Allan Holdsworth Trio 2009-10-11 Baked Potato, L.A.

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  • čas přidán 16. 09. 2015
  • Allan Holdsworth performs with bassist Jimmy Johnson & drummer Gary Husband on 2009-10-11 at the Baked Potato in Los Angeles, CA.
    Posted for pure enjoyment without thought of financial gain. I do not own the copyright in this recording.
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Komentáře • 82

  • @NotYourTypicalNegro
    @NotYourTypicalNegro Před 8 lety +43

    I was at this show. I was in the very back, dead center. I bought Allan a beer that night.

    • @RealDiaz
      @RealDiaz Před 8 lety +1

      Thats great I haven't seen Alan in so many years. I used to catch him all the time. Isn't it sad what happened recently with Nick there? Tragic..

    • @patricktiglao
      @patricktiglao Před 5 lety +1

      What happened?

    • @johnniehh
      @johnniehh Před 5 lety

      Me too!!!

    • @alainrosso568
      @alainrosso568 Před 4 lety

      Hi.Who 's the drummer? Husband??

    • @jmacias7823
      @jmacias7823 Před 3 lety

      Me too! Our minds were blown that night. So glad I went

  • @gavinclark2786
    @gavinclark2786 Před 2 lety +8

    13:43 absolutely bonkers run from Jimmy Johnson and quickly joined by Gary! Love to see it

  • @chrishenson4450
    @chrishenson4450 Před 2 lety +19

    I love that Allan looks so happy throughout the whole video. He made a whole hell of a lot of people happy in his lifetime. Thanks so much for posting.

  • @jamesallanburruto1230
    @jamesallanburruto1230 Před rokem +6

    AH is my musical father. Loved and learned so much from this man. Don't play like him at all but have taken many things of his and made them my own. Even though it was very infrequent I loved spending time with him too. Miss him dearly.

  • @jemubk
    @jemubk Před 9 měsíci +1

    I love Holdsworth and Coltrane as well❤

  • @dennissweeney6774
    @dennissweeney6774 Před 5 lety +5

    I wish I was there love A.H. One of the Greats!!!

  • @88anarahammertime
    @88anarahammertime Před 3 lety +6

    0:01 the only time Allan ever played minor third without a semitone in front of the base.

  • @rherrera921
    @rherrera921 Před 2 lety +4

    Ufffff !!!! Thank you for sharing.Allan the RACHMANINOFF of the guitar.Missed you.The one and only.

  • @landslug
    @landslug Před 8 lety +7

    I was there! Sitting towards the back on Jimmy's side of the room. What a great night

  • @themusiccovenant
    @themusiccovenant Před 2 lety +2

    God of the gods of the guitar

  • @manlypedro75
    @manlypedro75 Před 2 lety +2

    I could never understand this bloke's music, now it seems like a logic conclusion to guitar music evolution. I keep coming back, more and more. It's unearthly elegant and stylish. Shame I never got to see him when I had the chance... but I probably wouldn't have liked it back then. Well, thanks for posting it!

  • @VegasCyclingFreak
    @VegasCyclingFreak Před 6 lety +8

    There's some golden moments in this video. Thanks for sharing it with the world!

  • @luisgaris9566
    @luisgaris9566 Před 2 lety +3

    Allan llevó a los bateristas al límite...con su guitarra mágica...y tuvo a los más grandes bateros ...es un humano parece ....fue humano y no un anunaki ...un humano puede crear algo infinito ...

  • @jobryant8672
    @jobryant8672 Před 4 lety +2

    That chord at the end of "Leave Them On"...wha......ooofff.......

  • @vidsforsquids
    @vidsforsquids Před 3 lety +2

    Yup I was at this too with all you dudes. So awesome to have Gary there that night!!!

  • @Jedizen07
    @Jedizen07 Před 4 lety +7

    Wow! Thanks for this! This indeed rare for us AH fans. Allan had retired the Steinberger before the end of the nineties and went straight to the Bill Depas, Kielsel and Carvin guitars. So, seeing him with one of his older guitars is a treat. I always thought he played better with the Steinberger ( he seemed to grab the notes more here versus when he used the other headless guitars ).

  • @noctuamagna6724
    @noctuamagna6724 Před 6 lety +1

    I was here! I was sitting to the left just off camera. I was sitting so close I could reach out and touch his amp if I wanted.

  • @johnyflorez5397
    @johnyflorez5397 Před 4 lety +6

    This is gold
    Thankyou so much for this!

  • @jdubhman
    @jdubhman Před 5 lety +7

    Tony Williams couldn't of played that 'Fred' any better than Gary, damn amazing.

