| Jeff Beck |

Jeff
Beck performing at the Crossroads Guitar
Festival 2007
|
| Background
information |
| Born |
June 24, 1944 (1944-06-24) (age 63)
Wallington,
London, England |
| Genre(s) |
Blues, Rock, Hard rock, Electronica,
Instrumental rock, Jazz
fusion, Heavy metal |
| Years active |
1962 - present |
| Label(s) |
EMI
Epic |
Associated
acts |
The
Yardbirds
The Jeff Beck Group
The Honeydrippers
Beck, Bogert & Appice
Big Town Playboys
Upp |
| Website |
www.jeffbeck.com |
| Notable instrument(s) |
| Fender
Jeff Beck Signature Model Stratocaster |
Geoffrey Arnold ("Jeff") Beck (born June 24, 1944 to Arnold and
Ethel Beck in Wallington, Greater
London, England)
is a British rock guitarist. Though he
played in several influential bands in the 1960s and 1970s (notably in The
Yardbirds), Beck has maintained a sporadic solo career over
the last 25 years. Despite never attaining the commercial viability of
his contemporaries, Beck has gained widespread critical acclaim,
especially in the guitar playing community.
He has won many Grammy awards in the category for best rock
instrumental. Never one to be tied to one particular genre, he has
experimented with blues rock, heavy
metal, and jazz fusion. Most recently, he has
absorbed the influence of techno, creating a blend of heavy guitar rock
and electronica.
|
Contents
- 1 Biography
- 1.1 Early
career with The Yardbirds
- 1.2 Jeff
Beck Group
- 1.3 Later
career
- 2 Influence
- 3 Technique
and equipment
- 4 Discography
- 5 Trivia
- 6 See
also
- 7 Further
reading
- 8 External
links
- 9 Notes
|
Biography
Early career with The Yardbirds
Like many rock musicians in the early 1960s, he began his
career working as a session guitarist. In 1965, following a gig with
the Tridents, Beck was recruited to join the
Yardbirds (after Eric Clapton had left the
group for John Mayall's
Bluesbreakers). It was during his tenure with the Yardbirds
that they recorded most of their hits. His volatile temper, coupled with the
unreliable nature of amplifiers in those days, resulted in many
incidents of taking out his frustration on his equipment, although he
rarely actually destroyed his guitars. In 1966, he shared the dual-lead
guitar role with Jimmy Page. His time with The
Yardbirds was short, allowing Beck only one full album, Roger
the Engineer (1966); Beck left after 18 months,
partly for health reasons.
While on the surface Beck seems to have departed the group
because of his health, Jimmy Page, who had been invited into the band
in 1966 by Beck himself, tells a different story:
| “ |
It
was on that Dick Clark tour — there were a few incidents. One time in
the dressing room I walked in and Beck had his guitar up over his head,
about to bring it down on Keith Relf’s head, but instead smashed it on
the floor,” Jimmy Page recalled years later. “Relf looked at him with
total astonishment and Beck said, ‘Why did you make me do that?’
Fucking hell. Everyone said, ‘My goodness gracious, what a funny chap.’
We went back to the hotel and Beck showed me his tonsils, said he
wasn’t feeling well and was going to see a doctor. He left for L.A.,
where we were headed anyway. When we got there, though, we realized
that whatever doctor he was claiming to see must’ve had his office in
the Whiskey. He was actually seeing his girlfriend, Mary Hughes, and
had just used the doctor bit as an excuse to cut out on us. |
” |
Jeff Beck Group
The following year, after recording the one-off song "Beck's
Bolero" (with Jimmy Page, John Paul Jones,
Nicky
Hopkins, and Keith Moon), Beck formed a new band
called The Jeff Beck Group,
which featured him on lead guitar, Rod
Stewart on vocals, Ron Wood on bass, Nicky
Hopkins on piano, and Micky Waller on drums. The group
produced two albums, Truth in 1968
and Beck-Ola
the following year. These two albums are highly acclaimed, and are
considered by some to be among the precursors to heavy metal. Owing to
friction within the band, Stewart and Wood left the group in 1969 to
replace Steve Marriott in the Small
Faces.
Later career
In 1981 he made a series of historic, joint live appearances
with his Yardbirds predecessor Eric Clapton at the Amnesty
International The Secret
Policeman's Other Ball benefit shows. He
appeared with Clapton on Crossroads, Further
On Up The Road and his own arrangement of Stevie
Wonder's Cause We've Ended As Lovers. Beck also
featured prominently in the all-star band finale performance of I
Shall Be Released with Clapton, Sting,
Phil
Collins, Donovan and Bob
Geldof. Beck's contributions were seen and heard in the resulting album
and film, both of which achieved worldwide success in 1982. Another
benefit show called the ARMS Concert for Multiple
Sclerosis featured a jam with Jeff, Eric and Jimmy Page performing
"Living on Tulsa Time" and "Layla". This is the only time all of the
1963-1968 Yardbirds lead guitarists appeared on stage together.
