Jeff Beck

JEFF BECK (JEFF BECK GROUP)
 
 REDIRECT:  Jeff Beck Group 

A side man can be a wonderful thing for a musician.  For rock bands without keyboard players (and that was true of many in the 1960's), Nicky Hopkins was the go-to guy if you wanted a pianist:  He played with everybody from Jefferson Airplane to Jeff Beck Group to Steve Miller Band, and with simply every big British Invasion group:  the Beatles, the Kinks, the Who, and especially the Rolling Stones.  His name appears on dozens of albums from the late 1960's into the 1980's.  Hopkins released a couple of solo albums that I have never gotten around to buying, but I sure remember one of the first songs that I heard on college radio at North Carolina State University.  It was "Edward the Mad Shirt Grinder"; Hopkins was officially a member of Quicksilver Messenger Service at that time, and the song was the final track on their album, Shady Grove (1969).  Hopkins wrote it, and it was all his piano work along with a backing band. 

I am not the only one who feels this way about Andy Colquhoun; as Ken Shimamoto expressed in an online review of his solo CD, Pick up the Phone, America! (I sure wish I knew enough about music to write like this):  "Nobody on Earth plays guitar like Andy Colquhoun.  Well, maybe Wayne Kramer [of Detroit's MC5 and another running mate of Mick Farren's for several decades now] and Tony Fate (ex-Bellrays, current Streetwalkin' Cheetahs) are in the same league, but Andy's brand of over-the-top rock skronk and acid-blues is totally unique.  As guitarists go, he's got a deep trick bag: a huge sound, saturated with fuzz and Echoplex; a monstrous whammy bar attack that skews his snaky, vibrato-laden blues lines and monolithic octaves; ringing harmonics; a deft touch accompanied by a fine melodic sensibility . . . almost a bent-head Jeff Beck (always a name to conjure with in the gtr circles I run in)."
 
(August 2011)
 
Last edited: March 22, 2021