Hot Press, October 5, 1994
By Patrick Brennan
Jeff Buckley, fresh from his recent triumphant gig in Whelanâs, and with his debut album Grace just released, tells Patrick Brennan why he doesnât want to live or die in L.A., how Cooney and Begley are getting on in New York and about why he needed therapy after meeting Bob Dylan!
Jeff Buckley is of the opinion that the batteries of my super slick Sony Dictaphone are on their last legs. During a trial test to see if everything is in perfect recording order his voice sounds deeper than usual. I reassure him that we have the technology to continue without a hitch.
âGrace is very much a studio creationâ he observes, âeven though the basis of it is live performance. Playing live is the only way for a whole series of things to happen. Although I do enjoy studio creation thereâs a real intangible effect when you play live that stays with you forever.â
Jeff Buckleyâs first full length album, Grace, is a fully-fledged band effort. One of the things apparent on it is the tension between the American East Coast and West Coast musical styles. Jeff Buckley originally hails from Southern California but after some wandering, has finally settled down in New York, the Lower East Side to be precise, where he says he feel more at home than any other place on earth. Obviously his sense of place is very important to him.
âThe Lower East Side is a region of Manhattan thatâs just intoxicated with itâs own eccentricity. I appreciate that. Itâs easier to be me there. Southern California is kinda dead. There was always a lot of life there but thereâs a certain electricity missing that New York will have always above everywhere else. Thatâs just my opinion, though. New York has this caffeinated frenzy. Anything thatâs excellent that comes out of Los Angeles like The Doors or Janeâs Addiction, you just canât figure it out. Thatâs the strength of the place. It just works. Itâs freaky. Itâs great. But Iâm talking about a way of life.
âAlso in L.A. and in Hollywood, especially, itâs an industry town. Itâs like a steel town except itâs the fame industry. Irish people would hate it in Los Angeles. They always do. They fucking hate it, man. Itâs all who-you-know. Itâs like you have to sweep up the names dripping down everybody in restaurants. Itâs just boring. Even the architecture is set up for maximum schmooz capacity. Itâs a game, the rules of which Iâve never understood.
âBut thereâs some really great places there. There are lots of great underground clubs. Lots of great people â but I was more interested in being in a place that was more cosmopolitan and more artistic in every way, shape or form. But wherever the human race is involved, unspeakable horrors lurk just around the corner.
Whether itâs religious, political or just plain insanity. And because of Reagan, thereâs a lot of mentally ill out on the streets. Theyâre in a dream anyway. Theyâre not really dangerous or bad, theyâre just very eccentric. They just need a lot of love and care from people who understand them. Itâs a hard life, man. Itâs fucking hard. And thatâs the way Sin-Ă was a lot of the time. Just out on the street. And all my gigs were pretty much just out on the street.
âSin-Ă is a cafĂ© run by Shane Doyle,â he elaborates. âItâs informed and it has the potential. Cooney and Begley can totally get in there and do two hours and people will freak. Marianne Faithfull will be there â I actually saw her there. Or me. Or a full-on rock band. Itâs very low pressure and very high quality soul. Plus you play for your own tips so itâs pretty self-reliant. Thatâs what I used to do.â
FUCKED UP
Mention of Cooney and Begley is a reminder that Jeff Buckley is rumoured to be a big fan of Irish traditional music.
âNot big enough, probably, but I have a fair interest in going to Galway and getting lost. Itâs in my roots. With respect to the whole world and mystery of it, I shouldnât say itâs in my roots but I know it is somewhere. The quality of my voice and the range is very Irish tenor. My family is actually Panamanian and Irish. Or my blood. Traditional music is very hypnotic. It has just enough of the earth and just enough of the heavens.
Jeff Buckley certainly doesnât shy away from the mystical connotations of music.
