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Joe Beck

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Joe Beck (July 29, 1945 – July 22, 2008)[1] was an American jazz guitarist who was active for over 40 years.

Biography

[edit]

Born in Philadelphia, Beck moved to Manhattan in his teens, playing six nights a week in a trio setting, which gave him an opportunity to meet various people working in the thriving New York music scene. By the time he was 18, Stan Getz hired him to record jingles, and in 1967 he recorded with Miles Davis.[2] By 1968, at age 22, he was a member of the Gil Evans Orchestra. Beck described his early success in an interview near the end of his life:

My career happened because I happened to be in the right place at the right time in a very unique time of jazz music. ...when I would finish a gig around two in the morning I would go around the corner to the Playboy Club and sit in with Monty Alexander and let Les Spann take a breather and I would finish the gig for him. Then we would go and listen to Kenny Burrell play around the corner or we would go up to Mintons and listen to Wes Montgomery and sit in with him ...[3]

Beck played in a variety of jazz styles, including jazz fusion, post bop, mainstream jazz, and soul jazz, but also respected rock stylists and cross-over players (he was good friends with Larry Coryell)[3] and briefly flirted with rock music styles himself in the late 1960s and early 1970s.

In 1970 Polydor released Rock Encounter, a fusion collaboration with flamenco guitarist Sabicas.[1] In 1975 he released an eponymous album (upon which he simply referred to himself as "Beck") while recording the Esther Phillips album, What a Diff'rence a Day Makes, both for Kudu.[1][4] Beck was subsequently reissued as Beck & Sanborn to cash in on the success of alto saxophonist David Sanborn. In 1971, Beck left music for three years to become a dairy farmer, citing frustration with his career.[5]

In 1978, he went for more of a rock sound by forming a band named "Leader". They performed in the Northeast and recorded demos at Sound Ideas Studios in New York City, but soon disbanded when the band's gear was stolen after a gig at Joyous Lake in Woodstock, New York. In the 1980s Beck recorded for DMP including with flautist Ali Ryerson. In 1988, Beck left music again for a return to farming, but was touring again by 1992.[6] Beck toured and recorded with duos and small groups, releasing two more solo albums (1988, 1991). In 2000, he collaborated with guitarist Jimmy Bruno on Polarity, which extensively featured Beck's alto guitar,[1] and in 2008 on Coincidence with John Abercrombie.[1]

Beck worked as a sideman or session guitarist with a wide variety of well-known jazz, rock, and fusion musicians, including Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington, Buddy Rich, Woody Herman, Miles Davis, Maynard Ferguson, Howard Roberts, Tommy Tedesco, Larry Coryell, John Abercrombie, Tom Scott, Jeremy Steig, and Gábor Szabó. In mid-life Beck spent less time playing and worked more as a composer of commercial jingles and as an arranger, writing arrangements for Frank Sinatra and Gloria Gaynor. Joe also arranged and produced many records including projects for Frank Sinatra, Gloria Gaynor, and two albums for Esther Phillips including her hit single, "What A Difference A Day Makes". Over the years, Joe was signed to contracts with Columbia, Polydor, Verve, Gryphon, CTI, and MGM Records.[7]

Joe Beck played guitar on James Brown's singles and albums in 1974.[8] The National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences honored Beck five times with its Most Valuable Player Award. Beck also recorded with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra in London, the Milan Philharmonic in Italy, and The Paris String Ensemble in France.[7]

Beck's first wife, Sigi, was a model and later married an internationally renowned economist, Dr. Zoran Hodjera.[9] At Beck's death, he was married to Marsi Beck and was survived by five children.[10]

Beck died in Woodbury, Connecticut, of complications from lung cancer.[1] His album Get Me Joe Beck was posthumously released in 2014.[11]

Alto guitar

[edit]

In 1992 Beck began touring as a duo with flutist Ali Ryerson. To fill out the sound he wanted to present—bass lines, harmony, and melody—in a duo setting, he developed what he called the "alto guitar". This began as a standard, full-body, electric jazz guitar with a unique stringing pattern and reentrant tuning. As described by Beck:

