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Jeff Beck Tickets

As a popular and influential guitarist with The Yardbirds and as a solo performer, Jeff Beck really knows how to wow a crowd! Don’t miss your chance to rock out with Jeff Beck LIVE! Buy your Jeff Beck tickets now!
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[2 of 2 customers found this review helpful]

Unbelievable Expierence
By jeff from Camarillo, Calif. on 9/29/2006
Pros:
Crowd Was In To It, Engaging Stage Presence, Great Encores, Great Lighting, Great Sound, Perfect Set List
Best For:
Everyone

I waited 30 years to see Jeff Beck. It was better than I could have imagined. What a way to spend the evening

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[2 of 3 customers found this review helpful]

Rip the Joint
By Utrechtken from Oakland, Ca. on 9/26/2006
Pros:
Crowd Was In To It
Cons:
None
Best For:
Everyone

What a great time. A must. Have been a fan since the 60's. This was my first show. My wife and I left saying we couldn't believe that this was the first time we saw him live. Great Gereat Great.

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[2 of 2 customers found this review helpful]

Great Show - Great Seats
By MIsterbronx from Denver on 9/26/2006
Pros:
I was laughing smiling, Perfect Set List
Cons:
What was female singer na
Best For:
Everyone

Great musician. Great music. I fell in love with his female singer. Her "A Change is Gonna Come," brought tears to my eyes. "A Day in the Life" was a treat. Solo "Somewhere Over the RAinbow" was great ending for the show.

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[1 of 1 customers found this review helpful]

j
By rocker. from clo spgs co on 9/24/2006
Pros:
Crowd Was In To It, Engaging Stage Presence, Great Encores, Great Lighting, Great Sound, Perfect Set List
Cons:
Too Short
Best For:
Die-Hards Only

jeff was the lawmmomer and we were the grass, he mowed us down.he did all the hits includibg cas we've ended as lovers-all he had to do. his encore of somewhere over the rainbow made us cry

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Jeff Beck Info

Get the "Blow by Blow" when you pick up your Jeff Beck tickets today! 

Ranked by “Rolling Stone Magazine” as 14th in their “100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time," Jeff Beck is a performer that you cannot afford to miss! “Rolling Stone Magazine” has described Jeff Beck as “one of the most influential lead guitarists in rock.” Jeff Beck live is a must see.

Jeff Beck joins Eric Clapton and Jimmy Page as being one of three noted guitarists to play with the famed 1960s band The Yardbirds. See the legend in action; get your Jeff Beck concert tickets now!

With a focus that is mostly instrumental, Beck’s innovative sound has spanned a multitude of musical genres including jazz fusion, rock, blues, heavy metal and electronica. Beck has appeared on albums by Roger Waters, Stevie Wonder, Les Paul, Zucchero, Brian May, Cyndi Lauper and ZZ Top.

In Beck’s earlier days he formed bands, like the Jeff Beck Group, with music greats such as Rod Stewart, Ronnie Woods of the Rolling Stones, Syd Barrett of Pink Floyd and countless others. His astounding playing has earned him the accolades of being inducted into the “Rock and Roll Hall of Fame” in 2009 and being a five-time recipient of the Grammy Award for “Best Rock Instrumental Performance.” An incredible talent, Jeff Beck has written his own ticket into the annals of rock and roll.

Being a true talent, Jeff Beck doesn’t rely upon electronic effects to produce his legendary riffs. Back in the 1980s Beck stopped using a pick, choosing instead to use his fingers and the vibrato bar to produce a plethora of mesmerizing sounds. Jeff Beck’s music is a living thing, constantly changing, growing and changing direction.

If your musical palate rolls along the likes of King Crimson, Pat Methney and Eric Clapton, your love of Jeff Beck’s music is certain. Concertgoers review Jeff Beck’s concerts as memorable, a great time and better than imagined.

If you want a great concert experience don’t let the opportunity to see Jeff Beck live pass you by. Get your Jeff Beck tickets pronto!


Jeff Beck Biography

While he was as innovative as Jimmy Page, as tasteful as Eric Clapton, and nearly as visionary as Jimi Hendrix, Jeff Beck never achieved the same commercial success as any of those contemporaries, primarily because of the haphazard way he approached his career. After Rod Stewart left the Jeff Beck Group in 1971, Beck never worked with a charismatic lead singer who could have helped sell his music to a wide audience. Furthermore, he was simply too idiosyncratic, moving from heavy metal to jazz fusion within a blink of an eye. As his career progressed, he became more fascinated by automobiles than guitars, releasing only one album during the course of the '90s. All the while, Beck retained the respect of fellow guitarists, who found his reclusiveness all the more alluring.

