You Had It Coming

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ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 35:52

eMusic Features

This Is The (British) Blues

By John Morthland

It's tempting, given the relative paucity of Americans, to suggest that the recently released This Is the Blues, Volumes 1-4 instead be titled This Is The British Blues, or, even better, This Is British Blues-Rock. After all, nearly every track on these four discs comes from either older tribute albums to Peter Green's original Fleetwood Mac (as well as a bit of his solo work), British blues pioneer Cyril Davies and American blues institution … more »

They Say All Media Guide

Jeff Beck returns two years after the ten-years-in-the-making Who Else?, and You Had It Coming isn’t surprising just for its rapidity, but for its music. From the moment the electronicized, post-rave beats of “Earthquake” kick off the record, it’s clear that Beck isn’t content to stay in place — he’s trying to adapt to the modern world. To a certain extent, this isn’t an entirely new phenomenon, since each of his records is clearly, inextricably of its time, from the crunching metal of Truth through the breezy jazz fusion of Blow By Blow to the modernized album rock of Guitar Shop. This is just another side of that, as Beck works with electronic music, both noisy and new age introspective. It’s a bit clever, actually, since Beck’s playing has always been otherworldly, dipping, bending, and sounding like anything other than a normal guitar. The problem is, when he’s surrounded by lockstep, processed beats and gurgling synths, his guitar doesn’t leap to the forefront and capture attention the way it does on his best recordings. Still, there’s something to be said for the effort, because even if it doesn’t sound like a Beck record, it isn’t a bad record, and it’s certainly a helluva lot more successful than Clapton’s similar forays into these waters. Besides, knowing that he knocked this out so quickly makes it a little endearing. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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