    • @jameyroberts1424
      @jameyroberts1424 Před 3 lety +1

      Gary loves Tony, they are both one of a kind, all my best to t, and g..

    • @frankfertier34
      @frankfertier34 Před 3 lety

      Gary is an "all round" player. always on the brink of creation, as good a keyboardist as a drummer; every "pro" knows that "he is the deal", for so many years, and still so underrated !

  • @luisgaris9566
    @luisgaris9566 Před 2 lety +1

    Dentro de las normas ...se derimia el futuro de los metales y los buenos equipos y ...la historia de esos héroes...

  • @RealDiaz
    @RealDiaz Před 8 lety +10

    By the way thank you for posting such a gem and taking the time to record it. delysidd

    • @delysidd
      @delysidd  Před 8 lety +3

      TYVM, though to be fair I got this off the web - I did not record it, nor do I know who did (but I am likewise grateful, whoever it was.) ;)

    • @RealDiaz
      @RealDiaz Před 8 lety +1

      delysidd Haha, I see!!! well this is the first one i found so thanks anyways!!

  • @Noodlesx4
    @Noodlesx4 Před 6 lety +2

    allan pointed at me when I saw him in Toronto at the diamond club in 1987. I coulda swore it was his index finger.

    • @frankfertier34
      @frankfertier34 Před 3 lety

      Yeah: he knew you were the one who did not pay your ticket for this concert. shame on you. !

  • @sandraazevedo1366
    @sandraazevedo1366 Před 6 lety +1

    Deus abençoe Allan Holdsworth. Ele é o melhor guitarrista que já vi.

  • @luisgaris9566
    @luisgaris9566 Před 2 lety

    Animales nunca vistos ...vikingos del la música que se suspende y no cae nunca ...y uno no sabe donde está el uno ...no existe ...héroes!!!!

  • @luisgaris9566
    @luisgaris9566 Před 2 lety

    Ya no hay músicos así....

  • @luisgaris9566
    @luisgaris9566 Před 2 lety +1

    Dios fue filmado ....y será eterno

  • @MrThomas1958
    @MrThomas1958 Před 3 lety

    thx

  • @FunkadelicPancho
    @FunkadelicPancho Před 3 lety

    Allan is my favorite guitarist, easily....but holy fuck Jimmy Johnson

  • @justinfox2682
    @justinfox2682 Před 2 lety +2

    More people claiming to be there than would fit in The Baked Potato lol

  • @RozarSmacco
    @RozarSmacco Před 2 lety +1

    Jaw-dropping @ 5:00 and 12:50

  • @luisgaris9566
    @luisgaris9566 Před 2 lety

    Tocan en un pub ...con casi nada ....y son lo más bestia ...nadie se entera

  • @luisgaris9566
    @luisgaris9566 Před 2 lety

    Hay tantos falsos héroes....!!

  • @director2bob
    @director2bob Před 2 měsíci

    This guy Aaron Holdsworth is a pretty good guitar player.

  • @luisgaris9566
    @luisgaris9566 Před 2 lety

    Gary Husband ....como toca así....siendo pianista....

  • @garywillcox1
    @garywillcox1 Před 3 lety +3

    This is great. Shame it gets so out of sync.

  • @luisgaris9566
    @luisgaris9566 Před 2 lety

    Allan se ríe del batero ..no se impacienta....mira al batero como a su perro más amado ....el era el cosmos ....no recuerdo a un músico así....

  • @Jaundice__
    @Jaundice__ Před 8 lety +2

    Wow. I am pretty sure I wet meself while watching this, though I was mesmerized by the concert so I'm not really too sure.

  • @andym28
    @andym28 Před 3 lety

    Gary definately had his Weetabox that morning.

  • @winstonschwarz1636
    @winstonschwarz1636 Před rokem

    Allan is 63 years old here.

  • @evetsnitram8866
    @evetsnitram8866 Před 6 lety

    Have they reupholstered the seats at the bar yet?

  • @davideleouet
    @davideleouet Před 5 lety +4

    Fred 9:06

    • @adamgorka368
      @adamgorka368 Před 3 lety +2

      I think his performance of this song here is one of my favourites I've heard

  • @jessicavlogger
    @jessicavlogger Před 7 lety

    anybody want to try a setlist?
    i haven't watched it yet, but it's three hours? is he doing uk stuff, or what? soft machine?

  • @luisgaris9566
    @luisgaris9566 Před 2 lety

    Afina la bata ....así

  • @kostishasopoulos9816
    @kostishasopoulos9816 Před 7 lety +9

    What is this weird cut with Al Di Meola 02:032:09?
    Couldn't you at least cut this part out??
    The sound is out of sync also after a point.

