you already know that you will never reach the top. What a great player, what a brilliant tribute.
in 1987 I moved away from my family at 15. At 16, the printer at my school in Adelaide heard me playing guitar at assembly introduced himself and said 'you have to listen to this'.... it was Allan Holdsworth... I get emotional just thinking about it... away from home in a hostile environment and hearing such incredibly emotional guitar playing... he was a musical refuge for me.... he still is..... I was gutted at Allan's death.
I was just reminded again how much I don't know... I am happy with my music and my attempts to be good at what I do. I am so glad there are people who have that oddly unexplainable talent that goes beyond. Speaking of Alan Holdsworth it is good to see someone like Brett explain Alan's work like so many of us never will.
Thanks very much for your heartfelt and very perceptive and articulate take on the uncanny dizzyingly beautiful genius Holdsworth. Your playing is fantastic too, Mr. Garsed!
Thanks Brett! You helped me into the holdsworth universe. I found your music during the process and fell in love it. Thanks! You Have been a huge inspiration.
So interesting how everyone refers to him as this alien type figure. I never read about him much online until I started getting into his music(took me about 8 months of off and on listening). Once I got into it, I would tell my friends that I won't make it to the party because I was in Galaxy Yrslrs on planet Rlasncx listening to Mr.Holdsworth run shop. After being on the internet, everyone has a similar sentiment. His music really does come from another dimension. There are no words to really describe it, the emotion is there, but what kind? I don't know. My best description to any of his music is the song Sixteen Men of Tain: Futuristic, Mysterious, and Calming. The rest of that album fits loosely to that description, I think it takes place about 200 years from now in more of open minded benevolent society..
A nice tribute to Allan Holdsworth.Greatly appreciated.Its wonderful to see that his followers have been passing the torch of his music.Keep up the good work.Express the uncommon chord!!
Thanks Brett for your wonderful and heartfelt tribute. I first heard Allan in the early 80's and have been a fan ever since. I think that in 100 years we will still be studying his playing and still trying to figure out what this genius of a guitar player is doing. I am a bass player but a huge fan of guitar players like you and Allan Holdsworth. God bless.
Allan Holdsworth is the reason I even listen to jazz fusion. He showed me a brand of shredding I had never experienced before. From there I got into Shawn Lane, John McLaughlin, Brett Garsed, Frank Gambale, Chris Poland, Al Di Meola, and so on. In my eyes, Allan was the greatest electric guitarist in history. Rest in peace.
Thank you Brett for sharing your invaluable experiences with us. I'm still beating myself for not making the most out of being your neighbour about a decade ago....Such a down to earth person and an inspiration to my own style of playing.....
Very insightful explanation and praise Brett. I share your sentiments. Allan had such defiant integrity and other worldly familiarity of options on the instrument. We are lucky to have shared the planet in his time and I hear the respect for all who have applied their mind to advancing the craft, in your playing also. RIP Allan, keep rockin'-on Brett!
How the HELL did this get downvotes? Really? A wonderful heartfelt eulogy from one musician to another and it brings out haters? I for one, thank you Brett. That was touching and informative. I am going to mess around with my pedal setup now and try to get those tones. Thanks!
And I love you, Brett !!! I fully agree with many other great words here about you & Allan. I knew Allan in person and was lucky to tell him about his influence on my whole life once hearing U.K.-U.K. for the 1st time back in 1979... My absolute favs of yours are Brothers, Big Sky & Closure which I usually listen to non-stop repeated... So, you know that now. Cheers !!!
Bottom line, there maybe a couple of thousand who can play like Yngwie, but absolutely none can play like sir Alan Holdsworth. He's superhuman
People forget, just focusing on guitarmanship. Allan was ahead of everyone musically.
As a young rock guitarist back in the 80s, I was a fan of EVH, then Yngwie came along, so I played his stuff just because few could at the time.
