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Jeff Beck

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Jeff Beck (Born June 24, 1944 in Wallington, England) is one of the most talented and creative, as well as overlooked, electric guitarists in rock history. Like many electric guitarist in early 1960s England, Jeff Beck spent a lot of his time earning money as a session guitar player. In 1966, a promising rock band named the Yardbirds needed a lead guitarist after the departure of Eric Clapton to John Mayall's Bluesbreakers. Beck filled the lead guitar role more than admirably. Beck was one of the first electric guitarists to experiment with electronic fuzz distortion and noise and he made excellent use of it, pushing the Yardbirds' lead guitar part to previously unreached horizons and helped redefine what electric guitar could do just before the rise of Jimi Hendrix. This arguably was best demonstrated on the only full-length Yardbirds album with all original songs, 1966's Roger the Engineer.

As talented as Jeff Beck was with the Yardbirds, he was also quite eclectic and, combined with failing health, he left the group in late 1966 after a legendary but brief dual-lead guitar role with Jimmy Page, who had recently joined.

In 1967, Jeff Beck formed a new band named the Jeff Beck Group, which featured him on lead guitar as well as Rod Stewart on vocals, Ron Wood on bass, Mick Waller[?] on drums, and Nicky Hopkins[?] on piano. The group produced two albums, Truth[?] in 1968 and Beck-Ola Cosa Nostra[?] the following year, both of which helped lay templates for heavy metal music that would emerge a few years later. Nonetheless, friction emerged between the members of the Jeff Beck Group and, in 1971, Stewart and Wood left to join The Faces and later to pursue Stewart's solo efforts.

After the failure of a second Jeff Beck Group (which disbanded in 1972), Beck formed a more formal power trio Beck, Bogert, and Appice with Carmine Appice on drums and Tim Bogert on bass. This group, too, failed to attract much critical attention and soon split up, although they did have a minor hit with an instrumental version of Stevie Wonder's "Superstition", and Beck would add lead guitar to Wonder's Talking Book album. In 1975, Beck did a solo, all-instrumental jazz fusion album titled Blow by Blow which, surprisingly, got him strong critical reviews and was followed up by a collaborative effort with keyboardist Jan Hammer and his band on the 1976 Wired album, which also received critical acclaim.

Although Jeff Beck has never achieved the critical success of peers like Eric Clapton or Jimmy Page, he has been just as important of a defining force in rock music, not to mention his eclectic musical vision in which he often shifts from hard rock to psychedelia to progressive instrumental guitar music without as much as a pause. Unlike Page and Clapton's solid blues foundation, Beck's guitar music transcends blues scales with a creativity and experimentalism that is nearly unrivaled and has cemented his place in popular music history.



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