Jeff Beck - Jeff Beck Group Audio CD

A fair review of the Jeff Beck "Jeff Beck Group" Audio CD. Please note that the below review is the views of the authors, and authors only. You can get a complete list of all Jeff Beck reviews here, or go back to the Jeff Beck tabs.

Jeff Beck Band: Jeff Beck
Title: Jeff Beck Group
Rating:
Release Date: 2007-12-15
Media: Audio CD

Tracks: 1: Ice Cream Cakes 2: Glad All Over 3: Tonight I'll Be Staying Here With You 4: Sugar Cane 5: I Can't Give Back the Love I Feel for You 6: Going Down 7: I Got to Have a Song 8: Highways 9: Definitely Maybe

One of the BEST most underrated albums EVER
My question for you trivia people is what happened to Bob Tench?. OK my title says it all.


Gotta love good music!
I had this album when it came out, actually my brother had it and I grew up listening to whatever he had so. . Led Zepplin, Yes. . . all the good stuff from back then. This album was no exception. They are all good musicians and even though there's not much 'technically challenging' stuff on here, it is still SO great to listen to! To sing along with and groove with the music. I hadn't heard it in 20+ years and it brought back SO many great memories. Just a great bunch of songs!.


JEFF BECK GROUP
I'am a big Jeff Beck fan having over 8,000 albums in my collection,I have every Jeff Beck album all the way back to the Yardbirds to date, but for some reason I realy enjoy the begining of a new style and new band combination like this one,it sets off some unique tallents by Max Middleton-panio,Cozy Powell-durms,Clive Chaman-bass,Bob Tench-vocals,& of corse Jeff Beck-lead guitar. This is a truly hard album or cd to find,but if you can you will shurely like the beginings of early combinations of rock,blues,&jazz put together in a early and powerful style, which will get you primed for ther second album Rough And Ready. If you like what you hear see my coments on there next album. Happy Jammin Bill T. .


Beck Transitions to Fusion
This album is one of my favorites of the early 70s period, and Beck is here in somewhat rare form; not playing conventional blues, but hinting more at progressive elements in rock and fusion. On what is sometimes called "The Orange Album", Jeff Beck is captured at a special time of his music somewhere between coming out of conventional rock/blues and going into more of a fusion motif he would go on to explore for most of the mid-seventies. That said, the album does have some rockish R&B such as the Dylan cover "Tonight I'll be Staying Here with You", a revved up and sophisticated cover of "I've Got to Have a Song", and an outlandish boogie version of Nix's "Going Down". There are a few odds and ends such as "Glad All Over" and "Sugar Cane - which is not quite a reggae piece. The rest of the album features some wondrous progressive playing such as "Ice Cream Cakes" - a terrific cross of prog-like rock and fusion featuring some of Beck's most intriguing chops and some wonderful electric piano by Max Middleton all in a jazzy vain backed by pulsating rockish bass and Cozy Powell's drums. "Highways" has yet more prog-rock feel and some of Becks most tempered yet exciting chops all capped off by more soulful fusion electric piano from Middleton. "Definitely Maybe" is one of Becks most unique composition's: masterfully done here with a sophisticated feel, it is almost a cross between a ballad and a lament and is entirely infectious. This album occupies a unique era (my favorite) in Beck's stylistic sojourn; only the preceding album "Rough and Ready" is anything like it in style. Four and a half stars.


It's Beck alright, but...
So it is with this album. It's hard to review Jeff Beck because while his guitar work is never short of amazing, the genre and/or the material may not always be a match for his spectacular level of skill. If you like your Beck rocking with soulful vocals, then by all means, this is your cup of tea. The singing is not my favorite part of this recording because I think Bob Tench reaches a bit too far and sounds a bit strained, but the style of the music itself is okay. The musicians are good enough and some of the songs are really good and make you wonder how in the world Jeff Beck never became a household name. Seriously - ask the casual music fan about Jeff Beck and see how many people answer, "But I didn't know that Beck guy had a first name. . . " The record starts off promisingly enough with Cozy's drum intro and the fun rocking "Ice Cream Cakes" and ends with a beautiful piece that hints strongly of the Blow by Blow world Jeff was headed towards. In between is a mixed bag of songs including the minor radio hit "Goin Down," which despite the lack of any kind of lyrical content, manages to capsulize Jeff's chops pretty neatly. Throughout this record, like all of Jeff's work, you have the man's guitar playing - the tone, the whammy induced howls and growls, the lightning fast hammer ons and pull offs, the hyper-sonic bends, and the rest of the arsenal this genuine guitar hero packs. If you don't care how your Beck is served up, you probably already own this. If you are more choosy about the accompaniment, listen to some samples and see if you care for this seventies rock and soul sampler. .


You can see a complete list of all Jeff Beck discography, or go back to the Jeff Beck tabs. There is also a good guide on how to read guitar tabs here.

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