Beck began his musical career following a short stint at London's Wimbledon Art College. He earned a reputation by supporting Lord Sutch, which helped him land the job as the Yardbirds' lead guitarist following the departure of Eric Clapton. Beck stayed with the Yardbirds for nearly two years, leaving in late 1966 with the pretense that he was retiring from music. He returned several months later with Love Is Blue, a single he played poorly because he detested the song. Later in 1967, he formed the Jeff Beck Group with vocalist Rod Stewart, bassist Ron Wood, and drummer Aynsley Dunbar, who was quickly replaced by Mickey Waller keyboardist Nicky Hopkins joined in early 1968. With their crushingly loud reworkings of blues songs and vocal and guitar interplay, the Jeff Beck Group established the template for heavy metal. Neither of the band's records, Truth (1968) or Beck-Ola (a 1969 album that was recorded with new drummer Tony Newman), was particularly successful, and the bandmembers tended to fight regularly, especially on their frequent tours of the U.S. In 1970, Stewart and Wood left to join the Faces, and Beck broke up the group.

Beck had intended to form a power trio with Vanilla Fudge members Carmine Appice (drums) and Tim Bogert (bass), but those plans were derailed when he suffered a serious car crash in 1970. By the time he recuperated in 1971, Bogart and Appice were playing in Cactus, so the guitarist formed a new version of the Jeff Beck Group. Featuring keyboardist Max Middleton, drummer Cozy Powell, bassist Clive Chaman, and vocalist Bobby Tench, the new band recorded Rough and Ready (1971) and Jeff Beck Group (1972). Neither album attracted much attention. Cactus dissolved in late 1972, and Beck, Bogert, and Appice formed a power trio the following year. The group's lone studio album -- a live record was released in Japan but never in the U.K. or U.S. -- was widely panned due to its plodding arrangements and weak vocals, and the group disbanded the following year.

For about 18 months, Beck remained quiet, re-emerging in 1975 with Blow by Blow. Produced by George Martin, Blow by Blow was an all-instrumental jazz fusion album that received strong reviews. Beck collaborated with Jan Hammer, a former keyboardist for Mahavishnu Orchestra, for 1976's Wired, and supported the album with a co-headlining tour with Hammer's band. The tour was documented on the 1977 album Jeff Beck with the Jan Hammer Group -- Live.

After the Hammer tour, Beck retired to his estate outside of London and remained quiet for three years. He returned in 1980 with There and Back, which featured contributions from Hammer. Following the tour for There and Back, Beck retired again, returning five years later with the slick, Nile Rodgers-produced Flash. A pop/rock album recorded with a variety of vocalists, Flash featured Beck's only hit single, the Stewart-sung People Get Ready, and also boasted Escape, which won the Grammy for Best Rock Instrumental. During 1987, he played lead guitar on Mick Jagger's second solo album, Primitive Cool. There was another long wait between Flash and 1989's Jeff Beck's Guitar Shop with Terry Bozzio and Tony Hymas. Though the album sold only moderately well, Guitar Shop received uniformly strong reviews and won the Grammy for Best Rock Instrumental. Beck supported the album with a tour, this time co-headlining with guitarist Stevie Ray Vaughan. Again, Beck entered semi-retirement upon the completion of the tour.

In 1992, Beck played lead guitar on Roger Waters' comeback album, Amused to Death. A year later, he released Crazy Legs, a tribute to Gene Vincent and his lead guitarist, Cliff Gallup, which was recorded with Big Town Playboys. Beck remained quiet after the album's release prior to resurfacing in 1999 with Who Else You Had It Coming followed in 2001 and his 14th release, Jeff, was issued on Epic two years later. An excellent live set, Performing This Week: Live at Ronnie Scott's Jazz Club, was released in 2008 by Eagle Records. Emotion & Commotion, Beck's first new studio album in seven years, appeared in the spring of 2010. It was greeted by considerable acclaim, including winning two Grammy Awards in 2011 for Best Pop Instrumental Performance and Best Rock Instrumental Performance. Appropriately, Beck released a live album called Live and Exclusive from the Grammy Museum in the fall of 2010, followed by Rock & Roll Party (Honoring Les Paul), a salute to Beck's hero featuring vocals by Imelda May. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Rovi