Atavachron
Atavachron is the fourth studio album by guitarist Allan Holdsworth, released in 1986 through Enigma Records (United States) and JMS–Cream Records (Europe). The album's title and seventh track, as well as the cover art, are references to the "Atavachron" alien time travel device from the Star Trek episode "All Our Yesterdays". This marks Holdsworth's first recorded use of the SynthAxe, an instrument which would be featured prominently on many of his future albums.[1]
Critical reception
Professional ratings |
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Review scores |
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Source | Rating |
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AllMusic | [1] |
John W. Patterson of AllMusic gave Atavachron four stars out of five, describing it as "semi-progressive" with a "symphonic element" and praising it as "clear evidence of the genius Holdsworth was demonstrating release after release". He also highlighted the use of the SynthAxe, as well as praising the "beautiful female vocals" of Rowanne Mark, who makes her first of two appearances on a Holdsworth album.[1]
Track listing
All songs written and composed by Allan Holdsworth, except where noted.
1. |
"Non Brewed Condiment" |
3:41 |
2. |
"Funnels" |
6:15 |
3. |
"The Dominant Plague" |
5:45 |
4. |
"Atavachron" |
4:45 |
5. |
"Looking Glass" |
4:36 |
6. |
"Mr. Berwell" |
6:24 |
7. |
"All Our Yesterdays" (lyrics by Rowanne Mark) |
5:26 |
Total length: |
36:52 |
Personnel
- Allan Holdsworth – guitar, SynthAxe, engineering, mixing, production
- Rowanne Mark – vocals
- William Edward Childs – keyboard (tracks 2, 5)
- Alan Pasqua – keyboard (tracks 3, 4, 6)
- Gary Husband – drums (except tracks 3, 5, 7)
- Chad Wackerman – drums (tracks 3, 7)
- Tony Williams – drums (track 5)
- Jimmy Johnson – bass
- Robert Feist – engineering, mixing
- Dan Humann – engineering, mixing
- Bernie Grundman – mastering
References
External links
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| Studio albums | |
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| EPs | |
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| Live albums | |
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