It's pretty straight-ahead, really. Take your whole guitar and tune it down a fifth to the key of A, and then tune the middle two strings up an octave. What I've done is take the normal tuning of the guitar and changed it so that I have bass strings for my thumb; sort of a banjo register for my first two fingers, and then a low melody register for my other two fingers. [...] So you don't have to change any of your fingerings; it's the same intervals as in normal tuning, just in the key of A, so it's A-D-G-C-E-A."[12] [13]

While devising the tuning Beck realized that some restringing was going to be needed to obtain optimal resonance from the strings, so he commissioned a custom-built instrument from luthier Rick McCurdy, of Cort Guitars:

I had someone build me a guitar, Rick McCurdy as it happens, and he made me a beautiful guitar and so I started using it on the concert stage.[3]

I'm actually playing through three channels. The reason the guitar is a patented invention is that this pickup is split so that the bass strings have their own output. And the top four melody strings are coming out of another output, which in turn is split stereo by a chorus. The bass strings are .080 and .060. Then a .022 wound and a .016 plain. Then a .026 wound and a .018 plain. [...] I wanted to be more pianistic, to play clusters sort of like those Bill Evans employs, that you couldn't possibly play otherwise."[12]

Beck owned and played both Martin (CF-2) and Cort Alto guitars, and both Martin and Cort standard-tuning versions as well.[14]

Signature guitars

[edit]

Joe Beck worked with guitar manufacturer Cort Guitars in the 1990s to create two hollow-body jazz guitar models. The first was the BECK-6 model, which was an electric, hollow-bodied archtop jazz guitar, and the second was the BECK-ALTO model, a similar instrument but designed for heavier strings and alto tuning. In 2001, the retail price of the BECK-6 model was $895, and the BECK-ALTO model was $1195. Two finishes were available on both guitars, a blonde "natural" finish, and a black-and-orange "vintage burst" finish.[15]

The main differences between the models were the accommodations made for thicker strings on the BECK-ALTO model, and only one electronic pickup on the BECK-ALTO versus two on the BECK-6. The single pickup on the ALTO had split bass/treble controls for the lower two strings versus the upper four, and consequently, three knobs on the front of the guitar, versus four knobs on the BECK-6.[16] Both Cort guitar models could be purchased directly from Joe Beck through his website and at guitar dealers.[17] The BECK-6 is much more common, versus the BECK-ALTO, of which an estimated 200 were made.[18]

BECK-6 Specifications[19]

    • Body sides: Laminate Maple
    • Body back: Laminate Maple
    • Body top: Laminate Spruce
    • Neck wood: Maple
    • Fretboard: Rosewood, 12 Inch Radius
    • Neck contour: C
    • Neck inlays: MOP Dot
    • Scale length: 24–3/4"
    • Nut width: 1–11/16"
    • Lower Bout: 16–1/4"
    • Body Depth: 3–11/16
    • Center block: None (hollow body)
    • Bound: Multi-Ply binding
    • Cutaway: Venetian
    • Headstock: Makers Logo and artists signature
    • Pickups: Mighty Mite covered vintage alnico humbuckers
    • Pickguard: Wood
    • Controls: 2 Volume, 2 Tone, and 3 Way Toggle (pickup selection)
    • Bridge: Wooden Floating Base and Tune-o-matic Saddles
    • Tailpiece: Trapeze (Hofner-like)
    • Accessories: Hardshell case

Discography

[edit]

As leader

[edit]
  • Nature Boy (Verve Forecast, 1969)
  • Beck (Kudu, 1975)
  • Watch the Time (Polydor, 1977)
  • Beck and Zoller (Progressive, 1979)
  • Relaxin ' (DMP, 1983)
  • Friends (DMP, 1984)
  • Back to Beck (DMP, 1988)
  • The Journey (DMP, 1991)
  • Live at Salishan with Red Mitchell (Capri, 1994)
  • Finger Painting (Wavetone, 1995)
  • Alto with Ali Ryerson (DMP, 1999)
  • Polarity with Jimmy Bruno (Concord Jazz, 2000)
  • Strangers in the Night (Venus, 2000)
  • Django with Ali Ryerson (DMP, 2001)
  • Just Friends (Whaling City Sound, 2002)
  • What Is My Heart For with Sarah Brooks (Whaling City Sound, 2002)
  • Brazilian Dreamin' (Venus, 2006)
  • Tri07 (Whaling City Sound, 2007)
  • Coincidence with John Abercrombie (Whaling City Sound, 2008)
  • Get Me Joe Beck (Whaling City Sound, 2014)

