R.I.P. JEFF! Grace - albumul ce l-am postat cu doua pagini in urma ramane albumul meu preferat all time,
dar cam tot ce a scos e

, asa ca m-am gandit sa urc toate materialele ce le am:
Jeff Buckley - Sketches For My Sweetheart The Drunk
Disc 1
1. The Sky Is A Landfill
2. Everybody Here Wants You
3. Opened Once
4. Nightmares By The Sea
5. Yard Of Blonde Girls
6. Witches' Rave
7. New Year's Prayer
8. Morning Theft
9. Vancouver
10. You & I
Disc 2
1. Nightmares By The Sea
2. New Year's Prayer
3. Haven't You Heard
4. I Know We Could Be So Happy Baby (If We Wanted To Be)
5. Murder Suicide Meteor Slave
6. Back In N.Y.C.
7. Demon John
8. Your Flesh Is So Nice
9. Jewel Box
10. Satisfied Mind
Assuming that I've heard correctly, this CD was compiled and released following Buckley's untimely death and that probably explains why the recordings have a certain rough feel to them at times. But no matter -- the unpolished production is actually perfect for Buckley's moody style. Jeff Buckley was one of those all-too rare artists whose power as a musician came not from slick producers but instead from the mournful yet exhilirating sound of his own voice. Though he died without acheiving the success that he deserved, Buckley had that most elusive of qualities -- a natural born charisma. He had one of those voices that could automtically posess the mind of the listener and that charisma comes through even in the most unpolished of recordings. Whenever I hear this unpolished album, its easy to imagine being in some obscure club and discovering, for the first time, a truly great talent with all the promise in the world ahead of him -- its the type of exhilirating feeling that I think everyone hopes to possess whenever they see some unknown band take the stage.
This is one of those CDs that to which I find myself continually drawn and its rare that a day goes by that I don't listen to at least one or two songs from it. Especially when one considers Buckley's eventual fate, the songs on this album have a certain fatalism on them. As a friend of mine put it, "It has a real drowning quality to it." I don't know if I'd go that far but the music is truly haunting as is Buckley's voice, its amazing range thankfully preserved here. Among the songs themselves, my personal favorites are the three that start off the second disk -- Nightmare by the Sea, New Year's Prayer, and especially Haven't You Heard. After the mournfully fatalistic feel of that first two songs, Haven't You Heard serves as a powerful remainder that Buckley was more than an obscure, moody folkie. Haven't You Heard, to me, stands as proof that Jeff Buckley was -- for lack of a less stereotypical term -- a true rock star. Unfortunately, that was a destiny he wouldn't get to witness for himself.
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Jeff Buckley - Live at Sin-é
Disc 1
1 Be Your Husband 4:55
2 Lover, You Should've Come Over 9:25
3 Mojo Pin 5:37
4 Monologue - Duane Eddy, Songs for Lovers 1:18
5 Grace 6:49
6 Monologue - Reverb, The Doors 1:40
7 Strange Fruit 7:43
8 Night Flight 6:40
9 If You Knew 4:28
10 Monologue - Fabulous Time for a Guinness 0:40
11 Unforgiven (Last Goodbye) 5:36
12 Twelfth of Never 3:35
13 Monologue - Café Days 0:15
14 Monologue - Eternal Life 0:36
15 Eternal Life 5:51
16 Just Like a Woman 7:26
17 Monologue - False Start, Apology, Miles Davis 1:03
18 Calling You 5:49
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Disc 2
1 Monologue - Nusrat, He's My Elvis 3:13
2 Yeh Jo Halka Halka Saroor Hai 6:09
3 Monologue - I'm a Ridiculous Person 0:39
4 If You See Her, Say Hello 8:18
5 Monologue - Matt Dillon, Hollies, Classic Rock Radio 1:33
6 Dink's Song 11:14
7 Monologue - Musical Chairs 1:09
8 Drown in My Own Tears 4:11
9 Monologue - The Suckiest Water 0:08
10 The Way Young Lovers Do 10:06
11 Monologue - Walk Through Walls 0:26
12 Je N'en Connais Pas La Fin 5:02
13 I Shall Be Released 5:21
14 Sweet Thing 10:36
15 Monologue - Sweet Thing 0:16
16 Hallelujah 9:15
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Jeff Buckley was much more than the tragic rock god he has become. He was a soul singer who incorporated a passion for the blues and jazz into his folky brand of rock music. No Buckley release since his death in 1997 has captured this soulful essence the way his 1993 EP, Live At Sin-é, did (and does). Reissued by Legacy Recordings with an additional 17 tracks, Live At Sin-é, in its new form, is what 2000's Mystery White Boy (and the second disc of Sketches: For My Sweetheart The Drunk, for that matter) should have been: a private yet very public glimpse into the evolution of one of the most promising artists of the '90s. The album captures the folk movement of the East Village that was still flourishing in the early part of the decade—it's an artifact left over from when there were more artists on St. Mark's than fast food joints. The performances found here—recorded at the Sin-é Café in the summer of 1993—find Buckley disarmed, challenged, inspired and, above all, graceful. Only a handful of songs on the album are original compositions ("Mojo Pin" and "Eternal Life," both of which appeared on the original release, along with "Grace" and an early version of "Last Goodbye"), but the covers Buckley chose to perform seem tailor-made for him. He makes Dylan his own ("Just Like A Woman," "I Shall Be Released") and even manages to fit his little white-boy feet into Billy and Nina's shoes ("Strange Fruit," "Twelfth Of Never"). And, of course, there's Leonard Cohen's "Hallelujah," a song he transformed into something wholly unique on his landmark full-length debut Grace. The listening experience is at once disturbing and comforting—the double-disc set includes many amusing interludes, one of which is an impromptu impersonation of Jim Morrison while another nods to one of Buckley's contemporaries, Kurt Cobain. For fans of Buckley (both casual and hardcore), this new version of Live At Sin-é will be nothing short of a treasure. The album's liner notes read: "He was the Montgomery Clift of singer-songwriters, beautiful and bruised, struggling so hard to communicate you could feel it." One might call communication you can feel "music." And Live At Sin-é is beautiful communication indeed.
Jeff Buckley - Mystery White Boy (Live Album)
1. Dream Brother (Live) 8:50
2. I Woke Up in a Strange Place (Live) 5:05
3. Mojo Pin (Live) 6:06
4. Lilac Wine (Live) 5:19
5. What Will You Say (Live) 7:35
6. Last Goodbye (Live) 4:58
7. Eternal Life (Live) 5:58
8. Grace (Live) 5:39
9. Moodswing Whiskey (Live) 5:36
10. The Man That Got Away (Live) 3:47
11. Kanga Roo (Live) 10:23
12. Hallelujah/I Know It's Over (Medley) (Live)
Mystery White Boy, culled from Jeff Buckley's eight-month world tour of the same name, is not just another live album blighted by whoops and catcalls. Such was the reverence granted the ill-starred singer-songwriter's electrifying confessionals that hardly a whimper issues from the audience in 78 minutes--not, at least, until each gargantuan heart-and-soul epic ends. Buckley treated music like it was Shakespearean tragedy, and that grandiosity makes the live "Grace" and "Mojo Pin" at least the equal of their recorded counterparts. The gems, though, are the cover versions found here--especially a closing nine-minute rendition of Leonard Cohen's "Hallelujah" that lurches into a whispered chorus of the Smiths' "I Know It's Over." Ultimately, this posthumous collection is utterly captivating. --Louis Pattison
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you just never know when you're living in a golden age.