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Despite passing away at only 30, Jeff Buckley is fondly remembered as an inspired guitarist and singer/songwriter of the 1990s. He first worked in Los Angeles, singing mostly cover songs until he garnered the interest of Columbia Records and created his first and only studio album, Grace, in 1994. Working on that album was Record Producer Andy Wallace, who previously made a name for himself mixing Nirvana's Nevermind.
Buckley spent much of the next two years promoting Grace. Sales of the album were mostly lackluster, and the songs received little play on the radio. Despite that, he was a critical darling and received almost entirely positive reviews. His cover of "Hallelujah" was noted as one of his best efforts, and included in Rolling Stone's list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time. Jimmy Page even called Grace his "favorite album of all time", high praise from the man Buckley counted as one of his chief influences.
In late 1996, Buckley moved to Memphis to begin work on his second album, but tragedy struck. On May 29, 1997, he disappeared while going for an evening swim in Wolf River Harbor, a channel of the Mississippi river; having waded out into the river, fully dressed, while shouting the lyrics to "Whole Lotta Love", he was swept away while a friend was moving their belongings away from the incoming tide. His body wasn't found until June 4. After an autopsy, it was confirmed that Buckley had taken no illegal drugs or alcohol, and his death was entirely accidental.
After his death, it was decided by Buckley's mother to release an incomplete version of Jeff's second album, "My Sweetheart the Drunk". Due to the albums unfinished nature, the album was retitled "Sketches For My Sweetheart the Drunk". The album itself is even less known than it's predecessor, but among serious fans it has the status of being just as good, if not better, than "Grace". That being said, the album is obviously unfinished, with many songs suffering from poor audio quality and general oddities in terms of songwriting.
In the years since, Buckley's popularity has grown. "Hallelujah" eventually became the number 1 single on iTunes for a time, and several of his demos were released posthumously.
There's also a movie based off of his life in the works right now, with Reeve Carney playing Jeff. It has a tentative title of "Mystery White Boy", a nickname Jeff often went under whilst touring.
His work provides examples of[]
- Author Existence Failure - His death led to his sophomore album to never be finished.
- Bishonen - Don't try to deny it.
- Break Up Song - "Last Goodbye" and "Lover You Should've Come Over"
- Calling the Old Man Out - "Dream Brother", in a roundabout way. The song itself is warning to a friend who was self-destructing, but Buckley makes reference to his own father (who walked out on Jeff and his mother when she was still pregnant and died of a drug overdose before Jeff turned 10).
- This is not to imply that his father was a failure of a person, though. His father was Tim Buckley (no, not that one), who released several critically acclaimed albums in the late sixties and early seventies, and the start of Jeff Buckley's more popular (relatively speaking) career was at a tribute concert for his father.
- Tim Buckley was a Disappeared Dad to Jeff. He met him only once and the lyric "don't be like the one who made me so old" is a subtle but clear Take That.
- Additionally, at at least one live performance of this song, he adds an additional few lines in just before one of the verses, one of which is "you're just like him" several times.
- What Will You Say has been taken to be about Tim Buckley as well...which would make it about meeting him in the afterlife.
- Additionally, at at least one live performance of this song, he adds an additional few lines in just before one of the verses, one of which is "you're just like him" several times.
- Tim Buckley was a Disappeared Dad to Jeff. He met him only once and the lyric "don't be like the one who made me so old" is a subtle but clear Take That.
- This is not to imply that his father was a failure of a person, though. His father was Tim Buckley (no, not that one), who released several critically acclaimed albums in the late sixties and early seventies, and the start of Jeff Buckley's more popular (relatively speaking) career was at a tribute concert for his father.
- Celebrity Resemblance: Jeff has a pretty striking likeness to James Franco.
- The Cover Changes the Gender - Thoroughly and repeatedly averted.
- Cover Version - He had quite a few... "Lilac Wine", "Corpus Christi Carol", "Yard of Blonde Girls", "Back in N.Y.C." and "Satisfied Mind", for starters.
- Dead Artists Are Better - Sadly, Buckley didn't achieve widespread success until after his drowning.
- Disppeared Dad: Sadly Jeff never got to know his father Tim who died in when he eight from drugs.
- Epic Rocking - There exists a 26 minute version of "Kanga Roo" that pretty much plays this to the letter.
- Everything Sounds Sexier in French - Jeff's cover of "Je N'en Connais Pas La Fin", originally written by Edith Piaf.