As sideman

[edit]

With Gene Ammons

With Gato Barbieri

  • Fenix (Flying Dutchman, 1971)
  • The Legend of Gato Barbieri (Flying Dutchman, 1973)
  • Caliente! (A&M, 1976)
  • Bahia (Fania, 1982)
  • Passion and Fire (A&M, 1984)

With James Brown

  • Hell (Polydor, 1974)
  • Reality (Polydor, 1974)
  • Funky President(single) (Polydor, 1974)

With Joe Farrell

With Jay Leonhart

  • There's Gonna Be Trouble (Sunnyside, 1984)
  • The Double Cross (Sunnyside, 1988)
  • Two Lane Highways (Kado, 1992)
  • Four Duke (LaserLight, 1995)
  • Galaxies and Planets (Sons of Sound, 2001)

With Mike Mainieri

  • Insight (Solid State, 1968)
  • Journey Thru an Electric Tube (Solid State, 1968)
  • White Elephant Vol. 1 (NYC, 1994)
  • White Elephant Vol. 2 (NYC, 1994)

With Jimmy Scott

  • Mood Indigo (Grooveland, 2000)
  • But Beautiful (Milestone, 2002)
  • Moon Glow (Milestone, 2003)

With Don Sebesky

  • Don Sebesky & the Jazz Rock Syndrome (Verve, 1968)
  • The Rape of El Morro (CTI, 1975)
  • Three Works for Jazz Soloists & Symphony Orchestra (Gryphon, 1979)

With others

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Joe Beck (July 29, 1945 – July 22, 2008) was an American jazz guitarist, composer, arranger, and producer known for his expressive and versatile contributions to jazz, fusion, and studio music over more than four decades.[1] Born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, he began playing guitar at age six and moved to New York City at 17 to pursue a professional career, initially working in jingle composition and session recordings.[2] Beck's style blended classical influences with jazz improvisation, earning him recognition for highly musical jazz-funk recordings and adaptability across genres.[3] Throughout his career, Beck collaborated with jazz legends including Miles Davis, Duke Ellington, and Gil Evans, notably participating in Davis's early electric sessions in 1967 that contributed tracks to albums like Circle in the Round (1979) and Directions (1981).[2][1] He also performed with artists such as Frank Sinatra and James Brown, composed for film and television, and arranged for orchestras including the Royal Philharmonic and Milan Philharmonic.[1] Beck received five NARAS Most Valuable Player awards for his session work and released notable solo albums such as Relaxin', Friends, The Journey, Fingerpainting, Alto, and Django.[1] After periods of retirement to dairy farming in the late 1960s and 1980s, he returned to music in the 1990s until his death from lung cancer complications at age 62.[2]

Early Life

Birth and Upbringing

Joe Beck was born on July 29, 1945, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, to Arnold and Eleanor (Chichester) Beck.[1][4] His mother, a classical singer and piano teacher, introduced a musical atmosphere to the household, though the family lacked a deep professional tradition in performance.[2] Beck spent his early childhood in a New Jersey suburb before the family relocated to the San Francisco Bay Area around age seven due to his father's job transfer.[2][4] The family later returned to New Jersey, where Beck attended high school in Glen Rock.[2] Growing up amid the post-World War II economic landscape, he encountered a variety of sounds through local radio broadcasts and occasional live music events in the 1950s, reflecting the era's blend of emerging genres.[2] His fascination with the guitar began at age six, ignited by hearing the Spanish classical guitarist Andrés Segovia perform on the radio, which prompted him to experiment with a banjo found in the attic and request lessons.[2] That Christmas, he received a $9.95 Sears Roebuck guitar, marking the start of his self-directed exploration of the instrument before any structured education.[2] This formative period in varied American locales shaped his initial musical curiosity, setting the stage for subsequent formal training.

