JEFF BECK, TIM BOGERT, CARMINE APPICE – Beck, Bogert & Appice (1973)
Supergroups often flicker in and out and existence. Beck, Bogert and Appice recorded one self-titled studio album in 1973. That album continues to be cited as an influence on bands, and you can hear it instantly. One listen to Beck, Bogert & Appice and you can immediately hear the echoes of the bands that followed. Beck, Bogert and Appice were touring before the even recorded the album, so they were already well prepared. Jeff Beck came in with a song that Stevie Wonder worked up with him on Talking Book. All three musicians write and sing lead vocals on the album.
“Black Cat Moan” is a Don Nix blues (who also co-produced the album). It sure seems that Rose Tattoo must have ripped it off for “Rock and Roll Outlaw”! It’s marked by a a sting of slide guitar, a wicked blues grind, and Jeff Beck’s understated lead vocals. Carmine Appice plays it pretty straight, but this track just thuds! Bass heavy and weighty like lead, “Black Cat Moan” was some of the heaviest blues on offer this side of Black Sabbath. Stay tuned for some of the slidy-est slide guitar Beck ever recorded.
Appice sings lead on the the gut-busting groove of “Lady”, written with members of Atomic Rooster. Bogert’s melodically thunderous bass takes center stage. The production is so crisp, you can hear every finger pick, even flying at the speed they are. Listen carefully for a quick part in the song that Rush lifted for “2112”. The layered lead vocals sounds like they were taking inspiration from Cream. This track simply smashes everything in its way, letting the bass level the countryside before Beck plants some bluegrass with some twangy guitar licks. Meanwhille, Appice keeps the engine running with a tasty cymbal pattern and earthquake drum fills.
The ballad “Oh To Love You” is also sung by Appice and features piano and Mellotron accompaniment. It sounds like stuff David Coverdale was doing in his early pre-Whitesnake career a few years down the road. Carmine has a really nice swing on the beat, but that Mellotron really takes it home when it comes in.
“Superstition” ends side one with Tim Bogert’s first lead vocal. This version, worked up by Wonder with Jeff Beck, was supposed to come out first, but due to delays, “Superstition” was first heard in its Stevie Wonder incarnation. Once again, a rolling groove dominates the soundscape, with Jeff Beck stabbing guitar licks here and there, drawing blood every time. This arrangement is guitar heavy compared, with none of Stevie’s clavinet or keys of any kind. Beck goes caveman midway, like a prototypical Ace Frehley, who must have been studying every note at home. Then, Jeff Beck takes it high again, laying waste to the land as a guitar innovator like a rarified few before him. Carmine’s drum outro was later ripped off by Kingdom Come on “Get It On”.
The Rolling Stones recorded “Wild Horses” in 1971, and here is Beck , Bogert and Appice opening “Sweet Sweet Surrender” with similar sound. This, however is more a slow soul-rock lament. Carmine sings lead on this side-opener, and Beck colours the blanks with distant guitar. Tim Bogert takes things more upbeat the pop rocker “Why Should I Care”. This is the kind of song that Kiss would strive to write over and over again in the early 1970s.
Things get funky in a heavy on the brilliant “Lose Myself With You”, the vocal melody of which sure sounds a lot like Judas Priest ripped it off for”Saints In Hell”. This is funk of the heaviest order, a rare isotope of plutonium that you can only get with the fusion of these kinds of musicians.
Carmine sings lead for the remainder of the album. “Livin’ Alone” has a vibe not unlike early ZZ Top. Fast, blues based rock with melodic lead vocals. The shuffle sure recalls a few famous bands that would be known for such things later on. This is a potent, energized blast of rock.
Unusually, the album closes on a Curtis Mayfield soul classic: “I’m So Proud”. A slow dancer like this actually works well at this point of the album, because the listening is exhausted, quite frankly!
5/5 stars


One I must explore further but so much great music and too little time.
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This is one I’ve always wanted to get, but have never done it. Sounds like I’m missing out here. I’ll keep an eye out for it now.
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IT IS SO GOOD. And it was cheap too, I think I paid 7 or 8 bucks. And I’ve played it at least a dozen times since then.
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Great review, Mike. I think I’ve heard that album once or twice but never owned a copy. Should check it out again based on your comments. I’m a medium-level Jeff Beck fan, by my standards at least, and have the Rhino Yardbirds collection, all the excellent JB albums Rod Stewart & Ronnie Wood, the ones with Bobby Tench (not as well-known but very worth checking out), the instrumental jazz fusion ones, etc., basically most of them up to about 1989. Henry
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Man I have played this album, dozens of times since buying in June! Man, it feels like yesterday but June is already the distant past.
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