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  1. The start of There And Back is excellent and very exciting with Star Cycle featuring spectacular sequencing by Jan Hammer, a powerful and propulsive rhythm-section with a catchy beat and distinctive Jeff Beck guitar work with fiery and biting runs.

  2. There and Back, Jeff Beck's first new studio album in four years, found him moving from old keyboard partner Jan Hammer (three tracks) to new one Tony Hymas (five), which turned out to be the difference between competition and support.

  3. "Star Cycle" was used for a number of years as the theme song for both Mid-South Wrestling in the United States and the British music programme The Tube; "The Pump" was featured in the 1983 film Risky Business; "Too Much to Lose" is an instrumental cover of a song composed by keyboardist Jan Hammer that was originally featured on the ...

  4. 1996 — US. CD —. Album, Stereo, Mono. View credits, reviews, tracks and shop for the 1986 CD release of "There And Back" on Discogs.

  5. The Final Peace Lyrics. About “There and Back” “There and Back” Q&A. When did Jeff Beck release There and Back? Album Credits. Producers Jeff Beck & Ken Scott. Writers Jan...

  6. www.rollingstone.com › music › music-album-reviewsThere And Back - Rolling Stone

    Worse, the star opens There and Back with three strikes against him, all of them the work of fuzak keyboardist Jan Hammer, with whom Beck cut a 1977 live album.

  7. theshfl.com › album › There-and-BackThere and Back

    After an interesting but ultimately just-okay live album with Jan Hammer’s band, Jeff Beck took three years to return to the studio. There and Back kicks off with the synthwave-ish “Star Cycle” (you can tell me Perturbator’s never heard this track, but I will not believe you) before moving into the latter-day — it was 1980 already — disco-funk of “Too Much to Lose” and the slow ...