Initial Musical Training

Joe Beck began his musical journey around the age of six, when he discovered a banjo in his family's attic and taught himself to play basic chords by ear.[2] Inspired by a radio performance of Andrés Segovia shortly thereafter, he received his first guitar as a Christmas gift and took six formal lessons from a local teacher, which focused on basic techniques like note identification on the fretboard but did not cover chord progressions or jazz-specific elements.[5] Although largely self-taught thereafter, Beck continued his learning primarily through listening to jazz records.[2] Beck's dedication led to professional-level proficiency by his early teens, when he started performing in local jazz and R&B bands around New Jersey after the family's return from California.[2] These early gigs honed his abilities and solidified the influences of classical and jazz guitarists on his harmonic and melodic approach to the instrument.[2]

Professional Career

Session Work in New York

In the early 1960s, at the age of 17, Joe Beck relocated from Philadelphia to New York City to pursue opportunities as a session musician.[6] He quickly immersed himself in the vibrant Manhattan music scene, securing a steady gig with a jazz trio that performed six nights a week, which provided both financial stability and connections to established artists.[7] This early exposure allowed him to transition rapidly into studio work, where his technical proficiency and quick learning curve earned him a foothold among the city's top session players.[8] Beck's session career in New York flourished throughout the decade, as he contributed to hundreds of recordings across diverse genres, including jazz, pop, and R&B.[9] Notable examples include his guitar parts on tracks with Miles Davis in 1967, James Brown's R&B sessions, and Paul Simon's pop albums, showcasing his ability to blend harmonic sophistication with rhythmic drive.[6] His reputation for adaptability and precision made him a go-to guitarist for producers seeking reliable performances under tight deadlines, often incorporating innovative effects like fuzz tone and wah-wah to suit varying stylistic demands.[7] Beck's contributions were formally recognized when he won the first of five National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences (NARAS) Most Valuable Player Awards in the 1960s, honoring his pivotal role in New York's studio ecosystem.[10] These accolades underscored his status as one of the era's most sought-after session guitarists, capable of elevating recordings with his distinctive, economical style.[8]

