After the train-wreck disaster of Holdsworth's first solo release, the infamous Velvet Darkness,
it wasn't until three years later that he reconsidered doing a real
solo release versus the earlier ripoff of an authorized studio mishmash
product he suffered. So in 1979 he recorded I.O.U.
on a wing and a prayer and loans (ergo, an IOU recording project). With
his very successful stints with other groups in the intervening time
period, such as UK and Bruford, Holdsworth's guitar prowess and name were clearly on the map. Holdsworth now needed to be the leader he clearly was and thus release an official solo record. The real Allan Holdsworth unleashed is at last revealed on I.O.U.
in his original compositions and well-crafted soloing, versus being
merely part of a group and forced to stay within certain boundaries of
other bandmates' design. I.O.U.,
as a solo release, is high-quality jazz fusion interplay, offering
emotive compositions, ethereal guitar atmospherics, complex chordal
progressions, and intense legato explosions of guitar that set the
standard for many guitarists to come. There is no acoustic guitar this
time, but a wee bit of Holdsworth on violin appears in one song.
aCá
Wednesday, March 19, 2014
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