REVIEW

Music Review: Various Artists - Freeway Jam: To Beck And Back

Written by Glen Boyd
Published July 20, 2007

I'm not sure exactly where Jeff Beck picked up the nickname "guitar mechanic." It could be due to his well-known fondness for fast cars - Beck once considered a racing career over slinging guitars. What I do know is that wherever he picked it up, the name fits him like a proverbial grease rag.

Jeff Beck's approach to the guitar has always been one of surgical precision. Even as he bends the notes in a way quite unlike anyone else playing — his use of the tremelo bar alone would qualify him as one of the greats — Beck still finds a way to make every single note count. In other words, nothing is wasted in a Jeff Beck guitar solo.

The first time I heard Beck play — on the Yardbirds' groundbreaking single from the Sixties, "Shapes Of Things" — I was absolutely stunned at how somebody could make a guitar sound like that.

To my pre-adolescent mind at the time — I was maybe eleven years old — I couldn't believe how Beck made the guitar sound more like what was to my ears, a violin of all things. Later, on his first solo album Truth with the song "Beck's Bolero," I marveled once again at how he went from classical, to hard rock, to an almost Hawaiian sort of sound in something like under five minutes.

I've seen Jeff Beck live in concert several times since over the years, and in many different musical settings. From the short-lived power trio Beck Bogert & Appice (with those two guys from Vanilla Fudge), to his jazz rock excursions with the likes of Jan Hammer, Beck has throughout the years remained one of my all-time favorite guitarists.

And as one third of the Sixties holy trinity of rock guitarists (along with fellow Yardbirds alumni Eric Clapton and Jimmy Page), Beck has by this time also influenced a couple of generations of younger players. So it was inevitable that some of his more devoted students would eventually pay homage to the master with a tribute album.

Freeway Jam: To Beck And Back includes a great lineup of some of music's best axemen taking on several of Beck's finest moments. The most noteworthy name here is probably Eric Johnson, who is best known for the G3 concerts with Joe Satriani and Steve Vai, but is otherwise something of a guitar hero in his own right.

Johnson's take on "Beck's Bolero" here is a particular stunner. It starts out with a blast of guitar pyrotechnics, before settling into that song's gorgeous mid-section. Johnson expands on the song's trademark instrumental "chorus" — with its windtunneling sort of effect — and stretches it into the fusion sort of territory he's most familiar with playing-wise. From there, Johnson brings it back quite nicely to the song itself, ending it with some very nice use of sustain.

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GlenSoprano

You'll find Blogcritics assistant music editor Glen Boyd sharing his Thoughtmares on his personal blogs The World Wide Glen, and The Rockologist, as well as at Cinema Blend Music. In a previous life, Glen was a music professional and journalist whose work has appeared in The Rocket, SPIN, Pulse!, and The Source. Glen is also seeking an active full-time writing gig. Will somebody please hire this man?
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Music Review: Various Artists - Freeway Jam: To Beck And Back
Published: July 20, 2007
Type: Review
Section: Music
Filed Under: Music: Classic Rock and Oldies, Music: Jazz, Music: Recording, Music: Rock
Writer: Glen Boyd
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Comments

#1 — July 20, 2007 @ 03:05AM — El Bicho [URL]

I keep meaning to listen Jeff Beck but haven't gotten around to it yet. Sounds like an impressive line-up, but I will check out one of his albums first.

#2 — July 20, 2007 @ 09:57AM — Mark Saleski [URL]

ahem...if it were me, i'd start with Wired and Live with the Jan Hammer Group. then, straight over to Guitar Shop.

nice review glen.

#3 — July 20, 2007 @ 13:01PM — Ciao Baby

What's missing from this review is recognition and praise to Jeff Richman who not only produced the album, but whose masterful arrangements of each tune provides the pedestal on which these guitar players stand. Beck's Bolero is a stand-out example. Richman also takes the lead on El Becko ~ one of the four best tracks on the album.

A simple mention of Jeff Richman as a member of the "house band" is almost a slight. He's a phenomenal talent.

#4 — July 20, 2007 @ 13:31PM — Glen Boyd [URL]

Comment #3: I don't believe Richman was slighted at all here, because the emphasis of this album is clearly on the solo guitarists and their interpetations of Beck's work. Still, your comment more than acknowledges Richman, and for that I appreciate your having made it.

-Glen

#5 — July 20, 2007 @ 21:48PM — El Bicho [URL]

I have no doubt Ciao is correct that El Becko is a great track. Even the title has a nice ring to it.

Just read over at Rolling Stone.com: According to an industry insider, Jimmy Page and Jeff Beck are going to tour as The Yardbirds this fall alongside founding bassist Chris Dreja and drummer Jim McCarty. The tour is said to kick off this October. It's unclear who will be the reformed Yardbirds' lead singer (original vocalist Keith Relf died of electrocution in 1976). Eric Clapton, the Yardbirds' founding guitarist, has no plans to participate, according to the source.

#6 — July 21, 2007 @ 01:36AM — Glen Boyd [URL]

Just so you know Bicho, Billboard reported earlier today that Beck's manager says El Becko will NOT be participating in the Yardbirds reunion. Without Beck on board, I'd have to doubt Page being there either. In fact, there's been rumblings of a Led Zep reunion with Page, Plant, and even John Paul Jones on board, with Jason Bonham on drums.

If true, I'd guess this is a 2008 thing since the Police have pretty much cornered the reunion market this year.

FYI..

-Glen

#7 — July 21, 2007 @ 04:57AM — El Bicho [URL]

"the Police have pretty much cornered the reunion market"

no one told Genesis ;)

I have heard those Zep rumors also, and now that EVH is out of rehab, I hear faint rumblings of them trying to get that tour off the ground again.

#8 — July 21, 2007 @ 11:53AM — Mark Saleski [URL]

...and Chinese Democracy is coming out later this year.

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