Key Collaborations

In late 1967, Beck participated in sessions with Miles Davis, providing electric guitar on tracks later released on the compilation album Circle in the Round (1979), such as "Circle in the Round" and "Water on the Pond". These sessions introduced electric guitar to Davis's sound during a transitional period in jazz, helping bridge the quintet's post-bop roots with emerging fusion elements, alongside Herbie Hancock's Fender Rhodes.[11] These sessions, later compiled in the box set The Complete Studio Recordings of the Miles Davis Quintet 1965–1968, showcased Beck's innovative phrasing and tone, influencing Davis's shift toward jazz-rock and elevating Beck's profile as a versatile session player at age 22.[11] Beck's tenure with the Gil Evans Orchestra from 1967 to 1971 solidified his reputation in big band and orchestral jazz, where he toured extensively and recorded landmark arrangements blending improvisation with sophisticated orchestration. Joining at a young age, he contributed electric guitar to Evans's 1970 album Gil Evans, featuring tracks like "Lester Leaps In" that highlighted his fusion sensibilities within Evans's expansive soundscapes.[12] He also appeared on Blues in Orbit (1970), adding rhythmic drive to pieces such as George Russell's title track, and material later released on Where Flamingos Fly (1981), drawn from 1971 sessions.[13] These partnerships exposed Beck to Evans's innovative reharmonizations of standards and originals, shaping his approach to texture and ensemble interplay while touring Europe and the U.S., and fostering connections in the avant-garde jazz scene. In the 1970s, Beck ventured into funk and soul through sessions with James Brown, infusing electric guitar riffs into the Godfather of Soul's evolving sound during a prolific period. On Brown's 1974 album Hell, Beck played on tracks like "Papa Don't Take No Mess," delivering sharp, percussive lines that complemented the JB's horn-driven grooves amid Brown's shift toward harder funk.[14] He also contributed to Reality that same year, including the single "Funky President (People It's Bad)," where his guitar work added a rock-inflected edge to Brown's rhythmic intensity.[15] These collaborations highlighted Beck's adaptability across genres, bridging jazz improvisation with R&B's raw energy and contributing to Brown's commercial resurgence. Beck's work with vocalist Esther Phillips in the mid-1970s exemplified his production and arrangement skills, blending jazz, soul, and pop on CTI Records. Earlier, on What a Diff'rence a Day Makes (1975), Beck's lead guitar and arrangements propelled the hit single of the same name to chart success and earned a Grammy nomination for Best R&B Vocal Performance, Female, revitalizing Phillips's career with a sophisticated yet accessible sound.[16] He arranged and produced Phillips's 1976 album For All We Know, featuring his guitar on standards like the title track, showcasing his string orchestration enhancing Phillips's emotive delivery.[17] These projects demonstrated Beck's ear for vocal-guitar synergy, influencing his later arranging roles. Throughout the decade, Beck collaborated closely with alto saxophonist David Sanborn, merging jazz-funk grooves with rock edges on sessions that boosted both artists' visibility. Their joint album Beck & Sanborn (1979, reissued from 1975 recordings) featured Sanborn's searing solos alongside Beck's crisp guitar on tracks like "Jungle Nose," arranged by Don Sebesky for a polished CTI aesthetic.[18] This partnership, rooted in New York studio circles, amplified Beck's fusion credentials and Sanborn's breakthrough into mainstream jazz. Beck also arranged and produced for pop icons, extending his influence beyond jazz. For Frank Sinatra, he crafted the disco-infused arrangement of "Night and Day" in 1977, updating the standard with contemporary beats while preserving Sinatra's phrasing, released as a single in 1977.[19] Similarly, on Gloria Gaynor's 1977 album Glorious, Beck co-wrote and arranged "Sweet Sweet Melody," blending disco rhythms with his guitar-driven hooks to support Gaynor's powerhouse vocals during her post-disco pivot.[20] These high-profile endeavors underscored Beck's versatility, allowing him to shape pop arrangements informed by his jazz background and sustain his career across diverse musical landscapes.

Solo Album Releases

Joe Beck's debut album as a leader, Nature Boy, was released in 1969 by Verve Records and featured reimagined jazz standards infused with psychedelic rock and modern improvisational elements, showcasing his early versatility on guitar alongside contributions from musicians like Randy Brecker.[21][22] Beck achieved a commercial breakthrough with his self-titled album Beck in 1975 on the Kudu/CTI label, a jazz-funk fusion effort produced by Creed Taylor that highlighted his electric guitar work in groovy, soul-inflected tracks like "Texas Ann," featuring alto saxophonist David Sanborn and arrangements by Don Sebesky; the record captured the era's crossover appeal in jazz, blending post-bop structures with funk rhythms.[23][24] This stylistic shift toward jazz-funk continued in his follow-up releases during the late 1970s, including Watch the Time (1977, Polydor), which maintained the energetic fusion sound with prominent guitar leads and rhythmic drive.[25] In the 1980s, Beck explored more intimate, acoustic-oriented jazz on DMP Records, exemplified by Friends (1985), a collaborative effort emphasizing melodic interplay with guests like Michael Brecker and Steve Gadd, marking his transition to chamber-like jazz settings.[26] His artistic evolution deepened in the 1990s with Relaxin' (1991, DMP), a standards-focused album that returned to relaxed, straight-ahead jazz interpretations, prioritizing lyrical guitar phrasing over fusion intensity.[27][28] Beck's later career highlighted innovations like his custom alto guitar, prominently featured on Alto (1997, DMP), a duo recording with flutist Ali Ryerson that blended bossa nova, ballads, and contemporary jazz to demonstrate the instrument's unique tonal range.[29][30] This period of experimentation extended to Polarity (2000, Concord Jazz), a duo album with guitarist Jimmy Bruno that contrasted bebop runs with lush chordal accompaniment, underscoring Beck's role in advancing two-guitar jazz dynamics.[31][32] Beck's final studio album, Coincidence (2008, Whaling City Sound), was a duo project with John Abercrombie that revisited standards and blues in swinging, improvisational dialogues, reflecting his mature, economical style shortly before his death from lung cancer on July 22, 2008.[33][34][35] A posthumous release, Get Me Joe Beck (2014, Whaling City Sound), compiled earlier trio recordings with bassists Peter Barshay and David Rokeach, preserving his post-bop vitality and serving as a testament to his enduring influence in jazz guitar.[36][37]