    • @fabiocollina
      @fabiocollina Před 6 lety +1

      yes it's a shame here, over a concert of Allan

    • @delysidd
      @delysidd  Před 4 lety +1

      It’s on the original. I only transferred it.

    • @delysidd
      @delysidd  Před 4 lety +1

      I only did the transfer. I try to hew to the source tape. If anyone would care to try a remaster feel free... 🤷‍♂️

    • @frankfertier34
      @frankfertier34 Před 3 lety +1

      not very fair to lame Di Meola: the comparison is awkward. it's second floor staircase versus cloud nine escalator; makes sense ?

  • @JefferyJMarshall
    @JefferyJMarshall Před 3 lety

    Epic concert! Anyone know the name of the 2nd song?

  • @eddy71454
    @eddy71454 Před 4 lety +2

    The video is out of sync with the sound. It's easy to tell when watching the drums.

    • @delysidd
      @delysidd  Před 4 lety +2

      eddy71454 It happens when encoding. The CPU tries to multitask & the encoding job loses clock cycles. I’m not a good enough A/V editor to fix it though. Sorry.

    • @andym28
      @andym28 Před 3 lety +4

      @@delysidd don't apologise we appreciate the effort.

  • @jayrobb9
    @jayrobb9 Před měsícem

    If only the sound was in sync :(

  • @steadystate100
    @steadystate100 Před 3 lety

    The audio and video aren't even in the same time zone.

    • @delysidd
      @delysidd  Před 3 lety +2

      If you have the skills to fix it, feel free to do a remaster. That’s why this is here.

  • @free1982
    @free1982 Před rokem +1

    テキトー伝説ジュンジ参上😁

  • @luisgaris9566
    @luisgaris9566 Před 2 lety

    Paradidles

  • @luisgaris9566
    @luisgaris9566 Před 2 lety

    Toca leyendo ...y no existe nada fuera de lo real ....

  • @oldbladderhorn949
    @oldbladderhorn949 Před 2 lety

    So this is a pure bootleg, with no begging cap passed round like in a regular church.
    to be watched free of charge by all un-sundry free to view at this meeting house
    called youtube. with disclaimer words to cover the crime, of.
    I do not own the copyright in this recording. A get out of goal ticket.
    nothing will be received by the musician or their dependants for their genius
    when it was stolen right out from in front of there very eyes
    on that night with the hand of the thief hiding the recording device.
    so was it ok to do that back then on that night.
    So is this music no longer exclusive and owned by Allen Holdsworth
    when it is exhibited here for no profit.
    i'm sure Allen would give you a nice punch in the teeth
    for being so generous with his image and property
    he'd really love you for being so free with his stuff.
    the copyright will get round to you sometime i expect.
    i think your defence would be, that, it is an historical document
    of a true musical genius and needs to be seen by all.
    But you would be still libel for the admittance fee
    by all who have been here over the years
    20,982 views so far.
    i have decided not to watch this video
    past the time stamp 8:39
    on that principle of guilty by association
    and not a label i desire.

