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Tim Buckley gets some overdue attention TIME OUT London – March 14-21 2001 by David Peschek Tim Buckley is the new Nick Drake. And no,
that’s not insanely lazy journalism – simply a statement about how and
artist largely misunderstood or ignored during their lifetime posthumously gains
a kind of critical velocity. Tim Buckley
remains best known for the cover of his ‘Song To the Siren’ that appeared on
This Mortal Coil’s ‘It’ll End In Tears’ in 1983, sung by Elizabeth
Fraser. The awful, untimely death
of Tim’s son Jeff, who drowned in 1997 – himself, it also seems needless to
repeat, one of the most vital singers of the 90’s – gave the Buckley
mythology a terrible symmetry: Tim died on June 29th 1975, of an
accidental drug overdose. Though
he’d wrestled with addiction, he’d been clean for some time. Between 1966
and 1974, Tim released nine albums that touched on folk, psychedelia, jazz,
avant-jazz, soul and the blues; originally a singer-songwriter in Jac
Holzman’s incredibly fertile Elektra stable (Van Dyke Parks played on his
debut, the great Jack Nitzsche arranged the strings) his work soon became
uncategorisable. The minor
commercial success of his earlier records was not sustained; his public
increasingly perplexed by his relentless mutating muse.
Shockingly he was only 28 when he died. Only fitfully
available after his death, his work stands as a statement of what music can be:
largely unfettered by commercial concerns, extraordinary and livid in its
emotive power, it’s music that’s impossible to have on in the background.
The breathless range of Tim’s voice – real gone falsetto, resonant
low notes, a gorgeous, grainy tenor in between, capable of expressing utter
desolation and intensely ecstatic sexuality – vibrates through, is almost sung
through, the listener. For many,
much of Jeff’s appeal was his ability to access places that had seemed out of
reach since Tim’s passing; of course, Jeff – whose talent was informed by
rock in ways which Tim’s could never have been – couldn’t escape the
comparison however hard he tried. Now it seems
that dad will, at last, get his due. Gradually,
Tim rather than Jeff has become the Buckley to name drop – even if it’s
often a lame and spurious byword for vocal histrionics.
Recently, of course, the UK Top 20 has been visited by the band
Starsailor, though their safe (if lovely) melodic rock is a million miles from
the avant-jazz explorations of the album from which they took their name. Finally, 26
years after his death, comes ‘Morning Glory – The Tim Buckley Anthology’,
the first serious attempt to provide an overview of his work. To some extent, it plays John The Baptist to the real second
coming: reissues of all Tim’s albums over the coming year, many of the later
records (especially ‘Greetings From LA’, the sweat drenched, white soul
masterpiece that rivals Marvin Gaye’s ‘Let’s Get It On’) coming complete
with unreleased material. While we
wait, ‘Morning Glory’ usefully compiles a lot of stuff that’s currently
unavailable, particularly from the inexplicably deleted (and wonderful) ‘Blue
Afternoon’ (1969) and ‘Starsailor’ (1971). Hopefully, it
will also provide a decisive opportunity to laud one of the most fiercely
individual, questing and uncompromising musicians of the last century. That said -
and, of course, any selective compilation of a fiercely-loved artist provokes
dissent – there are mistakes and omissions.
So here, for the anal, the friendless and those who don’t get out
enough, are an obsessive’s gripes. Early,
non-album cuts ‘Lady, Give Me Your Heart’ and ‘Once Upon A Time’ (from a
1967 45) remain uncompiled. Sequencing
the melodically similar (though individually lovely) ‘Once I Was’ and
‘Morning Glory’ next to each other isn’t particularly sympathetic to
either. 1967’s ‘Goodbye And
Hello’ also contains the wrenching ‘I Never Asked To Be Your Mountain’,
addressed to the young wife and baby Tim had recently abandoned – and one of
the songs Jeff chose to sing at his first significant public appearance, the
1992 New York tribute to his father; the biographical significance alone would
make it a worthy inclusion, perhaps in place of the overwrought ‘No Man Can
Find The War’, which finds Larry Beckett at his most baroque. Strangely, there’s no place for ‘Dolphins’ either.
(Written by his hero, Fred Neil, also author of Midnight Cowboy theme
‘Everybody’s Talking’, the song was a key part of Tim’s repetoire for
years, and echoes through ‘Once I Was’.
It was finally recorded for Tim’s penultimate album ‘Sefronia’ in
1973, though an excellent live version appears on ‘Dreamletter’.)
The patchy but underrated ‘Sefronia’ is represented only by (the very
middling) ‘Sally Go Round The Roses’ – no match for the title track, nor
Tim’s lovely take on Tom Waits’s ‘Martha’.
(Points, however, for rescuing the rapturous ‘Who Can Deny You’ from
much-maligned swansong ‘Look At The Fool’ and finally compiling the
sought-after early version of ‘Song To The Siren’ from the Monkees TV show.) But the
greatest shame is that Tim’s most extreme music – the incredible title track
of ‘Starsailor’, a choir of multitracked Tims soaring through searing
harmonics into a near atonal bliss-out of yelps, cries and wails – is missing.
Over 30 years after it was recorded, it still sounds not futuristic but
wildly out of time, a vivid nebula on the furthest flung reaches of music. Like Jeff –
and less feted, less trendy but no less iconoclastic vocalists like Billy
Mackenzie and Klaus Nomi, who also lived extreme lives and died prematurely –
Tim is redemptively still alive in his songs, singing himself into raw,
brilliant existence over and over again.
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