Musical Innovations

Development of the Alto Guitar

In 1992, Joe Beck developed the alto guitar specifically to enable duo performances with flutist Ali Ryerson, allowing the instrument to provide bass, harmony, and melody lines without requiring additional musicians.[7] The design revived an alternate tuning Beck had explored earlier but adapted it for this context, featuring reentrant tuning where the third and fourth strings (G and C) are pitched an octave higher than in a standard baritone setup, resulting in fuller, more pianistic chord voicings reminiscent of Bill Evans' clusters. The patented aspects of the alto guitar centered on its innovative split pickup system, which provided independent control over the bass strings (the lowest two, gauged at .080 and .060 for a deeper low end) and the upper four melody strings (.022 wound, .016 plain, .026 wound, and .018 plain for a brighter timbre), enabling separate outputs that could be processed differently—such as routing the bass through an amp and the melody via chorus effects. The overall tuning—A1, D2, G3, C4, E3, A3—created a reentrant profile with the high G (G3) positioned above the low bass notes but below the nominal low E equivalent in standard tuning, enhancing harmonic density while maintaining playability with familiar chord shapes shifted down a fifth. Beck debuted the alto guitar on the 1997 album Alto, a collaboration with Ryerson that showcased its capabilities in intimate settings, blending flute and guitar to evoke chamber music textures.[30] In live performances, the instrument expanded harmonic possibilities during their worldwide tours over the subsequent eight years, simulating a trio's sonic breadth through its dual-register design and allowing Beck to comp richly while soloing fluidly.[7] Commercial production models, such as those from Cort and later Martin, built on this foundation but focused on broader market adaptations.

Signature Guitar Models

In the late 1990s, Joe Beck partnered with Cort Guitars to create two signature hollow-body electric archtop models tailored for jazz applications: the BECK-6 and the BECK-ALTO.[38][39] The BECK-6 serves as a standard six-string instrument with a single-cutaway body, spruce top, maple back and sides, maple neck, and Mightymite alnico humbucking pickups that produce a warm jazz-funk tone suitable for ensemble playing.[38][40] It includes one volume and one tone control, along with uniquely shaped f-holes for enhanced acoustic projection, and was produced from 1999 to 2005 in natural or vintage sunburst finishes.[38][41] The BECK-ALTO builds on Beck's earlier alto guitar concept, offering a compact semi-hollow body with spruce top and flamed maple back and sides, a maple neck with rosewood fingerboard, and a custom split-coil pickup system featuring dual outputs for independent bass and treble signals.[39] This configuration supports specialized string gauges tuned from A to A, enabling chordal and bass-line separation, and the model was manufactured from 1999 to 2002 in natural glossy or vintage sunburst options.[39][42] Both models prioritize playability through ergonomic design and quality construction at an entry-level price for professional jazz musicians, and Beck incorporated them into his live performances and instructional work beginning in the late 1990s.[43][44]

Later Years

Career Breaks and Teaching

In the early 1970s, Joe Beck took a three-year hiatus from his demanding session work in New York, operating a dairy farm in Greenwich, New York, to regain balance amid the city's intense music scene, which he described as overwhelmed by drugs and personal burnout.[4][2] Upon returning in 1971, he shifted toward jazz fusion, collaborating on recordings with artists like David Sanborn and embracing more experimental styles.[2] Beck's second career break occurred from 1989 to 1992, when he purchased and managed a large dairy farm in upstate New York following his marriage, seeking a family-oriented life away from the waning studio opportunities; the venture ultimately depleted his savings due to the challenges of dairy operations.[7][2] He reemerged in 1992 with a renewed commitment to live performance and innovation, notably reviving and refining his alto guitar concept for broader jazz applications.[7] In his later career, Beck dedicated time to education, teaching guitar at Naugatuck Valley Community College in Waterbury, Connecticut, for four years in the 2000s until his death, where he led classes in jazz history, guitar ensembles, and private lessons focused on improvisation, fusion techniques, and music reading.[35][45] He balanced these instructional roles with international touring, mentoring emerging guitarists through hands-on guidance in harmonic complexity and rhythmic innovation central to his fusion approach.[7][2]