When I heard Allan, I was still playing Metal and Hard Rock, but I walked away from every rock guitarist right then. I would close my eyes, lay on my bed and just listen to him, dreaming to be that good.
His influence started showing up in my Metal playing and people starting asking me after the show "man WTF was that?! Where did you learn to play that way?" Guitarists in the scene started labeling me a virtuoso!
I hate to selfishly admit that I miss those days when Allan was that secret no one else (at least in Metal) knew about. Just me and Allan🤣😂
I Met Allan when i was 16, playing to about 12 people. From that day, exchanged emails and he forever remained, the sweetest,humble and beautiful human being and his music is a document of that....Miss you Al
Beautiful stuff. Brett has always been the link between normal human beings and Allan (and also grossly unaware of his own genius!).
Brett and IMO the highly unrecognized talent of Chris Poland.
Yes boys
Certainly he has Holdsworth's humility.
@@SirJamestheIII You're absolutely right. I think they both have a lot in common in their playing. In a just world they would be household names. Well, they are household names...in my household, because I live in a house of music.
I always thought Ron Jarzombek musically lives in one of these parallel universes as well
I had the pleasure and honor of being one of Brett's students during my days in Musicians Institute. He is an incredible genius of a musician and all around great guy. He's completely unaware of his own genius and was always so humble. I would have been incredibly lucky had I had a fraction of his greatness.
What Brett says near the end about how Allan should have been given a government grant to write and record his music is something I've always felt. I used to almost obsess about how, "This guy should not have to tour as much as he does to pay the bills! Someone should give him a few million bucks to relax and do his own thing in the studio!" I would say this to my guitar students and friends. But of course, that's not how the music business works. In a better world a record company would have recognized his unique groundbreaking genius and really helped him out. It was nice that we all got to see him perform and meet him. But it would have been much better if he performed when he felt like it and not because he had to in order to survive.
Especially in a world today where you have a Billionaire on every corner.
art is something states should grant and fund as much as education, healthcare etc.
it's not an utopia, I know in some nordic countries this happens, and also in Cuba, so basically capitalism is the problem
why would a music company or the government go into a clearly losing business? The problem is that there is no DEMAND for this stuff or not enough at least. The people are just too stupid, as is often the problem. That is the sole root cause problem.
Allan was so amazing and unique... But i think that uniqueness is a lonely and hard path.
Nzinn73 Look at Danny Gatton. World class talent does not necessarily equal commercial appeal, obviously. It's kind of sad. You need to be good and have opportunity, I guess. If you can play and sing and write, you might be successful, or happen across the right gig.
What a humble human being.
You are a praise of Australia.
Thank you.
What a wonderful tribute, Allan will be sorely missed.
I always like Brett's teaching. I was very lucky to took lessons from him 25 years ago.
I’m jealous lol
What a beautiful and heartfelt tribute to the genius that IS Allan Holdsworth. When players of the calibre of Brett and Frank Gambale struggle to comprehend what Allan was playing,then you know that he was on a level way above everyone else and completely in a class of his own.
Met Allan at Iridium, NYC 4-5 years before he passed. We hung out at the bar and I just remember his gigantic hand completely engulfing mine when we shook hands. Such a warm, sweet guy. And he completely killed it as usual on stage that night. Total Mastery. RIP Allan
Thank you Brett for a genuine and humble tribute to Allan's music! and it's sad that people like Allan never really had the success in money and in other ways but all the greats died penniless and without the success they deserved. I thing the music industry could do with a relieve fund to help people out when needed if they could put away their egos and images away in a cupboard for a while! I never thought that Eric Clapton would have become a household name and in the same breath completely ignorant of Jack Bruce and Ginger Baker but that's life I suppose. Thank you for carrying on Allan's thing for want of a better word but in your own way. Regards Jon
There can never be enough tributes to this musical genius, Allan Holdsworth. Well done Brett. We all miss Allan.
