I have loved Jeff Beck for more than 30 years. His peerless approach to tone, phrasing and articulation always repays the listener’s attention. Every note he plays (and he plays a lot of them) has an individual identity. The nuances, with notes bending up, scooping down with a whammy bar, or through pull-offs, provide a full and productive lifespan for every single note. Intonation, whether by bend or when playing slide, is always perfect. With Beck’s approach, if he were a baseball pitcher, no hitter would have a prayer at hitting a thing. There’s an unexpected spin on everything he plays. He’s electric guitar’s answer to tenor saxophone masters Joe Henderson and Sonny Rollins.
Check out Jeff Beck Official Bootleg ’06, available through www.jeffbeck.com. This album is extraordinary. Rather than putting out new albums, Jeff Beck has been selling ‘official bootleg’ recordings through his website, and this is the latest. And,
it’s the best, far outdistancing Live At BB King’s from a few years ago.
Beck is given superlative backup by Vinnie Colaiuta (drums), Pino Palladino (bass) and Jason Rebello (keys). In jazz circles, it’s often said that the drummer makes the difference, and Colaiuta spurs Beck on to play the best he’s sounded in years. The material culled from 70’s fusion masterpieces Blow By Blow and Wired, is at or beyond the level of the original recordings. Scatterbrain, largely in 9/8, has some dazzling moments, with effortless shifts in time signature. The stuff actually grooves. Beck’s underrated ballad playing also shines through on Goodbye Porkpie Hat and Somewhere Over The Rainbow, a tune that would almost certainly drown in schmaltz in the wrong hands. There’s an all-too-rare level of interaction here—the band’s making a unified, shape-shifting magic carpet ride out of every tune. This is a great album—get it!
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