During the 1980s and 1990s, Jeff Beck recorded sporadically
(due largely to a long battle with noise-induced tinnitus): There and Back
(1980, featuring Simon Phillips, Tony Hymas, Jan Hammer
and Mo
Foster), Flash (1985, including
performances with Rod Stewart and Jan Hammer), Jeff Beck's Guitar Shop
(1989, with Terry Bozzio and Tony Hymas), Crazy
Legs (1993), Who Else!
(1999), and You Had It Coming
(2001). He also accompanied Paul Rodgers of Bad
Company on the album Muddy
Water Blues: A Tribute to Muddy Waters in 1993.
Jeff Beck won his 3rd Grammy Award, this one for 'Best Rock
Instrumental Performance' for the track "Dirty Mind" from You
Had It Coming. The 2003 release of Jeff
showed that the new electro-guitar style he used for the two earlier
albums would continue to dominate. This style has been lauded by
critics; Beck has skillfully fused an electronica influence with his
blues/jazz past, with a sound mix which seems heavily influenced by the
"brown" tone of subsequent guitarists like Van Halen
and Joe
Satriani. The song "Plan B" from this release earned him his fourth
Grammy Award, again, for 'Best Rock Instrumental Performance'.
Arguably the world's most famous record producer, if only for
his achievements with The Beatles, is George
Martin, who was deservedly knighted in 1996. But even a man of his
great wisdom was thrown into confusion when, in 1975, he produced Jeff
Beck's powerfully adventurous, jazz-tinged album Blow
by Blow at AIR Studios in London's Oxford Street. Jeff was fastidious
about over-dubs but never seemed to be happy with his solos.
A few days after a recording, when he'd had time to digest his
own performance, he would telephone George and say "I think I could do
a better one on this track", and they would return to AIR to try again.
Jeff would play over and over until he was satisfied that he had
performed his best. A couple of months went by and George received
another phone call from Jeff: "I want to do this solo again." Bemused,
George said: "I'm sorry, Jeff, but the record is in the shops!"
In the past few years, Jeff Beck has performed on new albums
by Les
Paul, Cyndi
Lauper, and Roger Waters. Beck also is
featured on one track on Queen guitarist Brian
May's last solo album, Another World.
He also appears on ZZ
Top's album XXX. Beck made a
cameo appearance in the movie Twins
starring Arnold Schwarzenegger and Danny
DeVito.
Jeff Beck continues to perform shows on a regular basis,
including opening for B.B. King in the summer of 2003, backed by
Terry Bozzio and Tony Hymas.
Beck's most recent tours in 2005 and 2006 have included Jason
Rebello on keyboards, Vinnie Colaiuta on drums and Pino
Palladino on bass (replaced by Randy Hope-Taylor due to
Palladino's prior commitment to The Who). An Official
Bootleg USA'06 from the tour has been released through Beck's
site.
Jeff Beck also accompanied Kelly
Clarkson as the guitarist for her cover of Patty
Griffin's song, "Up To The Mountain", during the
2007 Idol Gives Back episode of American
Idol, receiving a standing ovation from the
audience.
Influence
Beck was one of the first electric guitarists in the 1960s to
experiment with electronic distortion (most notably in The
Yardbirds' 1966 album, Roger
the Engineer) and helped to redefine the sound
and role of the electric guitar in rock music. Beck's work with The
Yardbirds and The Jeff Beck Group's
1968 album Truth were
seminal influences on heavy metal music, which emerged
in full force in the early 1970s. Jeff Beck is still highly influential
with many modern guitarists, who cite him as a major influence on their
playing. One example, is the late Mick Ronson who said Beck was his
guitar idol.
Technique and equipment
Unlike some guitarists, Jeff Beck does not rely heavily on
electronic effects. He produces a wide variety of sounds by using his
fingers and the vibrato bar on his signature Fender
Stratocaster, although he frequently uses a wah pedal both live and in
the studio.
Along with Fender Stratocasters, Beck
occasionally plays Fender Telecaster and Gibson
Les Paul models as well. His amplifiers are primarily Fenders and Marshalls. In
his earlier days with the Yardbirds, Beck also used a Fender
Esquire guitar through Vox
AC30's. On the "Truth" and "Beck-Ola" albums there is also extensive
use of the wah pedal, of which Beck is often cited as being a pioneer.
