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TIM BUCKLEY
One
of the great rock vocalists of the 1960s, Tim Buckley drew from folk,
psychedelic rock, and progressive jazz to create a considerable body of
adventurous work in his
brief lifetime. His multi-octave range was
capable of not just astonishing power, but great emotional
expressiveness, swooping from sorrowful tenderness to anguished wailing.
His restless quest for new territory worked against him commercially: By
the time his fans had hooked into his latest album, he was onto
something else entirely, both live and in the studio. In this sense he
recalled artists such as Miles Davis and David Bowie, who were so eager
to look forward and change that they confused and even angered listeners
who wanted more stylistic consistency. However, his eclecticism has also
ensured a durable fascination with his work that has engendered a
growing posthumous cult for his music, often with listeners who were too
young (or not around) to appreciate his music while he was active.
Buckley emerged from the same '60s Orange
County, CA, folk scene that spawned Jackson Browne and the Nitty Gritty
Dirt Band. Mothers of Invention drummer Jimmy Carl Black introduced
Buckley and a couple of musicians Buckley was playing with to the
Mothers' manager, Herbie Cohen. Although Cohen may have first been
interested in Buckley as a songwriter, he realized after hearing some
demos that Buckley was also a diamond in the rough as a singer. Cohen
became Buckley's manager, and helped the singer get a deal with Elektra.
Before Buckley had reached his 20th birthday,
he'd released his debut album. The slightly fey but enormously promising
effort highlighted his soaring melodies and romantic, opaque lyrics.
Baroque psychedelia was the order of the day for many Elektra releases
of the time, and Buckley's early folk-rock albums were embellished with
important contributions from musicians Lee Underwood (guitar), Van Dyke
Parks (keyboards), Jim Fielder (bass), and Jerry Yester. Larry Beckett
was also an overlooked contributor to Buckley's first two albums,
co-writing many of the songs.
The fragile, melancholic, orchestrated beauty
of the material had an innocent quality that was dampened only slightly
on the second LP, Goodbye and Hello (1967). Buckley's songs and
arrangements became more ambitious and psychedelic, particularly on the
lengthy title track. This was also his only album to reach the Top 200,
where it only peaked at number 171; Buckley was always an artist who
found his primary constituency among the underground, even for his most
accessible efforts. His third album, Happy Sad, found him going in a
decidedly jazzier direction in both his vocalizing and his
instrumentation, introducing congas and vibes. Though it seemed a
retreat from commercial considerations at the time, Happy Sad actually
concluded the triumvirate of recordings that are judged to be his most
accessible.
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The truth was, by the late '60s Buckley was
hardly interested in folk-rock at all. He was more intrigued by jazz; not
only soothing modern jazz (as heard on the posthumous release of acoustic
1968 live material, Dream Letter), but also its most avant-garde strains.
His songs became much more oblique in structure, and skeletal in lyrics,
especially when the partnership with Larry Beckett was ruptured after the
latter's induction into the Army. Some of his songs abandoned lyrics
almost entirely, treating his voice itself as an instrument, wordlessly
contorting, screaming, and moaning, sometimes quite cacophonously. In this
context, Lorca was viewed by most fans and critics not just as a shocking
departure, but a downright bummer. No longer was Buckley a romantic,
melodic poet; he was an experimental artiste who sometimes seemed
bent on punishing both himself and his listeners with his wordless
shrieks and jarringly dissonant music.
Almost as if to prove that he was still capable
of gentle, uplifting jazzy pop-folk, Buckley issued Blue Afternoon around
the same time. Bizarrely, Blue Afternoon and Lorca were issued almost
simultaneously, on different labels. While an admirable demonstration of
his versatility, it was commercial near-suicide, each album canceling the
impact of the other, as well as confusing his remaining fans. Buckley
found his best middle ground between accessibility and jazzy improvisation
on 1970's Starsailor, which is probably the best showcase of his sheer
vocal abilities, although many prefer the more cogent material of his
earliest albums.
By this point, though, Buckley's approach was so
uncommercial that it was jeopardizing his commercial survival. And not
just on record; he was equally uncompromising as a live act, as the
posthumously issued Live at the Troubadour 1969 demonstrates, with its
stretched-to-the-limit jams and searing improv vocals. For a time, he was
said to have earned his living as a taxi driver and chauffeur; he also
flirted with films for a while. When he returned to the studio, it was as
a much more commercial singer/songwriter (some have suggested that various
management and label pressures were behind this shift).
As much of a schism as Buckley's experimental
jazz period created among fans and critics, his final recordings have
proved even more divisive, even among big Buckley fans. Some view these
efforts, which mix funk, sex-driven lyrical concerns, and laid-back L.A.
session musicians, as proof of his mastery of the blue-eyed soul idiom.
Others find them a sad waste of talent, or relics of a prodigy who was
burning out rather than conquering new realms. Neophytes should be aware
of the difference of critical opinion regarding this era, but on the whole
his final three albums are his least impressive. Those who feel otherwise
usually cite the earliest of those LPs, Greetings from L.A. (1972), as his
best work from his final phase.
Buckley's life came to a sudden end in the middle
of 1975, when he died of a heroin overdose just after completing a tour.
Those close to him insist that he had been clean for some time and lament
the loss of an artist who, despite some recent failures, still had much to
offer. Buckley's stock began to rise among the rock underground after the
Cocteau Twins covered his "Song for the Siren" in the 1980s. The
posthumous releases of two late-'60s live sets (Dream Letter and Live at
the Troubadour 1969) in the early '90s also boosted his profile, as well
as unveiling some interesting previously unreleased compositions. His son
Jeff Buckley went on to mount a musical career as well before his own
tragic death in 1997. ~ Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide

Tim Buckley
- I never asked to be your mountain |
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