Album Review: Jeff Buckley - You and I
If you were to make a list of things that were deemed
necessary in 2016, what would be on it?
If you were to say a collection of demo recordings of Jeff
Buckley singing cover songs, I would tell you to stop reading this review right
now.
Arriving 19 years after his death, and probably 23 years (or
more) after they were committed to tape, You
and I is precisely just that—a collection of demo recordings of Jeff
Buckley singing cover songs.
It is also a terrible cash grab on behalf of some suit at
Columbia Records.
Cobbling together a diverse mix of songs, one thing You and I does is it shows Buckley’s
wide range of influences—including Bob Dylan, The Smiths, Led Zepplin, and Sly
and The Family Stone.
And sure, why not throw a very early recording of Buckley’s
own “Grace” in for good measure, too.
Another thing You and
I does is it, of course, shows of Buckley’s legendary and impressive vocal
range—the guy could wail, even when he’s stuck singing somebody else’s
songs—that’s evident on the soul he pours into the refrain of “Everyday
People,” and on Jevetta Steele’s “Calling You,” as well as in the Morrissey-esq
gusto he layers on in “The Boy With The Thorn in His Side,” one of two Smiths
covers to appear in this ten song collection.
Stripped of all the studio trappings of his debut album Grace, You and I also, inadvertently, allows the listener to be clued into
what a great guitar player Jeff Buckely was—something that is evident in the
frenetic virtuosity he displays on “Grace” as well as in the choppy rhythms he
creates on “Night Flight” and “Everyday People.”
One thing You and I does
not do, however, is earn its place
among Buckley’s esteemed, albeit short, canon.
With a release like this, arriving so many years after
Buckley’s untimely passing in 1997, one has to wonder what, exactly, is the
point of something like this? Who is the intended audience of You and I? Is it the Jeff Buckley
completest? Are there such people? And if there are such people, is this the
kind of thing that they want to hear
in 2016?
Something like this could have been released a year or two
after his death—that kind of thing is expected, really. But not nearly 20 years
later. It’s the kind of move that makes little to no sense given the content of
You and I. It’s not a long lost
album. It’s not even recently unearthed demos of original songs. It’s a collection of cover songs.
Much like another recently released posthumous collection, You and I is an incredibly underwhelming
affair and to say it leaves much to be desired is an understatement. For the
hardcore Buckley fans of the world, and for those who haven’t grown weary of
hearing his rendition of “Hallelujah,” I’d say it’s worth one listen before you
move along to something else.
You and I is out on March 11, via Columbia.
You and I is out on March 11, via Columbia.
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