"Although synth lines were the starting point, this remains a guitarist's album at heart": Steve Howe ranges far and wide on Guitarscape

Instrumental solo album from Yes/Asia guitarist Steve Howe

Steve Howe - Guitarscape cover art
(Image: © Howesound)

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As on his Love Is album of 2020, Steve Howe plays keyboards as well as bass (alongside his son Dylan on drums). In fact, he says Guitarscape is informed by his purchase of a Novation Summit synthesiser, on which he discovered tones and chord structures unlike those he would come up with on a guitar. 

The result is an album that exudes a hybrid air. But although synth lines were the starting point, this remains a guitarist’s album at heart, with a lot on display across 14 short pieces.

Steel Breeze - YouTube Steel Breeze - YouTube
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Howe’s fluid and delicate playing, mainly on electric guitars but also acoustic (and on some tracks both) ranges from prog to ambient to jazz. There’s an almost Far Eastern feel in the slow and delicate Gone West, and echoes of Soon (from Yes’s Relayer) in closing track Steel Breeze

Nothing hangs around long enough to become boring, and several tracks end a little too soon.

Neil Jeffries

Freelance contributor to Classic Rock and several of its offshoots since 2006. In the 1980s he began a 15-year spell working for Kerrang! intially as a cub reviewer and later as Geoff Barton’s deputy and then pouring precious metal into test tubes as editor of its Special Projects division. Has spent quality time with Robert Plant, Keith Richards, Ritchie Blackmore, Rory Gallagher and Gary Moore – and also spent time in a maximum security prison alongside Love/Hate. Loves Rush, Aerosmith and beer. Will work for food.