Sym Info was a Dutch progressive rock magazine
Interview by WILLEBRORD ELSING
Translation from Dutch by René Yedema
ALLAN HOLDSWORTH:
Never again a serial-production-group.
An interview about little accidents, electronics and the art of baking chips.
The name Allan
Holdsworth wont mean anything to much people, but he is considered as
one of the most leading guitarists. People like Gary Moore and Eddy Van Halen
called him a shining example, and his frightening fast play yield him superlatives
like Gods greatest gift to the guitar since Jimi Hendrix.
Different from many of his racing colleagues though Holdsworth makes compositions
that do have head and tail.
On February 19th 1986 he performed in Paradiso (Amsterdam), at which he showed
during a soberly decorated concert that he can fulfil his virtuosity on stage.
An unexpected big amount of people - about 600 were present at the
concert. Probably this anyhow is due to an impressive career; he played with
amongst others Soft Machine, Gong, Jean-Luc Ponty, Bill Bruford and UK.
On his own he made with his group IOU under his own supervision an eponymous
LP (1982, in 1985 re-released by the Enigma label), and under his own name
Metal Fatigue (1985, Enigma) and recently for the same label Atavachron,
on which he uses for the first time the SynthAxe, a revolutionary, new instrument,
about which later more.
So, quite a lot of different groups, and his own accompanying band changes
constantly from cast too. Is Holdsworth so difficult to work with?
When it comes
to my own band, thats how it has been from the beginning. Because we
dont earn that much money its hard to keep the same band together.
And sometimes some thing goes wrong, and then we say We wont be
on tour now, but only after 10 months.
Other musicians have to provide in their living. Than they get offered something,
and they take it, logical, they have to. Then you come into a situation in
which you have to search for someone else, although that hasnt been
necessary until now. Ive been lucky, all musicians just came to me like
that.
And when it comes to all those bands Ive been playing in, those were
all just accidents. I never did that on purpose, I never began to play in
a band with the idea to search for something else as soon as possible, I always
thought I would stay in that band for ever. Soft Machine was the only band
I left on my own accord, because I wanted to play with Tony Williams. Not
that I didnt love Soft Machine, for me it was an interesting band to
play in. At that moment I got the chance to play with Tony and I thought that
I would continue doing that for the time being. But the reason I left him
was because the management was so bad. At a certain moment it was even that
bad that during a tour pianist Alan Pasqua and myself were stranded in San
Francisco and there was nobody, no hotel, no airline tickets, nothing! But
I loved it to play in that band, it was fantastic.
So that was an accident, and after that Gong; that stopped existing as the
band fell apart, so that wasnt my fault.
And than Jean-Luc Ponty; even before I started playing with him I had agreed
with Bill (Bruford) that I would co-operate on his solo-project, so after
I had finished with Jean-Luc I had to go again to work with Bill.
Then came U.K., which came about because some girl had recommended me to the
other boys from U.K. Bill and I got fired from U.K., so that was it. Why?
I have no idea, really not
why do you dismiss somebody? After that Bill
started his own band. The record-company probably found it safer to go further
with the other two guys in the band, who were adjusted quite commercially,
than with two typical jazz-people like Bill and me.
Still UK seemed to me the band with the status that fitted with your talent, like Gong was the band with the talent that fitted with your talent. They both seemed to fit with you very much.
I dont
believe UK fitted with me totally. I didnt like it to play the music
live; they played every night the same thing, and I didnt like that.
I became very depressed, was already drunk before I had to come on the stage,
no, I didnt have much fun with that.
Gong had a whole lot of potential, especially the two vibes-players, Benoit
and Pierre (Moerlen). A very interesting group, and it was sad that they didnt
stay with each other. It was politics, and also the fact that they came from
different countries (England and France).
Still there were people like Mike Oldfield and Nick Mason involved with the band.
Yes, but I had never heard of them before I started playing with them. There was someone from Virgin, their manager at that moment, who put me into contact with them because they were looking for a guitarist. And that was all, at that moment I didnt know anything about those flying teapots (laughs sour).