Brett. Your own music is an inspiration. I was so happy to meet Allan Holdsworth in Buffalo. I just wish that the music that he could play was as satisfying to him as it was miraculous to his audience. Instead, he was sitting at the bar almost crying in his beer because he felt that he had not played well enough. Meanwhile, me and my mates were beyond astonished by his musicality and soul evident in his two sets. And I could not believe how approachable and humble he was as a human being. Perhaps he was from an advanced civilization who landed here but was never aware that he came from some far away place. I imagine that he is there now and brought his beer making talents with him too. Thanks for your reflections mate!
none of what this guy has done is primitive or less beautiful than Allan, just different. What a fantastic human that I hope to meet one day.
I've had the pleasure of working with Brett years ago and besides his guitar genius, he is amazingly kind, generous and humble.
a very late comment, just came across this video. thanks Brett... I have a signed copy of your album Dark Matter. I love hearing how the influences percolate through great players such as yourself. thanks for a touching tribute. Allan is one of the untouchables.
Watched this to the end, and, to my slight surprise, it made me cry. I was lucky enough to see Allan perform seven times. I feel blessed, thankful, and humbled to have had the opportunity to have been in his presence. I will go to my grave wishing I could play like that.
This is probably the best tribute to Allan Holdsworth especially the legacy part. It's so right! Dear Brett, obviously it's not just notes you can put together in a very nice way, you can put the words as well
Thanks for the wonderful tribute, Brett. Holdsworth's genius was impossible to quantify to non-musicians.
I hope that he someday gets the respect he always deserved. Sad that he won't be able to see the mark he makes on the music of the future.
His music and musical ideas represent the most advanced system of 12 tone harmony in musical history. I hope that, someday, advanced music theorists give him the respect he deserved.
Allan's music is World Heritage. Thank you very much Brett, Jason, and Guitar Techniques magazine for this wonderful tribute to Allan Holdsworth.
I'm not a musician but i live where Allan was brought up. I hear in his music this location. It was part of his personality and musical language. my favourite musician of all time. thanks Brett!
I feel the same about sixteen men of tain. Sounds like the Scottish Highlands.
Two notes played by Allan Holdsworth moves a mountain of emotions in me. When I first dropped the needle on my first Allan Holdsworth's album "Atavachron" ( Non-Brewed Condiments) I looked at my friend next to me and I said "what did just happen?" Thank you Brett for your tribute to Allan.
Thank you Brett, God bless Allan. Well spoken tribute. Ron.
That was beautiful Brett.
I feel your pain brother! I met Allan many times. At various NAMM shows, different clubs that he would play. I even saw him at a movie theater with his family going to see the movie "Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home" He sat right behind me with his family. We talked a bit after the movie and said he would love to do a soundtrack for a movie. He was in his own league! A very nice and humble spirit. We had a beer together at Catalina's Bar and Grill in Hollywood, CA. He was promoting his Road Games EP. We talked about cycling! I was introduced to Allan from the UK album. Nobody heard of him. This was back in 1978. When I heard the solo on "In The Dead of Night" I couldn't believe my ears! I have been a fan ever since. Thank you for posting this. To this day still, I'm trying to figure out what he is doing on that fretboard!
"in my primitive rock/pop way..." and then you pull off these beautiful chord voicings? Great tribute video. Thanks a lot!
Thank you Brett.Lovely words.I am sixty years old and became a fun of Allan's in the early seventies in a recording with a band called Soft Machine.To say that i was blown away is an understatement!!,his soloing was so different to everybody else and so fast!.In years to come i was to attend several concerts and guitar clinics by Allan,and always enjoyed what he did i loved the sound of his guitar,soloing or cording.i liked his jokes and he always came across as a very humble man.You know Brett something you said is so correct,he was so much ahead of everybody else.He wrote some incredible melodies(ballads if you like),at first i didn't understand what he was trying to say but after coming back and hearing time and time again an amazing melody appeared and many times i would cry in joy of recognition that this human being had an amazing ability to write music that was so far off centre that it required full attention to comprehend.How did he do that?.Anyway he will be sadly missed ,a legend has died .Hopefully his music will live on forever.RIP Allan Holdsworth.