Death and Legacy

In 2007, Joe Beck was diagnosed with lung cancer, yet he persisted in his musical endeavors despite the advancing illness.[4] He undertook a European tour with guitarist John Abercrombie in December 2007, marking one of his final major performances, and continued studio work as his health permitted.[1] In early 2008, he released Coincidence, a duet album with Abercrombie on Whaling City Sound, showcasing intimate post-bop and contemporary jazz explorations that highlighted his enduring technical finesse and harmonic depth.[46] Beck died on July 22, 2008, at a hospice in Danbury, Connecticut, from complications of lung cancer, at the age of 62.[35] He was survived by his wife, Marsi Beck, and their five children.[4] Beck's legacy endures as a pioneer of jazz fusion guitar, blending intricate harmonies with rhythmic innovation in a career spanning over four decades.[47] His development of the alto guitar influenced subsequent instrumentalists seeking expanded tonal ranges in jazz ensembles, while his session work and compositions shaped modern jazz-funk guitar approaches through collaborations with icons like Miles Davis and Gil Evans.[48] Posthumously, his live album Get Me was released in 2014 by Whaling City Sound, featuring a 2007 trio performance that underscores his improvisational mastery.[49] The National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences (NARAS) recognized his contributions with five Most Valuable Player Awards from its New York chapter between 1984 and 1989.[4]

Discography

As Leader

Joe Beck's debut album as a leader, Nature Boy (1969, Verve Forecast), showcased his early versatility blending jazz with psychedelic rock influences, featuring funky guitar-driven tracks like the title song and "Sausalito," highlighting his improvisational flair amid a rock-oriented ensemble.[22][21] The recording marked Beck's transition from session work to leading projects, emphasizing rhythmic grooves over traditional jazz structures.[50] In 1975, Beck released Beck (Kudu), a jazz-fusion effort co-led with David Sanborn on alto saxophone, supported by Don Grolnick on piano and electric piano, Will Lee on bass, and Chris Parker on drums, producing tracks such as "Star Fire" and "Cactus" that fused electric guitar lines with soulful horn interplay.[24][23] The album received praise for its accessible yet innovative sound, bridging jazz and R&B elements.[51] Beck's leadership output waned in the 1980s amid session commitments, but he returned in the 1980s with Relaxin' (1983, DMP), an intimate collection of jazz standards performed in duo and trio formats with bassist Jay Leonhart and drummer Grady Tate, including renditions of "Isn't She Lovely" and "Lover Man" that prioritized melodic warmth and subtle interplay over flash.[27][52] This shift reflected Beck's maturation toward acoustic-leaning interpretations of the Great American Songbook.[53] He continued with Friends (1984, DMP), featuring collaborations with Michael Brecker and others on a mix of standards and originals. Back to Beck (1988, DMP) revisited his fusion roots with electric guitar work. The Journey (1991, DMP) was a live album capturing his trio in performance. Fingerpainting (1995, DMP) showcased Beck's compositional skills with ensemble arrangements blending jazz and fusion elements. Alto (1997, DMP), co-led with flutist Ali Ryerson, highlighted Beck's invention of the alto guitar—a six-string instrument tuned an octave higher—paired with Ryerson's alto flute and supported by bassist Steve Davis and drummer Eliot Zigmund on tracks like "'Round Midnight" and "Joy Spring," creating a light, bossa-infused contemporary jazz texture.[29] The album was noted for its innovative timbres and elegant standards repertoire.[54] Beck's collaboration with guitarist Jimmy Bruno on Polarity (2000, Concord Jazz) featured duo performances on standards and originals like the title track, with Bruno handling bebop leads and Beck providing lush alto guitar comping, emphasizing harmonic depth and technical precision in a straight-ahead jazz vein.[32][55] Critics lauded its unique two-guitar dialogue and fidelity to jazz tradition.[56] Django (2002, Chesky), co-led with Chris Flory, paid tribute to Django Reinhardt with gypsy jazz influences. In one of his final studio efforts, Coincidence (2008, Whaling City Sound), Beck paired with John Abercrombie for a duo album of jazz standards and blues such as "Beautiful Love" and "Israel," delivering swinging, introspective extrapolations that underscored their mutual command of harmony and space.[34] The recording exemplified Beck's late-career focus on minimalist, evocative guitar interplay.[46] Posthumously released Get Me Joe Beck (2014, Whaling City Sound), a live trio date from 2006 with bassist Peter Barshay and drummer David Rokeach captured at Anna's Jazz Island in Berkeley, featured energetic takes on standards like "Stella by Starlight" and originals, showcasing Beck's rhythmic mastery and improvisational vitality shortly before his death.[36] The album stands as a testament to his enduring influence, blending fusion roots with mature jazz expression.[9]

