Christopher Holt
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Christopher Holt

Dallas, TX | Established. Jan 01, 2015 | INDIE

Dallas, TX | INDIE
Established on Jan, 2015
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"CHRIS HOLT RETURNS AFTER FIVE YEARS WITH A DOUBLE ALBUM AND DON HENLEY GUEST SPOT"

Holt is 42 now, happily married with kids and steadily gigging around town with various acts, including Hard Night’s Day (the long-running Beatles tribute act), Holt and Stockslager (a Simon & Garfunkel tribute act) and his own lengthy solo sets. He’s gearing up to release a 22-song collection called Stargazer, which features a guest spot from legendary Eagles member and Denton native Don Henley and is projected to arrive in 2016 — sometime after he's done touring with Henley. Far and away, it’s the best material he has recorded to date.
He jokes that it's the Chinese Democracy of his output so far. Even though it hasn’t been that long between releases, the wait has been long for Holt’s standards. He self-financed the recordings, which also contributed to why it's taken so long to release the album. In addition to his regular gigging, he was the musical director at Zounds Sounds and later the Dallas location of School of Rock.
When his previous solo record, A Cosmic Joke, came out to some dismissive reviews and didn’t sell well, Holt took things personally. Mixed with trying to keep a band together with practicing, writing, recording and playing shows, the drive to be a solo artist and a band leader waned significantly. He wrote a memoir and screenplay as creative pursuits in the meantime. “I just put music on hold,” he says. “I stopped gigging and writing. My confidence was gone.” In 2012, he realized he had a large backlog of songs. He recorded a few of these songs with Tom Bridwell at Tomcast Studio and did a couple of others with Salim Nourallah at Pleasantry Lane. After the session with Nourallah, Holt got really inspired and took action.
He decided to record at Junius Recording Co. with Lindsay Graham and at Tomcast with Bridwell and Paul Williams. Between fall 2013 and winter 2014, 30 songs were recorded. Save for a few songs, where Bridwell and Chris Carmichael played drums, Holt played almost everything else. One exception was “A Dirty Trick,” which features members of his old prog-pop band Olospo. For everything else, there were layers upon layers of guitars, keyboards, drums and vocals recorded, something Holt has been known to do. “He has a million ideas all the time,” Paul Williams says. “Some were better than the others and I think I could help him mine the gold.” Holt had wanted to do a double album for years. He considered making A Cosmic Joke into a double album, but was talked out of it. Taking the reigns with Stargazer, he saw an opportunity. “Everybody thought I was completely insane,” Holt says with a laugh. “But it’s been five years. I have a lot of material. I think the material is all good. And I don’t give a shit. We live in an age of distraction and this is a defiant way of saying ‘fuck you’ to the age we live in.”
There is no concept or story to Stargazer, but the there is a pretty consistent lyrical theme: a reflection of getting older and wiser. Furthermore, thinking about what you’ve done with your life and what you’re going to do with it. “Stargazer has a lot more sunlight,” Holt says, contrasting it to the darkness and sadness found on A Cosmic Joke and the second Slack record, The Deep End.There’s certainly a lot of information and styles of music across the album, and it can be daunting to take in on the first listen. Locally owned State Fair Records has a sensible strategy with how they want to present the album: instead of dropping all 22 songs at once, they will release a string of singles digitally, starting on October 2. All 22 songs will be on vinyl next year. “He wants to do a double record,” Trey Johnson, the label’s co-owner, says. “We signed on to do a double record and that is the plan.” Johnson has worked with Holt on many projects, including time together in the legendary Sorta. “He’s a prolific songwriter and has been for most of his career,” Johnson says. “There’s a lot of love in this record, and I think it works well as a double.”
Johnson is firmly aware of the marketplace, preferring the convenience of digital before deciding to own (or not own) something on a physical format. “Singles are kind of the way people are putting out their music now, for better or for worse,” he says. “What we have now is an opportunity to do both. Our plan is to let people hear Chris’s record in pieces, because it’s a lot of material to digest. If you’re going to hope people have the attention span to listen to the record, giving it to them in pieces just makes sense to me.”
Stargazer strongly builds on Holt’s back catalog, both in a band setting and as a solo act. He openly acknowledges his love of Elton John, Billy Joel, XTC, Todd Rundgren, ELO, the Beatles and the Flaming Lips, among many others. There’s soft acoustic material on “In Disguise,” “Like a Child” and “It’s Not Over Yet,” art power pop on “Face to Face” and “Make My Bed,” glam decadence on “Madelyn (Don’t Cry),” sugary bombast on “First Circle” and the title track, and piano-driven rock of “The Love Parade,” “Albatross” and “Now It’s Dark.”
“I’m Wasted,” a ballad driven by acoustic guitar and piano, is one of the standouts, and it features none other than Don Henley as a special guest vocalist. How Henley got involved is interesting. What happened after the recording session was done slowly led to what Holt will be spending most of the rest of 2015 doing: touring with Henley’s backing band as a rhythm guitarist and banjo player. Henley’s tour includes a stop at the Verizon Theatre in Grand Prairie on October 15. Back when Holt assembled and recorded tracks for Stargazer, he had been referred to Henley via Salim Nourallah as Henley’s son wanted guitar lessons. Soon after meeting for the first time, Henley asked Holt if he would like to lay down a guitar solo on a song called “That Old Flame” with producer Stan Lynch, a former member of Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, as well as a longtime producer of Henley’s solo material. (Coincidentally, the first guitar lick Holt ever learned as a kid was Henley’s “All She Wants to Do is Dance.”) Henley later asked Holt to play a private gathering and at the end of it, Henley offered to perform on a track Holt had been working on. Henley chose “I’m Wasted” and recorded his vocals at Tomcast.
As Henley gears up to release his new solo record, Cass County, and hit the road, he speaks highly of Holt. “Chris Holt is known as a gifted, versatile guitarist, but he’s also become an excellent singer and songwriter,” Henley says. “Chris’s new album showcases his growth as an artist and I was really pleased that I got to participate. It’s always a pleasure to work with a pro.”
Holt doesn’t hide his excitement about the opportunity to play arenas and theaters. He smiles even more these days. He takes the music seriously, and given how talented he is, he doesn’t have a sense of entitlement about the gigs he plays. He admits it’s nice for someone to hand him a guitar and then start playing a song that the crowd sings along to. He’s met people like Dolly Parton and Bob Seger, as well as Joe Walsh and Timothy B. Schmit from the Eagles. Still, he remains a humble, approachable person.
He’s focusing on the moment and thankful for what he has done as a performer. He’s looking forward to the tour and not the what-ifs when the tour is over. He’s thinking about recording a new Slack record; one that will be short in length and not take years to release. And of course, he’s game for more tour dates with Henley.
“I’m doing what I love now,” he says. “I don’t want to take for granted or miss out on how fun it is to do this.”  - Dallas Observer


