Jeff Beck with the Jan Hammer Group Liveseldom appears on lists of the greatest live albums of all time. Amid an age where it seems every hidden or overlooked gem has already been rediscovered, this 1977 set remains a well-kept secret a record filled with virtuoso performances, tremendous chemistry, high-wire improvisations, and explosive jazz-rock combinations. No wonder many listeners who came upon the effort in the late 70s admit to wearing out multiple copies and standing in awe of its powers. Wait ’til they hear this version.
Sourced from the original master tapes, housed in a Stoughton jacket, and strictly limited to 3,000 numbered copies, Mobile Fidelitys 180g LP ofJeff Beck with the Jan Hammer Group Livepresents this collaborative tour de force in audiophile quality for the first time. Clear, detailed, and dynamic, the collectible reissue places each of the five fabled instrumentalists Beck, Hammer, drummer Tony Thunder Smith, bassist Fernando Saunders, violinist Steve Kindler in the positions that mirror where they played onstage during the 1976-77 tour.
Benefitting from the resultant three-dimensional soundstaging and black backgrounds, youll not only hear but nearly see Beck center right; Hammer center left; Kindler right; and Smith and Saunders anchoring the middle. The quiet vinyl surfaces further contribute to the sonic realism, immediacy, and energy. Paramount to Beck and Hammer, tonalities are natural and balanced. MoFis edition also restores and increases the emotionalism at hand. Concentrate on any passage, and youll sense the camaraderie, spirit, and joyfulness shared by the quintet and communicated to the crowds. These guys love playing together, and it shows.
Its one reason why Beck and company took great pains to ensureJeff Beck with the Jan Hammer Group Livewasnt just another souvenir live recording. Along with producer/A&R icon Tom Werman, Beck auditioned tunes from multiple dates at Allen Toussaints New Orleans studio. They selected what they believed met their elevated expectations of standout musicality and fidelity. A majority of the album stems from a particularly exceptional concert in Reading, Pennsylvania. Hammer then got involved with the project by mixing the record.
Dovetailing with the peak of jazz fusion,Jeff Beck with the Jan Hammer Group Livebrings full circle a fruitful period that began with Becks acclaimed fourth studio LP,Wired, and continued with the extensive tour that inspired this album. The period witnessed Beck fly by the seat of his pants without a full-time band. Instead, he relied on solicitations from the days foremost musicians and risk-takers, creatives who were unafraid to challenge the status quo and come up with memorable fare on the spot.
That flair distinguishes the material here, all of which teems with scorching interplay, breakneck riffs, acrobatic rhythms, and one-of-a-kind synergy. Take the arresting introduction to Freeway Jam, where Becks guitar and Hammers synthesizers converse and recreate a cacophony of honking horns before segueing with the contributions of their mates to conjure an unforgettable highway ride. Consider the interstellar futurism of Darkness/Earth in Search of the Sun, radical reggae-laden revision of the Beatles Shes a Woman, feisty zip of Scatterbrain, and full-tilt sail of Blue Wind. All remarkable.
Beck and Hammer, Hammer and Beck each pushes the other, and each responds in kind. Let’s not forget the team of Saunders and Smith, which would go on to provide an unshakeable rhythm section for Lou Reed. If youre a music lover who values musical wizardry and originality, not to mention sensational sonics, youre not going to want to take this off your table.