Wired

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ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 8   Total Length: 37:10

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The Best?

Carolinahome

May be the best Jeff Beck album. Tight rifts, great Jan Hammer on keys, will listen to this until i die

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Far and Away the Best Beck!

Nyabinghi

Well, Truth is great and Blow By Blow excellent but I still think this is his high point. The exchanges between him and Jan are incredible. Get a LP and a good system and Crank up his version of Pork Pie Hat. This record is Air Guitar Heaven!

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Tightest Beck ever

takku

This was my first Jeff Beck record and it blew me away. I have since tracked his career backward and forward from this point, and only Blow by Blow matches or exceeds this work. You almost can't believe this is the same guy as on some of his 60's records. This is harder rocking than Blow By Blow, and occassionally Jan Hammer manages to steal the show altogether. In my ears, Jeff's mid-70's fusion era has very heavy John McLaughlin influences, in a good way.

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Jaw Dropping

zoot_the_muppet

My first experience with Jeff's music was in 1979 with this album and I've been hooked ever since. How he is able to make his guitar talk, sing, cry, and growl is nothing short of pure godliness. You really can't go wrong with anything Jeff ever produces and Wired is especially high on my list.

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Great to Find it Here

EMUSIC-00CEA1F6

Beck is all too often overlooked. This album is a perfect example. The songs are solid. His guitar work on another plane and overall, simply an amazing work. You won't find much like this these days.

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An old fave...

mjergens

I missed my album version of this. Jazz, rock, blues, funk...it's all here in a nice package.

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They Say All Media Guide

Released in 1976, Jeff Beck’s Wired contains some of the best jazz-rock fusion of the period. Wired is generally more muscular, albeit less-unique than its predecessor, Blow by Blow. Joining keyboardist Max Middleton, drummer Richard Bailey, and producer George Martin from the Blow by Blow sessions are drummer Narada Michael Walden, bassist Wilbur Bascomb, and keyboardist Jan Hammer. Beck contributed no original material to Wired, instead relying on the considerable talents of his supporting cast. Perhaps this explains why Wired is not as cohesive as Blow by Blow, seemingly more assembled from component parts. Walden’s powerful drumming propels much of Wired, particularly Middleton’s explosive opener, “Led Boots,” where Beck erupts into a stunning solo of volcanic intensity. Walden also contributes four compositions, including the funk-infused “Come Dancing,” which adds an unnamed horn section. While Walden’s “Sophie” is overly long and marred by Hammer’s arena rock clichés, his “Play With Me” is spirited and Hammer’s soloing more melodic. Acoustic guitar and piano predominate the closing ballad, “Love Is Green”; Beck’s electric solo gracefully massages the quiet timbres. Wired is well balanced by looser, riff-oriented material and Walden’s more intricate compositions. Walden and Hammer give Wired a ’70s-era jazz-rock flavor that is indicative of their work with the Mahavishnu Orchestra. Bascomb’s throw-down, “Head for Backstage Pass,” finds Bailey skillfully navigating the mixed meters while Beck counters with a dazzling, gritty solo. Hammer’s “Blue Wind” features an infectious riff over which Beck and Hammer trade heated salvos. As good as “Blue Wind” is, it would have benefited from the Walden/Bascomb rhythm section and a horn arrangement by Martin. One of Wired’s finest tracks is an arrangement of Charles Mingus’ “Goodbye Pork Pie Hat.” Beck’s playing is particularly alluring: cleanly ringing tones, weeping bends, and sculpted feedback form a resonant palette. Bailey and Middleton lend supple support. Within a two-year span, the twin towers Blow by Blow and Wired set a standard for instrumental rock that even Beck has found difficult to match. On Wired, with first-rate material and collaborators on hand, one of rock’s most compelling guitarists is in top form. – Mark Kirschenmann

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