- The Front Desk
- Prelude, with Debussy and Coltrane
- 1: 1969, 'Igginbottom
- 2: 1971-72, London Jazz and Ian Carr's Nucleus
- 3: 1972-73, Tempest
- 4: 1974-75, Soft Machine
- 5: 1974-76, The Tony Williams Lifetime
- 6: 1976, Velvet Darkness and Million Dollar Legs
- 7: 1976, Gong
- 8: 1977-78, John Stevens and Spontaneous Music
- 9: 1977, Jean-Luc Ponty
- 10: 1977, Bruford - Feels Good To Me
- 11: 1978, U.K.
- 12: 1979, Bruford - One Of A Kind
- 13: Holdsworth...and Company (Demos, BBC Jazz).
- 14: Gordon Beck in the '70s
- 15: 1979-81, I.O.U.
- 16: 1982-84, Road Games
- 17: 1985, Metal Fatigue
- 18: 1986, Atavachron
- 19: 1987, Sand
- 20: 1988-89, Secrets (& Guest Work)
- 21: Gordon Beck in America (None Too Soon)
- 22: Chad Wackerman
- 23: The Jazz-Rock Gunslinger: Truth In Shredding, Heavy Machinery, and More
- 24: 1990-92, Wardenclyffe Tower & Then!
- 25: 1993, Hard Hat Area, Just For the Curious
- 26: 1994-99, The Sixteen Men of Tain
- 27: 2001, Flat Tire: Music for A Non-Existent Movie
- 28: All Night Wrong, Snakes and Ladders, Piano Interpretations
- 29: 21st Century Schizoid Prog (Soft Works)
- 30: Blues For Tony, HoBoLeMa, Crossroads, Tales From The Vault
Appendices:
Absolutely fascinating reading!!! I've been getting into Holdsworth (and other jazzy fusion stuff) a lot lately. Sort of re-introduction for myself, if you will. It sounds absurd that Allan couldn't first find a record-deal late 70s/early 80s. People just didn't/don't appreciate great playing and craftmanship!!!
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