âIâm totally captured by it actually. The nature of music is mystical. Itâs not to sell Pepsi. Itâs to express being alive and being a human being. It really does bind all peoples together. You may not know a peoplesâ alphabet but you can get a sense of them from their music. Anything, from D.C. Punk to Pygmy songs. You can have music in your house. Not as a product but in your self and in your soul. It expresses people. Since you have blood pumping and you love and you get angry and you lose, you can get to any culture really as long as you have the right orientation.â
As it happens Jeff Buckley is also a big jazz fan.
âYeah. I like the improvisational aspect of it, and the harmonies and the forms but Iâm not really a jazz guy. I mean jazz is dead. But the things which it was based on and the artists are still valid. Even Miles would have told you that some marketing guy made up âJazzâ. To him he was just singing the only music that he knew. And Parker as well. And Billie Holiday.
âAlso, with the jazz idiom itâs easy to get caught up in countless players and countless instrumentalists who play faster or slower or something else. I never got into that. Itâs exhausting. You end up with these poor deluded musos. But my body just agrees with improvisation. All jazz was really was a bunch of musicians after they had learned how to play âWhen The Saints Go Marching Inâ for the white folks getting together and partying all night and saying Iâll do my own melodies and play for as long as I want and Iâll try and get this girl over here. And it was born to die as well. It became something else. It became rock ânâ roll, soul, funk, hip-hop.â
Jeff Buckley makes no effort to hide his enthusiasm for other peopleâs music. Naturally, he has countless heroes but his encounter with one of them, Bob Dylan, still haunts him.
âI needed therapy directly after I met him. Unfortunately, his boys caught me lampooning him the day after at a gig and took it back to him. It was a real drag. He felt dissed. I was doing an impression of him doing the new songs and the old songs from a gig I saw him do at the Supper Club. He went right through the old songs and then the new songs were completely brilliant but it was funny.
âSo I was talking to the crowd about it. And out in the audience are these three guys in trench coats who look, dressed and try to be exactly like Bob Dylan. Turns out theyâre his management. When I got wind of the news I was standing in the middle of Tompkins Square Park just staring at the ground with the snow falling down, wishing I was never born. I never felt so fucked up in my life.
âI was having a bit of immature fun and it was turned into a big political thing between their management and my company. It was just a big fucking mess and I was embarrassed beyond belief. It shows me something about fame â that you feel people become these ideas instead of human beings and you can never touch them. But you can I guess. Fuck it he doesnât know who I am anyway. I wrote him a letter and he probably still thinks Iâm a fucking wanker. So be it.â
MOVING ON
There are three covers on Grace, one of which is Leonard Cohenâs âHallelujahâ, a favourite in Jeffâs live shows.
âAny of the covers on the album are there because they mean a certain thing in my life that I love and I miss. One day I was house-sitting for a friend and she left her whiskey out and I got into it and hit this horrible sorrowful jag. I went to the gig - SinĂ, in fact â weeping like a fucking animal. The whole time. I sang âHallelujahâ that night and I got through the show just on the edge of tears. I donât know why. It just wells up inside you.
âI recorded âCorpus Christiâ because my friend Roy, who I met in high-school, introduced me to opera and turned me on to classical music. But our lives are going in separate directions now mostly because Iâm a flake. And I like âLilac Wineâ because of Nina Simone. I learnt it from Nina not Elkie Brooks. âLilac Wineâ was a great âfuck youâ to everyone for me.
âIn fact, Grace is a lot about leaving things behind. Letting them live on their own and moving on to other things. As well as that, Duke Ellington was very elegant, the kind of elegance that transcends any kind of ugliness. Thatâs why I like the word âgraceâ. Itâs the only thing that matters.â
Do you feel that because youâre the son of a great singer, namely Tim Buckley, that you have to be better, to prove to people that youâre here on your own merits?
âAll I have to do is be myself. This is my past. This is my thing. I have no reverence, knowledge, want, desire, relationship, connection, object in it. I was done with it before I was born. I have my motherâs sense of rhythm. I know all my momâs songs. My mother brought me up, musically.â
No comments:
Post a Comment