Jeff Beck with Jan Hammer Group
1977
Jeff Beck with Jan Hammer Group: Live
01. Freeway Jam
02. Earth (Still Our Only Home)
03. She's A Woman
04. Full Moon Boogie
05. Darkness /Earth In Search Of A Sun
06. Scatterbrain
07. Blue Wind
Jeff Beck / guitars
Jan Hammer / synths, keyboards
Steve Kindler / violin
Tony Smith / drums, vocals
Fernando Saunders / bass
Third chapter in Beck's adventure in Jazz-rock land, this live album is probably his best (at least IMHO) and certainly an improvement of the preceding ultra-technical Wired and the too fusion-esque Blow By Blow. Indeed, this third try is probably the best suited to those searching for a conventional (but not boring) jazz-rock between Mahavishnu Orchestra and Weather Report, while remaining accessible and out of the clichés.
With the opening Freeway Jam, with its car honking intro, is a complete stunner and much better than the BBB version (IMHO). The following Earth (Still Our Only Home) is a very funky jazz track sung (Eeehmmm!!) by Jan Hammer, but Beck's guitar shines brighter than a thousand suns. She's A Woman is turned to a semi-reggae, semi-funk thing with some guitar vo-coders ala Peter Frampton. Full Moon Boogie again dips into the guitar vo-coder and dipping into early 70's funk,
The definitely more even and consistent flipside includes the spacey doubleshot Darkness/Earth (In Search Of A Sun), which has a very different feel with Hammer's spacey synth dominating most of the track: we are hovering between Nektar/Eloy, Tangerine Dream and Dixie Dregs territory at times. A real pleasure of a mixture and a mixture of real pleasures. The great Mahavishnu- inspired Scatterbrain (also from BBB), where Steve Kindler's violin and Beck's guitar are indeed reminiscent of Goodman and McLaughlin and is easily the album's highlight, along with Freeway Jam. Closing the album is the excellent Blue Wind (from Wired), here played with a full line-up and includes a jam of the Yardbirds' Train Kept A Rollin.
With the flipside nearing perfection, one can only regret that the opening side gets lost in a few funky directions (wtf about the reggae stuff), and had the choice of tracks been better advised, this album could've been a real class act
This is one of my favorite albums of all-time. Every note is bliss. Mr. Beck is a perfectionist, and I think he met his soulmate in that regard in Jan Hammer, as they recorded many songs together. Some of my leaning to this as the best of the lot is recording quality. This has to do with the massive amount of live songs they had to choose from, after more than 100 gigs together, together they chose these. I sure won't complain about the choices.
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Fantastic album i need to replace..scratched to f--k big thanks man!
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