maybe i´m wrong, but it´s looks like 5 strings on a 4 string bass
@KennyEvansUK6 күн бұрын
Against Holdsworth you have to hold your own. Kei Akagi did an admirable job here, incredible in fact. Some of those licks he pulled off were on another planet. What an absolutely phenomenal line up of talent.
@furthur966 күн бұрын
He’s having his Marty mcfly moment
@alexhall63759 күн бұрын
My goodness … he hardly looks at the fretboard
@carlosfrdrch688010 күн бұрын
This is the highest level of musicianship
@curtisunit19 күн бұрын
Class. I use to see Kei play with Peter Sprague, Tommy Brechtlein and John Leftwich in Solana Beach, CA back in the late 80s. Helluva band. Later I saw him with Miles. Always brought the A game and a neat guy.
@sastal20 күн бұрын
Hey, I know that piano man from Airto and Flora! 🎹
@user-qh3cd7jl4i22 күн бұрын
кто куда....бред какой то
@MrTarlecon28 күн бұрын
What a wonderful video and what a wonderful job you've done! I enjoyed every second! Thanks for investing you time into making this legendary performance sound more distinct and perfect. And thanks to great Allan and the musicians for their talend! Allan is my latest discovery - and I fail to find anything and anybody close to him yet.
@balkharianlionАй бұрын
Brilliant!!!
@toddfoutsАй бұрын
Alan always brilliant of course, but Akagi’s solo here is epic. And the drums sound fabulous - thanks for this remix!
@andrewmoser5539Ай бұрын
9:01 Jimmy Johnson looks like he's in heaven here. (It's always fun to show my normie friends the connection between the Family Guy soundtrack and Holdsworth via Jimmy Johnson. Seth McFarland ought to throw an Allan Holdsworth cameo out there. "Ah, sorry, Louis, I can't make it to Meg's brain surgery. I promised the bass player from the theme song that we would have an 80's jazz fusion jam on "Water on the Brain Part 2" with his buddy Allan, and that's just the sort of thing you don't pass up...")
@evansgateАй бұрын
Shredding in Jazz Fusion terms would give most people a bad trip but a selected few a REALLY good trip
@steffomca762Ай бұрын
How does Jimmy Johnson manage to play with such a tight string spacing
@aharchivesАй бұрын
I think had that bass since 1976.
@Strenuous1033Ай бұрын
0:55 notice his shiny frets
@afanasymarinov2236Ай бұрын
As always Allan has great melodic ideas. I wish like he usually did in the records he took time with them so we could fully hear and appreciate them. For my taste his playing is a bit too fast here.
@aharchivesАй бұрын
I think it's because of the stress of the situation.
@afanasymarinov2236Ай бұрын
I find Allan's sound here kinda unfamiliar, he usually did not use that high pitched sound configuration.
@aharchivesАй бұрын
He played on borrowed gear that he did not have time to test properly.
@afanasymarinov2236Ай бұрын
In hindsight it's odd to see Allan with a guitar that is not headless.
@blesm77Ай бұрын
When a keyboard player take off his watch to hit a solo, it gonna be insane.
@davidscott10522 ай бұрын
I dont think that non musicians and even some musicians will be able to understand just how good this really is....its the kinda thing that all us musos can only marvel at and hope to get maybe some where close to maybe some time in the far off future 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
@farkinarkin509915 күн бұрын
OMG. It is like a higher lifeform explaining the universe to me. I feel smarter, even though I couldn't even begin to comprehend what it told me. Fantastic.
@michealculleton11592 ай бұрын
Sorry i found this all a bit self indulgent along with all of Allen's playing
@t3hgirАй бұрын
can't even spell the guy's name right LOL
@andreasbreitwieser14492 ай бұрын
I was there !! And for me it was one of the BEST concert of a drummer I saw in my life. Chapeaux and obeisance Gary !!!!! .....and I was TRUE! You played a Tama.....