"chris holt brings star power"

After a five-year hiatus, Chris Holt is returning to the Dallas music scene with his newest album “Stargazer,” and it absolutely kills.

Holt has been around the Dallas music scene for years. He has won Dallas Observer music awards for his work with Sorta, the Slack and Salim Nourallah. Holt even won Dallas Observer Musician of the Year as a solo artist.

After his last release received lukewarm reviews, Holt took a hiatus from music to focus on other creative pursuits. His memoir and screenplay didn’t make much of a splash, and he started working with State Fair Records, putting down some old tracks he had written.

This turned into the double album “Stargazer.” State Fair Records has been releasing singles off the album so that fans don’t get overwhelmed by abruptly dropping 22 tracks after five years of radio silence.

The album is a collection of tracks Holt wrote during his five-year hiatus from music as well as some tracks he wrote even further back and never produced. The wide span of time that the album covers means there is also a wide range of styles on the album.

But throughout that range there is a consistent theme of getting older and wiser throughout the album. There’s a lot of reflection in the lyrics about what you’ve done and where you’re going.

Twenty-two songs may sound like a lot, but Holt manages to make each track such a jam that you can’t help but want more. He ranges from heavy guitar riffs to an almost beachy vibe without losing any of his catchy rhythms.

His upbeat songs like “Face to Face” combine riffs and drumbeats perfect for studying, working out or even just driving with the windows down. It’s the music you want to bob your head along to. Even if you don’t realize it, you’ll find yourself nodding along to the beat.

Even his slower acoustic songs like “In Disguise” and “I’m Wasted” make you want to move. The ballad “I’m Wasted” features the legendary vocals of Don Henley, who met Holt after hiring him as a guitar instructor for Henley’s son in 2013. Henley invited Holt to tour with him as a backup vocalist and rhythm guitarist for most of 2015.

Holt has also mastered putting darker lyrics to an upbeat rhythm. “Our Situation” looks back on a destructive relationship both parties are trying to salvage. If you didn’t listen to the lyrics, you would have no idea. But it’s songs like this that make the double album and its writer so amazing.

The whole double album is available on iTunes, and Holt plans to release it as a vinyl in addition to the electronic and disc copy.

In between tour dates with Henley, Holt will be touring with his own band to promote “Stargazer” in 2016. - The Daily Campus


Discography

Still working on that hot first release.

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Bio

Christopher Holt is a jack of all trades, and if you ask him, a master of none. But that doesn’t stop him from trying his hand at just about everything. 

The five-time Dallas Observer Music Award winner (three of them for Musician Of The Year) has played in dozens of acclaimed bands from the DFW area over the past 20 years, including Sorta, The Slack, Olospo, Salim Nourallah and many others. He has juggled time between being an in-demand multi-instrumentalist and a songwriter fronting his own bands, while releasing solo albums in between. He’s been the lynchpin in spot-on cover acts like Hard Nights Day, Band On The Run, and Holt & Stockslager. On top of all that, he’s also been a dedicated teacher and mentor to budding musicians across the metroplex, while being a husband and father of three. And in the fall of 2015, he will hit the road as a touring guitarist for the legendary Don Henley, in support of Henley’s new record Cass County, which Holt also played on.

State Fair Records is pleased to announce the release of Stargazer, Christopher Holt’s third solo record, and a 22-track double vinyl set featuring all-new original material. Stylistically mixing in a variety of ingredients in his own indie-rock stew, Holt showcases his taste for melodic power-pop, lilting folk whimsy, psychedelic glam stomps, slinky prog-rock, and simple organic balladry, to create a sound that is both modern and classic simultaneously. 

With a few guest stars, but mostly playing everything himself, Holt has finally completed what he considers to be his best work to date. “Stargazer is like an ongoing mid-life crisis, a journey with its own tension and release, that perfectly represents this strange period in my life,” says Holt.