What a great tribute. Allan was truly a one of a kind musician, the likes we'll struggle to hear again. I first heard him on that astounding solo on that same UK track and it remains one of my all time favourites. I would also give a shout out to Beezebub from Bruford as well. His solo work started with Metal Fatigue for me and I was hooked. Allan's influence on some of my other favourite guitarists (EVH, Scott Henderson, Alex Lifeson, John Petrucci) was pretty profound and we're all the richer for hearing it.
I agree with you 100% You forgot to mention one very important player and thats Marshal Harrison, an incredible Titan on the guitar and a true Holdsworth fan. Check him out and your jaw will be on the floor, just ask Garsed.
Jean Luc Ponty's Enegmatic Ocean album also has some great Allan Holdsworth playing on it. UK and Ponty are where I discovered Allan. 6 billion people on the planet at that time and only one Allan Holdsworth. No other guitar player at that time played or sounded like him. Just like Jimi and Eddy, Allan was in a class all buy himself and even more than the others.
Thanks, Brett. Another valuable lesson and a great tribute from one master to another. Cheers, B.
note to self.. add Brett Garsed to list of awesome guitarists.. thanks for the vid : ) we saw Allan downtown Orlando FL in the late 80s in a small pub with Chad on drums.. Allan walked in the front door with his headless axe strapped on his back, just a humble chap! A great memory.. RIP Allan
Beautiful Brett, thank you.
Allan's music has been the
soundtrack to my life ever since Igginbottom, and I totally agree that it is
music of the soul and not a PHD thesis, as some narrow minded critics would
suggest. Technically I could not fathom what Allan was doing but the
music spoke to me at an emotional level and took me on a journey to places that
would otherwise have been hidden from me but for Allan's genius. If you,
and the venerable John McLaughlin amongst others, freely admit you could not
fully grasp Allan's immense harmonic universe, then that in itself shows it is
the music of the stars and not the physics lab.
And lest people forget, whilst
naturally the first point of amazement is Allan's soloing, he was so uniquely
innovative in any number of areas of the guitar. You have mentioned his
chordal genius, and he was also an innovator in sound too, developing over the course
of his life a number of evolving guitar sounds that indelibly influenced the
guitar world. For example, his unique approach to the whammy influenced
rockers and fusion guitarists alike, and also encouraged guitarist to incorporate
it into a hybrid accessible style that spoke to musos as well as your everyday listener
- the much missed Alan Murphy was a great example of this. So many diverse guitarists were influenced by
Allan, for example the wonderful Phill Keaggy on his Wind and the Wheat album (and
the incredible solos on his track Sounds from the Getting Closer album, and the
amazing modern player that echoes Allan in her own unique way, Susan Weinert
(just check out her IOU inspired Running Out Of Time album.
And how interesting it was to see
truly world class guitarists grappling with the impossible task of taking over from
Allan, such as the incredible John Etheridge in Soft Machine (listen to John
manfully grappling with Hazard Profile on British Tour ’55) and the criminally underrated
John Clarke on Bruford’s Live Tapes (I corresponded with John a year or two ago
after his retirement from music and a more humble musician you could never wish
to meet - I think he was amazing on
those latter Bruford albums).
Allan’s music, and his influence
on guitar, will resonate forever, and it is not too much to say that he is up there
with the giants such as Mozart, Coltrane and the like.
And thank you Brett at personal
level for developing your own style which harks to Allan but also expresses your
own unique approach to the instrument - long may you continue to blaze your own
particular path whilst honoring the musical giant that was Allan Holdsworth.
When Steve Vai, Eddy Van Halen, Shawn Lane and Brett Garsed cannot fully understand what Allan was doing it proves he was in contact with something else no other musician could tune in. We all have FM radio in our heads and Allan had XM radio in his.
thanks for breaking it down to a comprehensible level that we all can grab onto and build from.
great tribute brett... very emotional. you are great
Beautifully said Brett, and long may you play!