Are there still some groups in which youd love to play?
Like?
Yes?
No, thank you. I dont want to come into that corner again by playing with that kind of serial-products-groups.
Do I sense an UK-trauma?
Yes its always such a trouble with that kind of bands: they create an image that they cant fulfil by sounding great on the album and never to able to put that onto the stage. I dont know oh yes, there is somebody with whom I would love to play! Sting, that seems fantastic to me! But otherwise, no.
That music has, just like yours, quite some common ground with jazz.
Thats true, although that doesnt mean automatically that its good. A whole lot of people just love one kind of music take for instance those people who only love jazz. I think thats ridiculous, because a lot of jazz is awful, terrible and simply bad. The same way a whole lot of pop-music makes me mad, its disgusting! On the other hand, some pop-music is good, Sting for instance.
An inevitable subject
in the conversation is the SynthAxe. Without wanting to fall into a too technical
story, here follows in short the working of this new music-instrument.
One can image the SynthAxe as a kind of guitar. An essential outward difference
is the neck which stands in an ergonomic sensible way in an angle on the so
called body of the instrument. On this instruments there are two sets of strings:
on set on the neck, to play with, or better: to indicate the pitch, and one
set on the body, where the strings are being touched.
With a guitar the pitch of a produced sound is being determined by the place
where the string is being pressed on the so called fret. With the SynthAxe
this isnt the case; the electronics that are present in the instrument
registers the place where the string makes contact with the fret and deduces
the pitch from that; the tone on which the string has been tuned has been
programmed in advance. This produces a couple of advantages: the musician
doesnt have to put strength in order to play, never has to tune and
change the strings until they fall apart from the instrument. Further on the
SynthAxe offers a couple of possibilities to influence the sound, the pitch
and the time to hold a certain tone (sustain). The SynthAxe differs essential
from the guitar in working, because it doesnt produce sound from itself;
everything that being played, is being transformed in digital information
which is being fed to a synthesizer which is being connected to the instrument.
So, virtually this story amounts on the fact that you can play synthesizer
on a guitar-like instrument in stead of on a keyboard, which has been customary
since the introduction of the synthesizer. It all seems quite simple, but
still, a collective of three wise guys have been busy for no less than eight
years to develop the SyntAxe!
To play on the SynthAxe asks a different attitude from the musician, because
he thinks he has a guitar in his hands and hears the sound of a synthesizer,
which still is again completely different than normally because on a guitar
the arrangement of the tones that form together a chord just is different
than on a keyboard. A guitar furthermore lets itself play essentially different,
so the synthesizer producers quite different sounds and changes than you are
used to hear.
Well, last year Holdsworth saw a prototype from the SynthAxe on a fair, nosed
a bit on it and one hour after his introduction with the instrument showed
a complete elaborated composition, which made even the developers of the machine
fell backwards with astonishment. And Holdsworth went home with a SynthAxe,
a firm pat on the back and the request to keep in touch soon.
Was he the first one that was allowed to play on it?
I think so, yes. I just didnt master to play the instrument totally. The amount of possibilities is incredible. And furthermore they are still busy with changing and adding without chancing something on the outside. In fact its just a computer which transforms information to a synthesizer.
Doesnt this development hold a certain danger in itself? Take for instance the Fairlight; when that one came on the market everybody talked about a musical revolution, but now it proves that it is only being used to make weird sounds.
Whatever new things come onto the market, on a certain moment you will see that they are being misused for one thing or another. I dont believe that that is so important; at least someone will do something good with it, it doesnt matter what, as long as the striving only is the making of music. It totally depends on the musician. The same thing with electronics. In fact its just like cooking. My mother could bake incredible chips, but at home I couldnt get it done myself. Then she came to visit us once, and made them exactly the same way: in our kitchen, with our gear. Thats all Im saying: it depends on the person, not on the machine.