As Sideman

Joe Beck's work as a sideman spanned jazz, funk, R&B, and pop, contributing guitar and arrangements to recordings by numerous prominent artists over five decades. His early involvement in the New York session scene led to collaborations with jazz legends, transitioning into broader commercial and fusion projects in the 1970s and beyond. With hundreds of session credits across genres, Beck's versatile playing supported innovative arrangements and landmark albums.[10] In the late 1960s, Beck joined the Gil Evans Orchestra as a guitarist from 1967 to 1971, appearing on key recordings that showcased Evans's expansive orchestral jazz. Notable contributions include the self-titled album Gil Evans (1970), featuring experimental big-band arrangements, and sessions that yielded material for the later release Where Flamingos Fly (1981). These appearances highlighted Beck's integration into Evans's ensemble during a period of creative evolution.[47][28] Beck's brief but historic association with Miles Davis occurred in December 1967, when he became the first electric guitarist to record with the trumpeter on experimental sessions. His parts appear on tracks like "Water on the Pond" and "Circle in the Round," included on the posthumous album Circle in the Round (1979), bridging Davis's acoustic era to his electric fusions.[57][58] During the 1960s, Beck toured with Louis Armstrong's group, providing guitar support on live performances that captured the trumpeter's swing and pop appeal, though specific studio recordings from these engagements remain undocumented in available discographies. Similarly, he performed with Duke Ellington's orchestra, contributing to live settings, and later arranged and played on tribute projects like Secret Ellington: Songs from Saturday Laughter (2000), which premiered 12 unrecorded Ellington compositions, and Play the Music of Duke Ellington (2003) alongside Gary Burton, interpreting classics such as "In a Mellow Tone."[7][59][60] Beck's early session work included jingle recordings with Stan Getz around 1963, when he was 18, and opening performances for the saxophonist's band in 1966, fostering connections in the bossa nova and cool jazz circles. In the 1970s, he collaborated closely with David Sanborn on the album Beck (1975, Kudu), where his guitar intertwined with Sanborn's alto saxophone on fusion tracks like "Beck & Sanborn," blending jazz and R&B elements.[57][24] Beck's R&B and soul contributions peaked in the mid-1970s with Esther Phillips, for whom he provided guitar and orchestral arrangements on What a Diff'rence a Day Makes (1975, Kudu), including the hit title track, and For All We Know (1976, Kudu), emphasizing her emotive vocals with funky, jazz-inflected backings. That same year, he played guitar on James Brown's Reality (1974, Polydor) and select tracks from the double album Hell (1974, Polydor), adding electric textures to Brown's raw funk sound during a transitional phase.[61][15][62] Extending into pop, Beck arranged disco-infused versions of standards for Frank Sinatra in 1977, including "Everybody Ought to Be in Love" (Irving Berlin) and "Night and Day" (Cole Porter), released as singles and later compiled on Reprise Rarities Volume 3 (2021), adapting Sinatra's repertoire to contemporary beats.[63]

References

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