Beautifully said. Thank you...
Couldn't agree more about your comment re the emotion in his playing. I've always ended up in tears listening to the 4.15 Bradford Executive.....it's just pouring out of him on that track. It's like a wailing animal at times. First time I heard him was the intro to Nevermore.......wtf. Totally hooked ever since. I've been fortunate to see him live a number of times with friends, who also dig his playing. So although sad, many great memories.
Ah, Nevermore...brilliant acoustic intro from Allan.
I transcribed about 1/3 of his solo in that one trading licks with Jobson. Took me 1.5 yrs to be able to play it.
I should get on with the rest of it.
Great tribute! Whenever I listened to Allan I never think of the guitar itself! He was beyond that. Beyond everything really! A true genius.
Very impressive work. Incredible what you worked out on your own you must have an amazing ear and discipline.
Massive thanks Brett!
Awesome!
thx so much
Brett seems such a great guy, humility, talent, and wisdom. Thanks for this tribute.
Great video. The one thing that nobody can deny is that Allan was untouchable at knowing the fundamentals to the core, then throwing it to the side and playing with his heart.
Thanks Mr. Garsed! Wonderful tribute
Brett you're incredible. Player and gentleman. I've followed you for many years, and always loved your fluid style, much like Allan. Thank you. RIP Allan.
Brett sure is great, thanks for watching James!
I like how Allan once said, "not to learn licks, because that can limit improvising " something to that extent .. I am just beginning to understand that, and it's fantastic..
Brett your humility, recognition and reverence to the great Alan Holdsworth is humbling to watch. Wonderful to listen to. What a player and innovator he was. Thanks for that...it 's pure gold....beautiful.
The greatest of his generation, or any generation for that matter. A hundred years from now new musicians will be listening to his music in total awe and amazement. RIP Allan.
Watched this again, with gratitude for all the music Allan Holdsworth made, and appreciation for the way you've articulated not only these key aspects of his playing but also the admiration we all have for his monster talent. Combine that talent with Allan's humility? Out of this world.
Thanks for watching!
I saw Allan in 1991 at a dive bar in Sacramento, and I bought a CD that night that was produced by Mike Varney. That was the first time I heard of Brett Garsed and Shawn Lane. Ever since then, these are the top three players I admire to this day. They all have this ability to move so fast and fluid, but retain a very musical touch to their playing. RIP Allan!
Nice tribute, Brett! I don't play guitar or any instrument, and I couldn't agree more when you say that one doesn't have to intellectually "understand" Holdsworth's music to love it on an emotional level and to simply revel in its awesomely fluid virtuosity, as I've been doing for over thirty-five years. Thanks for posting this.
Wonderful Brett. "If anyone should've been given a grant just to write and record music...". You're so right.
Just a short anecdote, I met Allan once in a very small club in London, early 90's. Pre-internet days so I found out just by luck and was living nearby at the time. I was a huge fan because growing up I always picked up Guitar Player magazine whenever I could and he rightly got a lot of exposure in it. I was young and traveled a lot back then and always took my walkman and a few Holdsworth tapes wherever I went. IOU, Metal Fatigue, Secrets. etc. Secrets was my personal favorite btw. It got me through some lonely times. So anyway, I went to the club and saw his band live. If I remember, Steve Smith was on drums ( I might be wrong about this it was a long time ago), plus bass player plus Allan. They were so tight I'd never seen anything to compare. Even though it was a small club the sound was incredible and the intensity was unbelievable. I can remember to this day that when Allan ramped into his solos that the drum kit was moving across the stage and Steve would regularly have to pull back his hi hat or bass drum or whatever. The point is that those guys were super talented and playing their hearts out for Allan because he was utterly genius.
