Home » Jazz News » Obituary

416

Joe Beck Jazz Guitarist with Sinatra, Davis Dies

Source:

Sign in to view read count
Joe Beck, 62; jazz guitarist collaborated with Sinatra, Davis, other top musicians was honored five times by the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences as a “Most Valuable Player."

Joe Beck, a jazz guitarist who collaborated with artists such as Frank Sinatra, Miles Davis and James Brown, died July 22 at a Connecticut hospice after battling lung cancer. He was 62.

Beck got his start as a teenager in the 1960s playing in a jazz trio in New York. By 1968, he was working with Miles Davis and other top jazz stars. “My career happened because I happened to be in the right place at the right time in a very unique time of jazz music," Beck told JazzGuitar Life.com last year.

He took a three-year break from music to run a dairy farm, telling Guitar Player magazine, “The New York scene just got too intense with drugs and all, so I milked cows for a couple of years. But after a while that got really old."

Beck returned to music in the 1970s, working with artists such as Gloria Gaynor and Esther Phillips, including on her hit single, “What a Difference a Day Makes." In 1975, his collaboration with saxophonist David Sanborn, “Beck and Sanborn," became a fusion hit.

Continue Reading...

Visit Website

Comments

Tags

News

Popular

Get more of a good thing!

Our weekly newsletter highlights our top stories, our special offers, and upcoming jazz events near you.