- Famous Last Words: When Buckley was last seen alive, he was shouting the lyrics to "Whole Lotta Love" by Led Zeppelin.
- Generation Xerox: Tragically both Jeff and Tim died at young ages.
- Grief Song - "Hallelujah" again
- Also many of his songs of of "Sketches", with "I Know We Could Be So Happy Baby (If We Wanted To Be)" particularly standing out.
- Not to mention "Forget Her", which Buckley wrote after breaking up with his girlfriend. As a result, the song brought up such painful memories that he refused to include it on his first album (It was eventually released on the Legacy Edition of "Grace", however).
- Intercourse with You - Not often, but "Your Flesh is So Nice" absolutely reeks of this.It's about two lesbians having sex (with Jeff being one of them somehow).
- Keep Circulating the Tapes - A lot of his E Ps and live albums have either gone out of print or are really hard to find.
- Fans like to collect bootlegs of his recorded concerts on DVD and CD. His mother doesn't do much to stop this as she thinks this helps to spread his name out there.
- Amazing Grace, the award-winning documentary about his life went into a state of limbo for a few years before finally being released on the special edition of Grace Around The World. This edition, however, is about to go out of print, leaving the documentary under the possibility of becoming this trope once again.
- Long Title - "Lover You Should've Come Over", "I Know We Could Be So Happy Baby (If We Wanted to Be)"
- Officially unreleased classic "All Flowers In Time Bend Towards The Sun"
- Lyrical Dissonance - "Last Goodbye"
- Missing Episode - According to Amazing Grace, Buckley threw out almost an album's worth of recordings for his second album. This means that the two discs on Sketches For My Sweetheart The Drunk aren't even all of the recordings from those sessions.
- Nightmare Fuel - You And I is a dark minimalist dirge, the only light coming from Jeff's vocals...which sound slightly mournful.
- Before he died, Buckley once said that he intended his second album, "My Sweetheart the Drunk" to be "Nightmare Fuel". Specifically, he planned for it to be dark and disturbing, but with moments of sweetness distributed throughout. Once he died, however, these plans were mostly put to rest. "Sketches For My Sweetheart the Drunk" still has moments of horror in it from time to time (specifically "Murder Suicide Meteor Slave" and "Demon John"), but it doesn't really seem indicative of the original intent.
- One of the creepiest parts of "Murder Suicide Meteor Slave" comes at the end wherein a monotone voice says "happy" over and over again with slower and slower pronunciation until eventually it sounds almost robotic.
- One of Jeff's most fondly remembered concerts was a gig at The Garage in London. The reason for it's fame is a 26-minute long rendition of "Kanga Roo" that completely runs the emotional gamut. It's quite scary at parts due to Jeff's outright screaming. Nowadays it's nearly impossible to find, and the few copies that do exist online have horrible audio quality.
- Before he died, Buckley once said that he intended his second album, "My Sweetheart the Drunk" to be "Nightmare Fuel". Specifically, he planned for it to be dark and disturbing, but with moments of sweetness distributed throughout. Once he died, however, these plans were mostly put to rest. "Sketches For My Sweetheart the Drunk" still has moments of horror in it from time to time (specifically "Murder Suicide Meteor Slave" and "Demon John"), but it doesn't really seem indicative of the original intent.
- One-Hit Wonder - Technically: "Last Goodbye" was his only chart appearance in his lifetime, peaking at #19 on Billboard's Modern Rock Tracks (now Alternative Songs) chart. However, based on the song's fame, "Hallelujah."
- Real Song Theme Tune - "New Year's Prayer" was used as the theme to the first three seasons of The Dead Zone.
- Sex, Drugs and Rock and Roll - Averted. Despite what the media assumed after Buckley was first found dead, neither drugs nor alcohol contributed to his death.
- This doesn't mean he never did drugs though. In a few interviews he was quoted that he was a light drug user.
- This was played tragically straight for his Father Tim (Also a famous musician) who died of a Heroin Overdose when Jeff was eight.
- Surprisingly Gentle Song - Picture this: You're listening to "Sketches For My Sweetheart the Drunk", which is full of Nightmare Fuel. Finally, you get to the penultimate song on the album, "Jewel Box", which is one of the prettiest love songs Jeff ever wrote. It's jarring, to say the least.
- Title-Only Chorus - "Hallelujah"