The great Bradford-born guitarist and composer Allan Holdsworth has died at just 70. Many in the UK will recall him from his 1970s stints with Soft Machine, Gong, Tony Williams' Lifetime, Bruford and UK, but there's also a substantial catalogue of about a dozen studio or live albums as band leader and a plethora of guest appearances. You can usually meaure the stature of an artiste by the number of peers who cite an influence and/or reverence, and Holdsworth's list of admirers reads like is a who's who of the rock-cum-jazz worlds including just about every major guitarist from Pat Metheny and Johh Mclaughlin to Eddie van Halen. His fluency and fluidity on the fretboard had him compared to John Coltrane - very apt when you hear him. At the same time he had a highly individual and very chromatic harmonic palette - somewhat neo-Messiaenic. Lucky enough to see him twice, once at Ronnie Scott's. R.I.P.
In mellow jazz mode:
In mellow jazz mode:
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