Max Middleton is best known as the pianist in the second, most successful version of
Jeff Beck Group.
Middleton was trained as a classical pianist but also possessed a strong affinity for jazz, and had played in a band called Flare with Trinidad-born bassist
Clive Chaman. His hook up with
Beck came about in the spring of 1971, while the guitarist was rehearsing the lineup of his reconstituted band (including
Chaman) and decided that he needed a pianist. At 20,
Middleton was one of the youngest players on the early-'70s blues-rock scene, and his youth, coupled with his devotion to jazz, quickly made him a mainstay of
Beck's group -- his jazz piano was one of the more successful new elements introduced on the
Rough and Ready album, and on the next LP, Jeff Beck Group,
Middleton also wrote an outstanding instrumental track entitled Definitely Maybe.
Middleton was also the only member to make the jump from the second version of
Jeff Beck Group to the third, which was really the prototypal
Beck, Bogert Appice, but he left before that trio had gotten far into their short-lived hook up. He passed through a group called
Gonzales before rejoining
Beck in 1974 -- with other core members of
Gonzales soon to follow -- to collaborate with the guitarist on the instrumental
Blow By Blow album, which became the top-selling LP of
Beck's whole career, reaching number four on the American charts.
Middleton also played clavinette on the
Wired album that followed, after which he parted company with the guitarist.
In the wake of his work with Jeff Beck, Middleton's career fairly exploded, and he became ever busier as the 1970s wore on -- he passed through membership in the Hummingbirds, alongside his fellow Jeff Beck Group/Flare alumni Bob Tench and Clive Chaman, and did session work with everyone from Pete Brown to Kate Bush, and he played extensively with Chris Rea throughout the 1980s and 1990s. Middleton's most familiar contributions to popular music, however, remain his work with Jeff Beck. Beyond his actual playing, Beck has described the pianist as his most significant collaborator during the most commercially successful period of his career; Middleton's fluency in jazz chords forced the blues-rock guitar virtuoso to extend himself and his music in new and unexpected directions. ~ Bruce Eder, Rovi