He has also played through a variety of fuzz pedals and echo-units
along with this set-up. He most famously used the Pro Co RAT
Distortion Pedal.
Recently, Fender created a Custom Shop Tribute series version
of his beat-up Esquire as well as his Artist Signature series
Stratocaster, which emerged in 1991 with features such as a massive
neck shape (deep '50s) and Fender Gold Lace Sensor pickups. This guitar
was based on the Strat Plus, except for the addition of a Gold Lace
Sensor Dually pickup, which resembles a humbucker in the bridge
position with a coil-split push button. Other features included a
roller nut, locking tuners and a 2-point pivot tremolo bridge. 2001 saw
major changes to the guitar, reflecting Beck's requirements. The Lace
Sensors were replaced with Fender's dual-coil ceramic Vintage Noiseless
pickups while a thinner neck with a smooth contoured heel took the
place of the previous deep U-shaped neck. Custom Shop versions of the
artist's personal instrument debuted in 2004. The guitar features a
rosewood fingerboard and is available in Olympic White and Surf Green.
Although most people are not aware of it, he had an ox blood (dark red)
Gibson Les Paul/Custom he used for about 10 years ie 1968-1978.
Discography
As the Jeff Beck Group:
- Truth – 1968
#15 US
- Beck-Ola
– 1969 #15 US
- Rough and Ready
– 1971 #46 US
- Jeff Beck Group
- 1972 #19 US
As Beck, Bogert & Appice
- Beck, Bogert &
Appice - 1973
- Beck,
Bogert & Appice Live in Japan - 1973
Solo:
- Blow by Blow –
1975 #4 US
- Wired – 1976
#16 US
- Jeff
Beck With the Jan Hammer Group Live – 1977 #23
US
- There and Back
– 1980 #21 US
- Flash – 1985 #42 US (Winner 1986 Grammy
Award for Best Rock Instrumental Performance)
- Jeff Beck's Guitar Shop
– 1989 #49 US (Winner 1990 Grammy
Award for Best Rock Instrumental Performance)
- Who Else! – 1999
#99 US
- You Had It Coming
– 2001 #110 US
- Jeff – 2003
- Live At BB King Blues Club
- 2006 (recorded 09/10/2003; originally sold only through Sony's online
store in 2004)
- Official Bootleg USA'06 (originally sold
through Beck's site)
With Big Town Playboys:
Compilation:
Appeared on
- Brian May's "The Guv'nor" from
the album Another World
- Stevie Wonder's Talking
Book
- Imogen Heap's Speak
for Yourself
- Roger Waters' Amused
to Death
- Mood Swings' song Skinthieves
- Tina Turner's Private
Dancer
- Jon Bon Jovi's solo album Blaze
of Glory
- Paul Rodgers song "Good
Morning Little School Girl"
- Stanley Clarke's 1975 album Journey
to Love.
- Stanley Clarke's 1978 album Modern Man.
- John's Childrens single
"Just What You Want - Just What You'll Get" b/w "But She's Mine" (rel.
Feb 1967) as uncredited session musician.
- Reunited with former Yardbirds bandmates in 1984 with the
group Box of Frogs
- Donovan's
"Goo Goo Barabajagal (Love Is Hot)"
- Malcolm McLaren's album Waltz Darling,
released in 1989, on the songs "House Of The Blue Danube"
and "Call A Wave".
- Mick Jagger's "She's
the Boss"
- The Honeydrippers:
Volume One
- Kate Bush's 1993 album The
Red Shoes
- Appears in the movie Twins with Danny
Devito and Arnold Schwarzenegger
- The soundtrack to the movie Sgt
Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band featuring The
Bee Gees and Peter Frampton (Beck was once quoted as saying that after
he saw Peter Frampton use the guitar mouth tube (talk box), he
gave it up).
- The 2003 Yardbirds' reunion album Birdland
- on track "My Blind Life"
- Cyndi Lauper's song "Above The Clouds"
from her 2005 album The Body Acoustic
- played guitar solo in Pavarotti's rendition of "Caruso"
- Rod Stewart's album
"Camouflage" on 3 tracks, also appears in video for the song
"Infatuation"
- Toots and the Maytals 2004
album "True Love" on the song "54-46."
- American Idol on 24 April 2007 for the
Idol Gives Back special, with Kelly Clarkson, playing "Up to the
Mountain", originally by Patty Griffin
- Murray Head's "Voices" (1981)
- Guitarist for Hans Zimmer's Days
of Thunder Instrumental Score.