But here's the main bit. After the show Allan was standing at the bar having a beer - just standing there like a normal person - and after a few minutes I plucked up the courage to go speak to him. Not a single part of him was above himself. He took the time to talk to me and was right down to earth. I did a geeky fan thing by asking him to sign my IOU CD which I have to this day. I can tell you that he was a true gentleman and acted like he was completely unaware of his unbelievable talent. We've lost a good one in every respect.
Apologies, not such a short anecdote after all but I wanted to share. RIP Allan.
This is such a moving, sincere and beautiful tribute to Allan's music and playing!
Especially the legacy part expresses exactly how I relate to Allan's music on an emotional level. It always spoke directly to me despite me clearly not "understanding" his music in any sort of "analytical" or "stringent theory" way.
Thank you for this beautiful tribute!
Awesome tribute to one of the most amazing musicians ever to grace the planet. Thank you for posting this. I became a fan after hearing the UK album then the IOU days and all of his other solo stuff.
There will never be another like him. Rest in peace Allan we miss you so.
Thank you Brett for this Video. It once more demonstrates how important Allans legacy is for todays best guitar players. You can not praise Allans work high enough. He not only influenced musicians, he also intoduced new playing techniques, new sounds, chords, never heard before and he added something to the music itsself what from now on will be part of music as long as mankind exist.
Well said Brett, a great tribute. Allan Holdsworth was so advanced, human kind will take a couple of decades to even come close to his way of thinking, forget playing that will take another couple of decades or even centuries.
Some very touching words about Allan. I'm sure he would appreciate your sentiments & musicality.
Nice chordal work btw !
I'm sorry I only just stumbled across this. It is a heartfelt and moving tribute to someone who opened my eyes to a new world of music...by someone who is an exceptional guitarist in his own right. Thanks Brett.
Brilliant tribute and explanation. I’m a 60 year-old, self-taught fusion drummer but you make perfect sense and I feel the same way about Allan. When I first heard him with Tony W. back in 1975 it was a revelation-almost religious. I also heard the melancholy and empathy underneath the rivers of fire. Thx so much.☮️
Thanks for watching Mark!
Such great insight about Allan from Brett, who is an incredible artist in his own right.
I am not sure if watching and listening to all these great players, inspires me to continue to play guitar, or to quit. It is like climbing the mounting even when you already know that you will never reach the top.
What a great player, what a brilliant tribute.
in 1987 I moved away from my family at 15. At 16, the printer at my school in Adelaide heard me playing guitar at assembly introduced himself and said 'you have to listen to this'.... it was Allan Holdsworth... I get emotional just thinking about it... away from home in a hostile environment and hearing such incredibly emotional guitar playing... he was a musical refuge for me.... he still is..... I was gutted at Allan's death.
I was just reminded again how much I don't know... I am happy with my music and my attempts to be good at what I do. I am so glad there are people who have that oddly unexplainable talent that goes beyond. Speaking of Alan Holdsworth it is good to see someone like Brett explain Alan's work like so many of us never will.
Crying here. Thanks mate for putting your feelings out there, and of course your thoughts.
This is so great! Some tears were shed. Just to know how much Allan affected us all.
beautiful tribute,... loved it,.... thanks!
Thanks very much for your heartfelt and very perceptive and articulate take on the uncanny dizzyingly beautiful genius Holdsworth. Your playing is fantastic too, Mr. Garsed!
Thanks Brett! You helped me into the holdsworth universe. I found your music during the process and fell in love it. Thanks! You Have been a huge inspiration.
He is the most incredible source of music,.thankz brett,nice shirt too..
What a wonderful tribute...brought tears to my eyes...thank you Brett.
Beautiful tribute Mr. Brett Garsed.
All perfectly and beautifully said, sir. My thanks, I’ll be looking at your recordings, today! Cheers!