@pieterpieter43513 ай бұрын
I love. This is my master
@biorythmicshifter3 ай бұрын
Jimmy jamming a 5 string long before the rest of the world caught up. Allan only played with the best of them…
@pobinr3 ай бұрын
A better sax player than than most sax players
@snowfiresunwind3 ай бұрын
Allan in full flight!
@planetpjr3 ай бұрын
🍻 miss that geezer.
@dylano01263 ай бұрын
Great contribution, my thoughts are with his family and peers of Allan today, R.I.P! Much love.
@user-be1bj9zl1t3 ай бұрын
They SUCK.
@user-kv1zf1hx7x3 ай бұрын
thanks jim hall
@olivierblandin87573 ай бұрын
Extraordinaire !❤
@JavaJack593 ай бұрын
The audience is 99.5% dudes :)
@jimmythebold5893 ай бұрын
gary. my fav drummer
@josephgutkowski20594 ай бұрын
The great Allan holdsworth is the greatest guitarist the world has ever know, the john Coltrane of the guitar. He has never played a wrong note in his entire career,and yet he struggled to get record deals,that in it self is a travisty! This genius changed the way the guitar is played forever, he also introduced the synthaxe which is a impossible instrument to master, yet this glorious musician did.even after his death still doesn't get the credit he rightfully deserves. He is just as important as bird, Coltrane, monk,armstrong,Ellington and roach. There really needs to be a monument erected in honor of this wonderful genius. Thank you Allan for all your genius.
@Heavy_Metal_Pioneer4 ай бұрын
What a wonderful experience! Amazing!
@jimmythebold5894 ай бұрын
gary husband is amazing
@PRODBYJONMARINE4 ай бұрын
Its a bizarre world. Ive seen the comment section for this video and I have seen the dislikes on videos from fusion artists like Holdsworth and especially Jean Luc Ponty. Why? Maybe musical taste is subjective, but its objectively stupid to leave ridiculous comments about this groups "bad, tasteless sound". This group objectively (especially Holdsworth) pioneered mastery of instrumentation in the fusion genre. And they sound objectively disciplined and passionate in their music. What Im saying is, regardless of the taste of haters...the people that those haters listen to were definitely influenced by and admired jazz fusion giants like Holdsworth and his group.
@aharchives3 ай бұрын
You know, Allan would never badmouth other musicians by name, at least not in public. The only exception was that he had a strong dislike of guitarists who tried to blatantly copy him. I think there's something to learn from there...
@PRODBYJONMARINE3 ай бұрын
@@aharchives well said.
@philnaccarato4 ай бұрын
I don't think I've ever seen Allan this animated taking a solo. These guys were on fire that night. Incredible. !!!
@jimmythebold5894 ай бұрын
gary :D
@joeylodes4 ай бұрын
I was there that night and got to hang with Allan at the bar. Sweetest, most humble guy you’d ever meet. When we shook hands his fingers literally engulfed my comparatively tiny hand lol What a night. RIP Allan. Legend
@spazzriff_appreciator4 ай бұрын
also have been impressed by gary husbands utter reluctance to play a beat. sounds beautiful
@dansullivan12464 ай бұрын
His left finger is like a spider...
@fusionhar4 ай бұрын
LOVE CAMERMAN/WOMEN , DETERMINATION
@samkennard24554 ай бұрын
Awesome! Sounds like Joel Taylor on drums, dave carpenter bass?
@adnilrummut1055 ай бұрын
this was another league
@user-ht8og4kd1d5 ай бұрын
凄い🎉エディヴァンヘイレンに凄く影響を与えた天才ですね🎉
@glouismusic5 ай бұрын
Not musical to my ears. Sorry.
@anthonynichols52665 ай бұрын
The entire band is awsome 🎉🎉🎉🎉
@FrankJSelkeIV5 ай бұрын
fall of '86 caught Allan at Rutgers University, a small lecture hall, there was maybe 20 people there... very odd start time, i think it was like 5pm-6pm, because we had to haul ass after school on the Shore to drive up there.