- His song "Hot Rod Honeymoon" was on the soundtrack
for the video
game Gran Turismo 4
Trivia
- While Beck and Jimmy Page played together in The
Yardbirds, the trio of Beck, Page
and Eric
Clapton never played together in the group all at the same
time. The 3 guitarists did play on stage together at the ARMS
charity concerts in 1983 in honour of Ronnie
Lane.
- Beck's girlfriend Mary Hughes is name-checked in The
Yardbirds song "Psycho Daisies".
- He appears in the movie Blow Up with The
Yardbirds.
- He appears in the movie Twins with Nicolette
Larson.
- Beck plays an instrumental version of Lennon/McCartney
classic "A Day in the Life" on Sir George
Martin's album In My Life
(1998).
- Beck and Jimmy Page have known each other since Page was 11
years old.
- Beck is a vegetarian.
- Stevie Wonder originally wrote "Superstition"
for Beck. However, Stevie's manager insisted that he record it before
Beck did.
- When not touring or recording, Beck rarely plays guitar.
Instead, he spends most of his time working on his classic Jaguars or
building hot rods.
- Beck was asked to join The Rolling Stones but
declined before Ron Wood took the job.
- Jimi Hendrix considered Beck a close
friend.
- Honorary member of the Henchmen Motorcycle Club.
- Beck did a co-headline tour with Stevie
Ray Vaughan in 1989.
- He was interested in playing lead guitar for Iron
Butterfly when the group reformed in 1968 after a brief split. Before
deciding upon Erik Brann, the band also considered Neil Young
and Michael Monarch.
- Beck appears on John McLaughlin's Promise.
- Pink Floyd originally
considered Beck to replace Syd Barrett after the latter
became difficult to work with. However, Beck declined and David
Gilmour was chosen instead.[1]
- Beck's group plays with Donovan on the song, "Goo Goo
Barabajagal (Love is Hot)"
- Beck was to play a song with Guns N' Roses in Paris in 1992
but couldn't perform due to ear problems. He did rehearse on stage with
them though.
- Beck rarely uses a pick while playing.
- Jeff has played on the rare blues album Guitar
Boogie with Eric Clapton and Jimmy
Page
- Jeff was due to play as featured guitarist on Mo
Foster's first solo album Bel Assis but days before
the recording was due to start Jeff injured his thumb working on one of
his beloved hot-rods. He was replaced at the last minute by Gary Moore.
See also
- List of rock instrumentals
Further reading
- Carson,
Annette (2002). Jeff Beck: Crazy Fingers. Backbeat
books. ISBN
0-87930-632-7.
- Christopher Hjort and Doug Hinman (2000): Jeff's
Book: A Chronology of Jeff Beck's Career, 1965-1980: From the Yardbirds
to Jazz-Rock, Rock'n'Roll Research Press ([2], [3])
External links
Notes
| v • d • e The Yardbirds |
| John Idan
• Ben King
• Chris Dreja • Billy Boy
Miskimmin • Jim
McCarty |
| Keith
Relf • Paul Samwell-Smith • Top
Topham • Eric Clapton • Jeff Beck • Jimmy
Page • Rod Demick • Ray Majors • Laurie Garman • Alan Glen • Gypie Mayo |
| Discography |
| Studio albums:
Roger the Engineer
• Little Games • Blue
Eyed Blues • Birdland |
| Live albums:
Five Live Yardbirds
• Sonny Boy
Williamson and The Yardbirds • Live Yardbirds:
Featuring Jimmy Page • Blueswailing '64
• Yardbirds Reunion Jam
Vol II • Live At B.B. King Blues
Club |
| Compilations:
For Your Love
• Having a Rave Up
• The Yardbirds Greatest
Hits • BBC Sessions
• Ultimate! |
| Songs:
"I
Wish You Would" • "Good Morning Little Schoolgirl" • "Boom
Boom" • "For Your Love" • "Heart
Full of Soul" • "My Girl Sloopy" • "Evil
Hearted You" • "I'm a Man" • "Train
Kept A-Rollin'" • "Shapes of Things" • "Over Under Sideways Down" •
"Happenings Ten Years
Time Ago" • "Little Games" • "Ha Ha Said the Clown" • "White
Summer" • "Ten Little Indians" • "Goodnight Sweet Josephine" • "Think
About It" • "Dazed and Confused" |
| Related
articles |
| Box
of Frogs • Cream • The Jeff Beck Group • Led
Zeppelin • Renaissance |