So interesting how everyone refers to him as this alien type figure. I never read about him much online until I started getting into his music(took me about 8 months of off and on listening). Once I got into it, I would tell my friends that I won't make it to the party because I was in Galaxy Yrslrs on planet Rlasncx listening to Mr.Holdsworth run shop. After being on the internet, everyone has a similar sentiment. His music really does come from another dimension. There are no words to really describe it, the emotion is there, but what kind? I don't know. My best description to any of his music is the song Sixteen Men of Tain: Futuristic, Mysterious, and Calming. The rest of that album fits loosely to that description, I think it takes place about 200 years from now in more of open minded benevolent society..
Possibly the John Coltrane of the guitar would be reasonable description or an analogy
He was and more
His work was an attempt to describe the indescribable
Excelente gracias Brett por recordarlo y gracias jason por subirlo a youtube,desde Argentina saludos abrazo !!!
A nice tribute to Allan Holdsworth.Greatly appreciated.Its wonderful to see that his followers have been passing the torch of his music.Keep up the good work.Express the uncommon chord!!
Thanks for watching!
Bret you are a genius in your own right, love your guitar work. Thank you for the beautiful tribute to
Allan.
Awesome playing and a very nice tribute
Wonderfully said. Thank you Mr. Garsed.
Thanks Brett for your wonderful and heartfelt tribute. I first heard Allan in the early 80's and have been a fan ever since. I think that in 100 years we will still be studying his playing and still trying to figure out what this genius of a guitar player is doing. I am a bass player but a huge fan of guitar players like you and Allan Holdsworth. God bless.
Thank you so much, Brett. You have done this beautifully. Allan was a great source of inspiration and will be missed.
Thanks, Brett. What a heartfelt tribute from one monster player to another.
WOW!!! Best tribute I have ever heard! Not only did I learn about how inspiring he was but also got a great guitar lesson out of it!
Allan Holdsworth is the reason I even listen to jazz fusion. He showed me a brand of shredding I had never experienced before. From there I got into Shawn Lane, John McLaughlin, Brett Garsed, Frank Gambale, Chris Poland, Al Di Meola, and so on. In my eyes, Allan was the greatest electric guitarist in history. Rest in peace.
Thank you for this beautiful and perfect video.
Thank you Brett for sharing your invaluable experiences with us. I'm still beating myself for not making the most out of being your neighbour about a decade ago....Such a down to earth person and an inspiration to my own style of playing.....
Very insightful explanation and praise Brett. I share your sentiments. Allan had such defiant integrity and other worldly familiarity of options on the instrument. We are lucky to have shared the planet in his time and I hear the respect for all who have applied their mind to advancing the craft, in your playing also. RIP Allan, keep rockin'-on Brett!
Absolutely superb Bret .. you are an incredibly modest guy.. considering your formidable technique and ear ...
Allan Holdsworth ..Unbelievable GENIUS ..LookingGlass ..What a PHANTASTIC Modern Music
So well said abouth my all time musician!Thank you so much!🙏
Beautifully said!
What a cracking video. Thank you Brett and GT.
Beautiful tribute, thank you...! 🌷
Beautiful tribute. Thank you, Brett.
Thank you.
A beautiful tribute! Thank you so much for sharing your experiences and thoughts.
10 (-ish) minutes of pure gold. Thank you Mr Garsed!
Brilliant! Lovely tribute, and thanks for sharing your insight and techniques.
How the HELL did this get downvotes? Really? A wonderful heartfelt eulogy from one musician to another and it brings out haters? I for one, thank you Brett. That was touching and informative. I am going to mess around with my pedal setup now and try to get those tones. Thanks!
Thank you. Another tribute to an amazing musician.
And I love you, Brett !!! I fully agree with many other great words here about you & Allan. I knew Allan in person and was lucky to tell him about his influence on my whole life once hearing U.K.-U.K. for the 1st time back in 1979... My absolute favs of yours are Brothers, Big Sky & Closure which I usually listen to non-stop repeated... So, you know that now. Cheers !!!
Very touching! Truly a unique voice on guitar-He will be missed
Heartfelt and insightful. Thanks Brett.
Heartfelt and a beautiful tribute