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The Allan Holdsworth Album Collection is a box set by the English jazz fusion guitarist Allan Holdsworth. It was released by Manifesto Records on 7 April 2017. The 12-CD collection contains remastered versions of 11 studio albums and a live album, along with a 40-page booklet by Christopher Hoard.
File:Allan Holdsworth - Hard Hat Area album cover.jpg; File:Allan Holdsworth - I.O.U. album cover.jpg; File:Allan Holdsworth & Gordon Beck - 1979 - Sunbird.jpg; File:Allan Holdsworth & Gordon Beck - 1980 - The Things You See (Japanese edition).jpg; File:Allan Holdsworth & Gordon Beck - 1980 - The Things You See (vinyl).jpg
The Allan Holdsworth Album Collection, which comprises remastered versions of 12 of Allan's solo albums. [47] These 12 albums also have been released in a vinyl box set under the name The Allan Holdsworth Solo Album Collection, marking the first time many of these albums have been available on vinyl. [48]
Secrets is the sixth studio album by guitarist Allan Holdsworth, released on 6 November 1989 through Intima Records; [2] a remastered edition was reissued in 2008 through Eidolon Efformation. The album features drummer Vinnie Colaiuta , rather than regular collaborator Chad Wackerman ; Wackerman did, however, write and perform drums on the song ...
Allan Taylor (L) and Paul Metsers (R), Norwich Festival 1981. Taylor left school in 1961. He was an apprentice in telecommunications until 1965. Inspired by skiffle and the beat generation, he started singing and playing guitar in the folk clubs of Brighton through his teenage years. [1]
U.K. is the debut album by the progressive rock supergroup U.K., released in April 1978 [5] through E.G. Records and Polydor Records. It features John Wetton, Eddie Jobson, Bill Bruford, and Allan Holdsworth. The album was well received by FM album rock radio and by the public during the summer of 1978.
Karaoke Superstars is the first major release album by the Christian rock band Superchic[k].Before being signed to Inpop Records, the album was released independently. It did not include the three final remix tracks and featured different cover art.
In the US, "Last Night a D.J. Saved My Life" reached number ten on the Billboard R&B/Hip-Hop Singles chart and number two on the Billboard Club Singles chart, but could only bubble under the main Billboard Hot 100, where black crossover had become very difficult in the early 1980s as a result of the anti-disco backlash.