They say if there is rock n’ roll in heaven they’ve got one hell of a band. I was saddened to learn that Jeff Beck has passed away on Tuesday, January 10 at age 78.
From BBC Music Correspondent Mark Savage:
Jeff
Beck, one of the most influential rock guitarists of all time, has died at the
age of 78.
The British musician rose
to fame as part of the Yardbirds, where he replaced Eric Clapton, before
forming the Jeff Beck group with Rod Stewart.
His tone, presence and,
above all, volume redefined guitar music in the 1960s, and influenced movements
like heavy metal, jazz-rock and even punk.
Beck's death was confirmed
on his official Twitter page.
"After suddenly contracting bacterial meningitis, he
peacefully passed away yesterday. His family ask for privacy while they process
this tremendous loss."
Speaking when he was inducted to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
for the second time in 2009, Beck - said: "I play the way I do because it
allows me to come up with the sickest sounds possible."
"That's the point now, isn't it? I don't care about the
rules.
"In fact, if I don't break the rules at least 10 times in every
song, then I'm not doing my job properly."
'Six-stringed warrior'
Responding to news of his death, singer Sir Rod Stewart called
Beck "the greatest".
Posting a picture of the pair together on Instagram, he wrote:
"Jeff Beck was on another planet. He took me and Ronnie Wood to the USA in
the late 60s in his band the Jeff Beck Group and we haven't looked back since.
"He was one of the few guitarists that when playing live
would actually listen to me sing and respond. Jeff, you were the greatest, my
man. Thank you for everything. RIP."
US rock band Hollywood Vampires, comprising Johnny Depp, Alice
Cooper, Joe Perry and Tommy Henriksen, also saluted "the passing of our
dear friend and guitar legend".
"Jeff's incredible musicianship and passion for guitar has
been an inspiration to us all," the band wrote. "He was a true
innovator and his legacy will live on through his music. Rest in peace,
Jeff."
Rock singer and guitarist Eric Clapton simply tweeted:
"'Always and ever'…….. ec".
Elsewhere, Led Zeppelin's
Jimmy Page paid tribute to Beck as "the six-stringed warrior" and
praised his "apparently limitless" musical imagination which could
"channel music from the ethereal".
In another rock tribute,
Rolling Stones frontman Sir Mick Jagger shared a video of the pair playing
together, saying music had lost "one of the greatest guitar players in the
world" and "we will all miss him so much".
Black Sabbath frontman Ozzy
Osbourne said it had been "such an honour" to know and play with
Beck, adding: "I can't express how saddened I am..."
And Queen guitarist Sir
Brian May said he was lost for words, but called Beck "the absolute
pinnacle of guitar playing" and a "damn fine human being".
Members of Kiss, Gene
Simmons and Paul Stanley, also expressed their shock.
Simmons called the news
"heartbreaking", while Stanley said he had "blazed a trail
impossible to follow. Play on now and forever".
Singer Paul Young added in
a Twitter post: "He was loved by everyone in the know; the guitarists'
guitarist!"
Born Geoffrey Arnold Beck in
Wallington, Surrey, the musician fell in love with Rock and Roll as a child,
and built his first guitar as a teenager.
"The guy next door
said, 'I'll build you a solid body guitar for five pounds'," he later told
Rock Cellar Magazine. "Five pounds, which to me was 500 back then [so] I
went ahead and did it [myself].
"The first one I built
was in 1956, because Elvis was out, and everything that you heard about pop
music was guitar. And then I got fascinated. I'm sure the same goes for lots of
people."
After a short stint at
Wimbledon Art College, he left to play with shock-rocker Screaming Lord Sutch
and the Tridents.
When Eric Clapton left the
Yardbirds in 1965, Jimmy Page suggested hiring Beck - and he went on to play on
hits like I'm A Man and Shapes Of Things, where his pioneering use of feedback
influenced musicians like Paul McCartney and Jimi Hendrix.
"That [technique] came
as an accident," he later told BBC Radio 2's Johnnie Walker.
"We played larger
venues, around about '64-'65, and the PA was inadequate. So we cranked up the
level and then found out that feedback would happen.
"I started using it
because it was controllable - you could play tunes with it. I did this once at
Staines Town Hall with the Yardbirds and afterwards, this guy says, 'You know
that funny noise that wasn't supposed to be there? I'd keep that in if I were
you.'
"So I said, 'It was
deliberate mate. Go away'."
Going instrumental
The guitarist stayed with
the Yardbirds for nearly two years, before declaring he was quitting music
altogether and releasing his first solo single Hi Ho Silver Lining.
However, he quickly
returned with the Jeff Beck Band, whose first two albums Truth (1968) and
Beck-Ola (1969), took a ferocious approach to the blues that laid the
groundwork for heavy metal.
But the band were unhappy -
with a US tour regularly descending into arguments and physical fights.
Singer Rod Stewart and
bassist Ronnie Wood quit in 1970 to join the Small Faces (later The Faces), and
when Beck was injured in a car accident, he had to put his career on hold.
When he recovered, Beck
assembled a second line-up of his band but their albums were commercially
unsuccessful and Beck went solo in 1975.
That year, he recorded an
album, Blow By Blow, with Beatles producer George Martin. Entirely
instrumental, Beck's lyrical, mellifluous guitar playing essentially replaced
the parts of a lead vocalist, an approach he would take for most of the rest of
his career.
Blow By Blow made the US
top 10 and was awarded a platinum disc, and Beck quickly followed it up with
1976's Wired (also produced by George Martin) and the 1997 concert album Jeff
Beck With The Jan Hammer Group Live.
After the tour documented
on the album, the musician retired to his estate outside of London and remained
quiet for three years.
"The pitch I play at
is so intense that I just can't do it every night," he later explained.
The 1980s saw him
collaborate with Nile Rodgers on an album called Flash, which contained his
first hit single - a cover of Curtis Mayfield's People Get Ready with Rod
Stewart on lead vocals - and earned him a Grammy Award.
In 1987, he played on Mick
Jagger's solo album Primitive Cool, and continued to work with artists like
Roger Waters and Jon Bon Jovi in the 1990s, as well as contributing to Hans
Zimmer's score for the Tom Cruise movie Days Of Thunder.
Around this time, he
started incorporating more electronic and hip-hop elements to his music;
culminating in his fourth Grammy victory for the tempestuous, shape-shifting
instrumental Plan B.
He toured extensively in
the 2010s, including a joint-headline venture with Beach Boy Brian Wilson.
The duo had hoped to record
together but those plans fell apart. Instead, Beck ended up befriending actor
Johnny Depp, with whom he released a full-length album, 18, in 2022.
But the musician's legacy
lies in the balance between the fluidity and aggression of his playing, his
technical brilliance equalled only by his love of ear-crunching dissonance.
"It's like he's
saying, 'I'm Jeff Beck. I'm right here. And you can't ignore me'," wrote
Mike Campbell of the Heartbreakers in an essay for Rolling Stone's Greatest
Guitar Players of All Time, where Beck placed seventh.
"Even in the
Yardbirds, he had a tone that was melodic but in-your-face - bright, urgent and
edgy, but sweet at the same time. You could tell he was a serious player, and
he was going for it. He was not holding back."
"He'd just keep
getting better and better," Led Zeppelin's Jimmy Page once recalled.
"And he leaves us, mere mortals".
Posted by Drifter
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