Allan Holdsworth -- Just for the Curious: Book & Online Audio
R**D
Very insightful
This book is strictly for guitarists who want to put the intensive work into "outside" playing. Search for the REH video that goes with it on youtube.The book gave me really important insights into how to get those "outside" jazz sounds that I could hear on the records but couldn't quite grasp on the fretboard. Even if you don't want to play all those fast semiquavers, the explanation of how he approached scales and chord voicings is a goldmine.
3**4
Parfait !
Rapide , conforme , Rien à dire ... donc super !
B**L
Allan Holdsworth - Just For The Curious - Book/CD
Though his music may not be for everyone, Allan Holdsworth is one of the world's greatest guitarists. That is reason enough why so few can play at his level, but guitarists in general tend to play much like other guitarists with relatively slight differences in technique, note choice, sound quality, etc, by which we are able to distinguish between them. Holdsworth is an exception, a masterful musician who happens to be a guitarist. "Just For The Curious" is a detailed outline of his absolutely unique approach to the instrument, showing how he crafts his unusual lines and arrives at chord voicings that just don't lend themselves well to typical chord-spelling and/or numbering analysis (b9b5, 13b9, M7#11, etc.) Of course, a well-placed b9b5 moves the world and Holdsworth uses these kinds of chords too sometimes but in this book he shows you how to generate those new sounding chord voicings that seem to be his alone and account for some of the singularity, power and beauty of his very original music. It will have you putting your fingers in places you probably never would have otherwise and saying "Ah, that's how he plays that!"..."Ow, how does he play that?" and "Oh, how can I apply this method to other scales and modes to create more of these new chord voicings?"
S**Y
More "what" than "how"
Allan seldom used "licks". Oh, he had a few figures he returned to now and again, but his improv playing was just that. Improv. There is really no "how" to do this, except to practice making the fingers of your left hand independent from one another and to avoid "patterns" that lock you into this many or that many notes per string, or "positions" that inhibit you from seeing all the notes in a scale on the neck.String skipping and hybrid picking are other things you can practice to develop techniques that help you truly improvise, rather than parroting Allan note-for-note. That may be interesting as a study, but may not fruitful for your own improvisational voice.
J**N
Five Stars
An absolute must for the guitarist curious about the guitar magic of John Holdsworth.
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