Home » Jazz Articles » Profile » Diamond Dust: The Eccentric Genius of Jeff Beck
Diamond Dust: The Eccentric Genius of Jeff Beck
ByThe harrowing impact of hearing about the unexpected passing of Jeff Beck indirectly calls to mind the tragic deaths of two other contemporary musical icons

John Lennon
guitar and vocals1940 - 1980

Duane Allman
guitar1946 - 1971

Jackson Browne
guitarb.1948

Allman Brothers Band
band / ensemble / orchestra

Jan Hammer
keyboardsb.1948
Apart from the confounding fatal medical issue(s), what's even more enervating in grasping the reality Jeff Beck will never again populate the stages of this material world is the growing recognition of his talents. In the later years of his life, the man who took the place of

Eric Clapton
guitar and vocalsb.1945

Jimmy Page
guitar
Led Zeppelin
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1968
More important, however, is that the relative inactivity of those peers in the triumvirate of British guitar icons was allowing widening of recognition for Beck. That satisfied state of mind by which he realized that phenomenon might well have its seeds in the fall of 2006: at a concert in Hampton, New Hampshire, Beck looked and played as if fully and completely comfortable in his own skin, gleefully acknowledging the estimable presence of drummer

Vinnie Colaiuta
drumsb.1956
And in his appearance the very next year at Slowhand's Crossroads Guitar Festival, Jeff reaffirmed how he further distinguished himself in the very presence of his contemporaries. His near-reckless abandon on "Stratus" hardly precluded the tender touch he applied to Stevie Wonder's "'Cause We've Ended As Lovers." And it's not just Beck's lead and solo playing that's so idiosyncratic. Hear "Ice Cream Cakes'' from the second Jeff Beck Group's eponymous sophomore album (also known as 'The Orange Album'): he can't resist playing around with the rhythm guitar progression as he plays it, preferring to mirror the layered nuance of drummer extraordinaire Cozy Powell's layered patterns.



The Beatles
band / ensemble / orchestra
We can only hope future archiving comparable to that of the triple-CD Beckology (Epic, 1998) will unearth more gems of Jeff Beck's eccentric genius. In the meantime, what the late rock impresario Bill Graham once said about the

Grateful Dead
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1965
Tags
Profile
jeff beck
Doug Collette
John Lennon
Duane Allman
Jackson Browne
Allman Brothers Band
Jan Hammer
Eric Clapton
Jimmy Page
Led Zeppelin
The Beatles
Grateful Dead
Comments
PREVIOUS / NEXT
Support All About Jazz
