02/06/2016

"Being on the road is so romantic"... Jeff Buckley


 One of my first musical loves, passions, awakenings... The voice of Jeff Buckley. The grace of Grace!
This music shook me to the core, changed me and made me feel so understood... His songs are among those I love the most to sing, at home, and in my heart.

Listen to this documentary on BBC Radio 4 about the making of the album and the making of the man, and about his relationship to England.

One of the first direct quotes from him says: "Being on the road is so romantic"... Yes, indeed, a few people are drawn on the road all the time. It may be what musicians and wandering itinerant journalists have in common...

Then is mentioned is love for Elizabeth Fraser's voice and Jimmy Page's guitare skills.

Link to the audio:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b048hxpk?ns_mchannel=social&ns_campaign=bbc_radio_4&ns_source=facebook&ns_linkname=radio_and_music




Details:

Since his desperately early death in May 1997, there's been an inevitable mythologizing about the life and music of Jeff Buckley. Perhaps it's not surprising that in the posthumous rush to acknowledge his genius, memories have been clouded or, retrospectively, given a silver lining.
The quiet, uncertain foundations of his reputation were laid on a solo tour of Europe three years earlier, in March 1994 - and, in particular, during one day. On the 18th March, Buckley was scheduled for a photo shoot (with Kevin Westenberg), an appearance on BBC GLR and his first proper London concert, at a folk club called Bunjies.
In 'The Grace of Jeff Buckley', those who were there speak for the first time about the man and his music: Buckley's American manager Dave Lory, record company owner Steve Abbott, booking agent Emma Banks and photographer Kevin Westenberg share intimate memories that have so far not featured in the Buckley biography.
And the programme also includes rare archive: the GLR radio session that has not been heard since that live broadcast in 1994 - including an astonishing version of 'Grace' - and, exclusively, a private interview that Buckley recorded on the eve of this tour but decided not to release.
Together, these glimpses offer a portrait of a young man whose voice and musicianship, as well as his irresistible charisma and the trauma of his early death, touched millions.
Produced by Alan Hall.
A Falling Tree production for BBC Radio 4.
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Mary Anne Hobbs recommends

Mary Anne Hobbs recommends
"This programme centres on a short trip that Jeff Buckley made to the UK in 1994. We hear stories of a tender but troubled soul, with shadowy unresolved issues from childhood haunting him, from his manager, agent, photographer and driver. We also get a taste of his first BBC session for the local London station GLR, which he kicks out in a rage. It gives us a measure of just how gifted he really was, and what a tragedy it was to lose him in the Mississippi River aged just 30."

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PS. One of the most beautiful love songs in the world:


Jeff Buckley - 'Lover, You Should've Come Over' (Acoustic)



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