Beck ranked in the top five of Rolling Stone and other magazine's list of 100 greatest guitarists. He was often called a "guitarist's guitarist". Rolling Stone describes him as "one of the most influential lead guitarists in rock". Although he recorded two hit albums (in 1975 and 1976) as a solo act, Beck did not establish or maintain the sustained commercial success of many of his contemporaries and bandmates.
Beck earned wide critical praise and received the Grammy Award for Best Rock Instrumental Performance six times and Best Pop Instrumental Performance once. In 2014 he received the British Academy's Ivor Novello Award for Outstanding Contribution to British Music. Beck was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame twice: as a member of the Yardbirds (1992) and as a solo artist (2009).
Beck was born on 24 June 1944 to Arnold and Ethel Beck at 206 Demesne Road, Wallington, England. As a 10-year-old, Beck sang in a church choir. He attended Sutton Manor Schoo and Sutton East County Secondary Modern School.
Beck cited Les Paul as the first electric guitar player who impressed him. Beck said that he first heard an electric guitar when he was 6 years old and heard Paul playing "How High the Moon" on the radio. He asked his mother what it was. After she replied it was an electric guitar and was all tricks, he said, "That's for me". Cliff Gallup, lead guitarist with Gene Vincent and the Blue Caps, was also an early musical influence, followed by B.B. King and Steve Cropper. Beck considers Lonnie Mack "a rock guitarist [who] was unjustly overlooked [and] a major influence on him and many others."
As a teenager he learned to play on a borrowed guitar and made several attempts to build his own instrument, first by gluing and bolting together cigar boxes for the body and an unsanded fence-post for the neck with model aircraft control-lines and frets simply painted on.
Upon leaving school, he attended Wimbledon College of Art, after which he was briefly employed as a painter and decorator, a groundsman on a golf course and a car paint-sprayer. Beck's sister Annetta introduced him to Jimmy Page when both were teenagers.
Beck stopped regular use of a pick in the 1980s. He produces a wide variety of sounds by using his thumb to pluck the strings, his ring finger on the volume knob and his little finger on the vibrato bar on his signature Fender Stratocaster. By plucking a string and then 'fading in' the sound with the volume knob he creates a unique sound that can resemble a human voice, among other effects. He frequently uses a wah-wah pedal both live and in the studio. Eric Clapton once said, "With Jeff, it's all in his hands".
Along with Stratocasters, Beck occasionally played Fender Telecaster and Gibson Les Paul models as well. His amplifiers were primarily Fender and Marshall. In his earlier days with the Yardbirds, Beck also used a 1954 Fender Esquire guitar (now owned by Seymour W. Duncan, and housed in the Cleveland Rock and Roll Hall of Fame) through Vox AC30s. He also played through a variety of fuzz pedals and echo units along with this set-up and has used the Pro Co RAT distortion pedal. The pickup was based on a Gibson pickup rewound by Duncan and used in a salvaged Telecaster dubbed the "Tele-Gib" which he had constructed as a gift to Beck. Scott Morgan of the Rationals, who at one point shared a dressing room with the Yardbirds, recalls how Beck amplified his lead guitar through a Vox Superbeetle while using banjo strings for the unwound G string on his guitar because "they didn't make sets with an unwound G at that point."
During the ARMS Charity Concerts in 1983 Beck used his battered Fender Esquire along with a 1954 Stratocaster and a Jackson Soloist. On Crazy Legs (1993) he played a Gretsch Duo Jet, his signature Stratocaster and various other guitars. In 2007, Fender created a Custom Shop Tribute series version of his beat-up Fender Esquire as well as his Artist Signature series Stratocaster.
Described by Rolling Stone as "one of the most influential lead guitarists in rock", Beck cited his major influences as Les Paul, the Shadows, Cliff Gallup, Ravi Shankar, Roy Buchanan, Chet Atkins, Django Reinhardt, Steve Cropper and Lonnie Mack. Of John McLaughlin, Beck said: "[he] has given us so many different facets of the guitar and introduced thousands of us to world music, by blending Indian music with jazz and classical. I'd say he was the best guitarist alive."
According to musicologist and historian Bob Gulla, Beck is credited for popularising the use of audio feedback and distortion in rock guitar. Prior to Beck's arrival, guitar playing generally conformed to the "clean, bright, and jangly" sounds of early-1960s British Invasion bands or the bluesy aesthetic of 1950s African-American performers like Muddy Waters and Bo Diddley. During his short time with the Yardbirds, Beck's experimentation with feedback, distortion, and "fuzz" tone "pushed the band into directions that would open the door for psychedelic rock" while "jolt[ing] British rock forward", according to Gulla. While Beck was not the first rock guitarist to experiment with electronic distortion, he nonetheless helped to redefine the sound and role of the electric guitar in rock music. Beck's work with the Yardbirds and the Jeff Beck Group's 1968 album Truth were seminal influences on heavy metal music, which emerged in full force in the early 1970s. Gulla identifies one of Beck's characteristic traits to be his sense of pitch, particularly in exercising the whammy bar to create sounds ranging from "nose-diving bombs to subtle, perfectly pitched harmonic melodies".