    • @chrishenson4450
      @chrishenson4450 Před 2 lety +2

      If this was the only recording made when the Trio played at the Baked Potato on 2009-10-11, what revenue is Allan Holdsworth's dependents being deprived of? While I couldn't know for sure, I'm willing to wager that more than a few of the 22,740 viewers of this video went on from here to stream a couple of his albums over the next few days. Chances are good that a few visitors had never heard of him or Jimmy Flim Johnson or Gary Husband before landing here. Now they know to seek out more of their performances. That's good for the artists, no doubt.
      It's true that music streaming, CZcams, Spotify, Apple Music, etc., does no favors to working musicians, songwriters, or bands these days. And it is surely extremely difficult to make a living performing or recording music. The very nature of intellectual property as it is consumed on the Internet needs to change drastically for the music arts to once again be sustainable [if they ever were].
      However, I feel this is a bit different. Allan Holdsworth is a legend who emphatically changed the way the electric guitar is played - the way it sounds and even the way it's listened to. But more than that, he changed music in general in much the same way that Rachmaninoff, Liszt, Boulanger, Enrico Caruso, Louis Armstrong, Robert Johnson, Ella Fitzgerald, Brubek, Astrud Gilberto, Tito Puente, The Beatles, The Kinks, The Who, Joni Mitchell, Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix, Eddie Van Halen, The Carter Family, Bill Monroe, Michael Brecker, Chick Corea, Thelonius, Duke, and so many others did. Since Holdsworth's death in 2017, video recordings like this one have become vital archives of lightning in a bottle - of genius striking in real time [albeit in odd time signatures].
      I've been a Holdsworth superfan since 1981 when I first heard his work on the UK album with Jobson, Wetton and Bruford. I've listened to most of the sounds he made over his remarkable career. But because I'm culturally landlocked in rural Virginia, I never had the opportunity to see him perform live. And until the advent of sharing sites like CZcams, I'd never once seen how he did the singular things he did - the legato lines, the lush compound chords, the furious flurries of notes. To me, getting to see him play like this is a lot like seeing footage of Coltrane live or Miles. Or Gene Krupa. Seeing them perform is the only way to fully understand what went into what they did and what you heard. It's like watching actual footage of the Rapa Nui on Easter Island erecting a 30-foot moai.
      Meanwhile, it doesn't take more than a cursory glance around CZcams to see the profound and indelible influence Holdsworth has had on younger guitar players - even kids in their early teens. That's incredible to me. And I'm grateful that there's a place out here where you can get a glimpse of music history like this. I feel it's deeply important to the future of music and the arts. And in some small way, the future of all of us.
      I respect your concern for the intellectual property rights of the performers here and elsewhere. As a working musician myself, I'm glad there are people who take things like copyright seriously. I'm no legal expert or trademark lawyer. But I can't escape the sense that there is a spectrum in which the arts exist - or perhaps levels of strata [I'm no geologist either]. And I think at some level - at some apex of genius and skill and musicality and artistic grace - a work transcends the realm of rigid ownership and more or less belongs to the ages. The Mona Lisa or Un dimanche après-midi à l'Île de la Grande Jatte or Warhol's Campbell Soup Cans - at some point these works entered your consciousness and mine whether we beheld the original brushstrokes or not, despite our not having paid for the privilege. They became universal and inevitable. Now, I'm not saying Holdsworth was a da Vinci. But I am saying he was a Seurat. And the landscapes he dotted with so many, many notes are unlike any others.
      I hear your concerns and I don't expect or even want you to change your mind. But I ask you to consider two things: first, how extremely unlikely this video's presence online represents a financial loss for anyone involved in it; and second, how vital a record like this can be to someone who will never get to sit stage-side and watch this master do his thing. If this was instead a bootleg film of Jimi Hendrix performing the Sgt. Pepper album live the first time - something you had never seen before, but was undeniably a historic event now offered posthumously, would you watch it? I surely would.
      Anyway, peace.

