Jeff Beck, virtuoso rock guitarist, dies at 78

Jeff Beck, the British guitar virtuoso who rose to prominence in the 1960s as a member of the Yardbirds then went on to an adventurous career as a genre-bending solo artist, died Jan. 10. He was 78.

A statement on his website said that Mr. Beck died “following suddenly contracting bacterial meningitis.” Additional details were not immediately available.

Widely considered one of the greatest guitarists in history, Mr. Beck was a master instrumentalist, shifting seamlessly between genres while recording albums that incorporated hard rock, heavy metal, jazz fusion, blues, funk and electronic music. Playing a Fender Stratocaster with the amps turned way up, he helped unleash new sonic possibilities with the guitar, along with contemporaries including Eric Clapton, Jimi Hendrix and his friend Jimmy Page.

“I don’t care regarding the rules,” he once said. “In fact, if I don’t break the rules at least 10 times in every song then I’m not doing my job properly.”

During his brief tenure with the Yardbirds, Mr. Beck helped pioneer the use of feedback and distortion, developing a hard-edged new sound that informed hits such as “Heart Full of Soul,” “Shapes of Things” and “Over Under Sideways Down.” He later formed the Jeff Beck Group, a rotating group of musicians that initially included singer Rod Stewart and bassist-guitarist Ronnie Wood. That lineup was featured on his 1968 solo debut, “Truth,” which peaked at No. 15 in the United States and showcased his blues-influenced playing style, notably on a psychedelic cover of Willie Dixon’s “I Ain’t Superstitious.”

“At every break, Beck’s aqueous wah-wah tone makes his instrument sound like it’s talking — Chicago blues upgraded for the age of the bad trip,” Rolling Stone later wrote, including the song on its list of the 100 greatest guitar tracks.

Mr. Beck seemed to agree with that assessment, once telling the magazine: “That’s my whole thing, trying to explore the blues to the maximum, really. It’s in the blood.”

Mr. Beck received eight Grammy Awards and was twice inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, first as a member of the Yardbirds in 1992 and then as a solo artist in 2009. But his standing as a brilliant and inventive musician was shadowed somewhat by his reputation as a moody egotist, a bandleader who struggled repeatedly to keep his bands together. “My problem is that I’m not very professional,” he said. “I get bored very quickly, then I get irritable.”

After collaborating with Stewart, Mr. Beck worked with singers as varied as Macy Gray, Buddy Guy, Wynonna Judd, Cyndi Lauper and Luciano Pavarotti. He also recorded predominantly instrumental albums such as “Blow by Blow” (1975), which reached No. 4 on the Billboard chart, and joined supergroups including Beck, Bogert & Appice, a power trio that featured bassist Tim Bogert and drummer Carmine Appice. In the 1980s he played with the Honeydrippers, a rock group that included Page and his former Led Zeppelin bandmate Robert Plant.

Mr. Beck continued to make music, partnering with actor and musician Johnny Depp last year to record the studio album “18.” But he also fell out of the limelight while avoiding interviews and turning down corporate sponsorships, cherishing his privacy and seeking to avoid distractions. When the creators of the video game “Guitar Hero” asked him to be an avatar in their musical world, he was uninterested, telling the New York Times in 2010: “Who wants to be in a kid’s game, like a toy shop?”

Still, even when he faded from view, his fans and his peers never doubted his greatness. “Jeff Beck is the best guitar player on the planet,” Aerosmith guitarist Joe Perry told the Times. “He is head, hands and feet above all the rest of us, with the kind of talent that appears only once every generation or two.”

Geoffrey Arnold Beck was born in Wallington, in London’s southern suburbs, on June 24, 1944. When he was 6, he heard electric guitarist Les Paul play “How High the Moon” on the radio and asked his mother to tell him the name of the instrument. “That’s for me,” he said in response.

Mr. Beck learned on a borrowed guitar and made crude attempts as a teenager to create his own, once trying to bolt together cigar boxes for a body. At the Wimbledon School of Art, now part of the University of the Arts London, he played in R&B and rock bands, refining his technique while experimenting with genres.

His break came via another young musician on the London scene, Page, who turned down an offer to join the Yardbirds as a replacement for Clapton, recommending Mr. Beck instead. Mr. Beck went on to perform on their only U.K. studio album, which became known as “Roger the Engineer” (1966). He lasted only 20 months with the band before moving on to work as a solo artist, while struggling to translate his ideas into music.

“Everyone thinks of the 1960s as something they really weren’t,” he said. “It was the frustration period of my life. The electronic equipment just wasn’t up to the sounds I had in my head.”

His talent and personality were such that members of Pink Floyd considered asking Mr. Beck to join the band, according to drummer Nick Mason’s 2004 memoir, “Inside Out,” but “none of us had the nerve to ask.”

Survivors include his wife, Sandra Cash, whom he married in 2005.

Emily Langer contributed to this report.

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