According to guitarist and author Jack Wilkins, Beck is regarded alongside Jimi Hendrix and Eric Clapton as one of his generation's greatest guitarists, receiving praise for his technical skill and versatile playing. Stephen Thomas Erlewine finds him to be "as innovative as Jimmy Page, as tasteful as Eric Clapton, and nearly as visionary as Jimi Hendrix", although unable to achieve their mainstream success, "primarily because of the haphazard way he approached his career" while often lacking a star singer to help make his music more accessible. On his recorded output by 1991, Erlewine remarked that "never has such a gifted musician had such a spotty discography", believing Beck had largely released "remarkably uneven" solo records and only "a few terrific albums". In Christgau's Record Guide (1981), Robert Christgau essentialised Beck as "a technician" and questioned his ability to "improvise long lines, or jazz it up with a modicum of delicacy, or for that matter get funky", although he later observed a "customary focus, loyalty, and consistency of taste".
In 2015, Beck was ranked No. 5 in Rolling Stone' magazine's list of the "100 Greatest Guitarists". In an accompanying essay, guitarist Mike Campbell applauded Beck for his "brilliant technique" and "personality" in his playing, including a sense of humor expressed through the growl of his wah-wah effects. Campbell also credited Beck with expanding the boundaries of the blues, particularly on his two collaborations with Stewart.
Bye Bye Blues
Jeff Beck Lyrics
Jump to: Overall Meaning ↴ Line by Line Meaning ↴
I never dreamed that it could be
But now I realize since I saw you smile
There's only happiness for me. so
Bye bye blues
Bye bye blues
Bells ring, birds sing
Just we two smiling through
Don't sigh, don't cry
Bye bye blues
The two of us together, just me and you
Will keep smilin' smilin' through
So don't you sigh, and don't you cry
Bye bye blues
The lyrics to Jeff Beck's song Bye Bye Blues reflect a sense of relief and happiness after experiencing something unexpected. The opening lines, "I got a big surprise when I saw you smile, I never dreamed that it could be" suggests that the singer was initially doubtful or uncertain about their situation, but the sight of the person they are addressing has changed everything. The chorus, "Bye bye blues, bells ring, birds sing, sun is shining, no more pining, just we two smiling through," further emphasizes the newfound joy and lightness in the singer's life. They are essentially saying goodbye to their worries and sadness and welcoming in a brighter future.
Line by Line Meaning
I got a big surprise, when I saw you smile
When I saw you smile, it completely caught me off guard and took me by surprise.
I never dreamed that it could be
I never could have imagined that seeing you smile would have such a profound effect on me.
But now I realize since I saw you smile
Since seeing you smile, I've come to understand that true happiness is possible for me.
There's only happiness for me. so
As a result of seeing you smile, I can now experience true happiness in my life.
Bye bye blues
Farewell to my sadness and unhappiness.
Bells ring, birds sing
The world is full of beauty and joy, as symbolized by the bells and birdsong.
Sun is shining, no more pining
Now that the sun is shining, I no longer have to yearn for happiness.
Just we two smiling through
Together, the two of us can face the world with a smile on our faces.
Don't sigh, don't cry
There's no reason to feel sad or cry anymore.
The two of us together, just me and you
We'll be together, just the two of us, sharing our happiness.
Will keep smilin' smilin' through
We'll keep smiling and pushing through whatever obstacles come our way.
So don't you sigh, and don't you cry
There's no need to feel disheartened or cry. We have each other and all the happiness that comes with it.
Bye bye blues
We're saying goodbye to sadness and welcoming a life of happiness and smiles.
Lyrics © O/B/O APRA AMCOS
Written by: BERT LOWN, CHAUNCEY GRAY, DAVID BENNETT, FREDERICK L HAMM
Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind
usmale 49
I saw these amazing people on PBS a few years ago. Very good and quite impressive; so glad to find them here on YouTube! Thank you for the video upload!
Наталья Митрофанова
Прекрасная певица.Спасибо!!!
Scott Daly
Aahhh, man, remember whrn mysic involved instruments?! God damn, I lived those days...
I must be gettin old.
GREAT Video and performance.
LOVE that there are still people keeping the human element in music alive
Terry Collins
Yes. The late Les Paul and Mary Ford are looking down and saying," yes,remember real music and not the noise of today trying to pass itself as music.
ROYAL COMMAND
Genial !!!!!
Les Wilcock
Love the song and the playing but....Jeff Beck is wearing sleeves!!
stan ochocki
not bad for this generation....but the Non-Mastery of the Les Paul Mary Ford technique and skill.....shows, it is not just them....but...just the lack of Mastery......
sunnysideamps
who is singing the harmonies? Digital harmonies?
Andrew Kling
Pre recorded, just like Les Paul and Mary Ford taught them
dirtydoggies
Hello there Reveco Ola