    • @oldbladderhorn949
      @oldbladderhorn949 Před 2 lety

      @@chrishenson4450 i agree with you 100% with some of what you have said Alan was remarkable. the musical landscape has altered very little or no at all , some are/ have made vast fortunes while others are in rags so to speak, as you say/or hint at they're still getting the short end of the stick.
      The jobbing musician with no recognition
      if just sitting in on a session paid by the hour and nothing more.
      yes he influenced and is still doing so from his grave. he is the most instantly recognisable element in any band he has been involved in.
      I first heard him some where back in the early seventies when i was a teenager, he stood out he made me think, what's that! sound is that Hendrix, i was very ignorant at that time and my ear new no difference it was on the radio with no information he was just some crazy sounding guitar or other i didn't know or really care but it was interesting and some what new to me. my musical taste being very primitive and underdeveloped but as he moved through those various bands and his name was becoming known you'd hear his sound here and there and everywhere
      i was never a direct fan and follower of Alan my taste was elsewhere and not into fusion or guitar orientated music and still isn't i prefer clever guitar or any other instruments with vocal poetry where the instrument gives voice as well as backing to the singer with the focus on the massage
      of the poem or whatever, i like it when you finally get to a truth that is often not straight away apparent on first listening as
      it often fly's right over your head on that very first listening.
      or you miss it's message completely and years later it then shows it's self and it helps one to reflect how you have changed
      so much to have missed it and now see it,
      the inner hidden message or find that there are other master musicians greater than Alan or his equal in their own field Julian Bream far and away superior than any in his
      own high artistic field brilliance in every note played to perfection. the world is full to the brim with magnificent inventive and artistic people and they influence us all directly or indirectly but they are people just like you and i the point is we may never reach to their perfection but it never hurts but to try. I'm reading DH Lawrence at the moment, what an eye opener he is, he paints pictures with words directly in to ones minds eye, brilliant and not pornographic in the slightest if there is pornography you bring it there yourself.
      I've gone off music and musicians temporarily there are to many things and to little time to spend on any one thing or subject and my little letter was write out of boredom one night with my insomnia making my mind race, was written with no research just with feeling
      something i get often, must be a symptom of getting old there is an adage (if that is the correct word )about wisdom coming with old age i don't know, sometimes i think yes.. but then i often think my self as nothing but a puddle of mud, that is also a sign of how very stupid an idiot can be
      and who wants to be an idiot.
      I'll just lie and say I'm brilliant (liar)or try and look the part though I'm clearly not(brill) but at least i now see, and my ego sits in the backseat it's never going to have the drivers seat as it once used to.
      As it never helped it always put my mouth in to motion before my mind, and that's where you get judged by others when they see how far your foot is in side you gob.
      it was kind of you not to be hurtful with your letter we are somewhat the same both of us reasonable and polite and i enjoyed reading it, that letter just the right amount of relevant information to see you as well,
      i think we both like words and how they can put into the mind with the smallest amount
      verbiage the whole of your thought and not be vague or vulgar f's an b's
      it almost like a letter from a pen pal.
      so best of luck mate.
      PS
      I play a little guitar myself and i fully understand where you are coming from and i love the old blues masters from your neck of the woods and that cabin among the pines of Johnny B and the poetry of indifference. and before www and the web we where all so isolated as
      you say and now we are flooded as if the that mighty Mississippi has flooded on to our homestead we are over come with the abundance and for the most part it
      is almost completely free with technology advancing in leaps and bounds you can get most anything that was once the exclusive domain of the professional studio.
      and what is the point, what!! am i' drowning, where before there was very little. where as you hinted at you had to listen very hard for the tune to come to you
      (at last)
      oh and how we listened over and over to get that phrase just right only to realise that it doesn't really matter
      being a copy cat doesn't get you anywhere you might gain a few licks here and there this is my own opinion
      but i think Alan's system is reasonably easy to see and figure out yes there are charts involved and a vast knowledge of scales and modes need to be understood at heart and that marvellous legato like water but that comes from the set up of the instrument is my thought. but the base and foundation is pretty straight forward and the structure. guitar intro bass and drum short guitar legato after chord build up the bass solo drum solo band fight guitar wins fiery solo to outro end
      giant improve in the mid sequence of bass and drum
      with a signal from the drum to go back to main sequence and if you listen very hard the sequence
      will come to you at last, and that's where it becomes repetitive and stale though very close and tight right on the metronome unlike say muddy waters you sometimes think he's fallen overboard into the river but no he's just having a breather and chilling as he drives the tune to new places guess who's been listening to old muddy.
      and i haven't got the chops needed for dear Alans wild jazz .I'd rather be back in the early 20s if I was to be honest as there was some great and marvellous music to be had, most is now lost but, what is available to be had is inspirational. And what has been lost i cry at.
      And especially the so called race music that lead to rock and roll that captured the hearts of so many here in the UK after that war with Hitlers nazi Germany we won but this country was still rationing into the mid to late fifties and people like my Da and Mam heard it, that swing.
      And that there was colour still in the world and there where people more hard done by than we.
      we only had four years of it, and everything was changing that is where Alan was from
      that era he must have been but a little kid when it hit. here ordinary people where not much better than surfs
      here in Britain, just like some parts of America abused
      a certain minority we here could understand their hurt
      as it was a bit like ours our traditional and local folk music is full to the brim with accepted abuse by
      the Lord and master and the schools here do not
      teach it it has been white washed and was never
      spoken of those Lord where nothing more
      than gentrified Nazi and your country is not much better
      the land of the free...
      sorry for this it need to be said:
      it's been bugging me for a few weeks
      we are at a precipice today and things you Americans do not hear are available here if you but care to look
      and you will not escape it you will have a full portion
      just like everyone else if diplomacy is not administered.
      we are about to become extinct and no rabid frothing general will save you or us. your neo Nazi's behind the everyday face of your government are toying and daring and i am terrified this is so much worse the the Cuba crisis and i don't think your Mr Biden realises how very dangerous and serious it has become and you the ordinary American citizen is out of the loop
      you just don't know the truth
      i shall say no more go figure it out
      as it's out there the truth.
      forgive me if i offend i am only human

    • @mountainman8775
      @mountainman8775 Před rokem

      They’re improvisers, so truly this is an important historical document. To not want it to exist is akin to book-burning.

    • @oldbladderhorn949
      @oldbladderhorn949 Před rokem

      ​@@mountainman8775 excuses excuses excuses excuses and warts and all? book burning it is not. a document it is. but such a fine line is theft🤔😶😑🤪☝ a paradox

  • @anthonyf4439
    @anthonyf4439 Před 3 lety

    Out of sync