tim was 22 years old here. can you imagine? barely into his twenties and already making music that few artists outside of jazz could ever hope to come close to touching. this is quite different from the album version of "come here woman", so i think it's safe to say a healthy amount of improvisation was involved in the performance. the fact that "starsailor" hasn't been remastered and re-released is nothing short of criminal. it's one of the most fearlessly original albums ever made by anyone.
Luckily the "Complete Albums" box came out recently, so you can pick up everything by him, individually packaged, from his debut to "Greetings from L.A." in one package!
Definitely one of the most fearlessly original albums ever made by anyone... He was a genius I think, the inventiveness on that album is surprising to listen to even now.
Once Upon a Time Long Ago In a far away land were people that played and listened experiencing music live in public as well as on Television. It was a time when looks like brown sweaters were superfluous to the real reason they were there. It looks like a very good quality wool. In those times musicians could play,sing, and not need autotunes or added enhancements. It was called REAL, REAL feel,soul ,musicianship. No fast fashion and polyester shiney bling. The music was enough. Everybody was content and brown sweaters were irrelevant. This was Cool and unpretentious. Real talent didn't need flashy distraction to be called music. If only you were listening with your ears not eyesight. Sad ending . Ah boohoo for you child.☮️😥🤬😫☠️🔥💦
@@kolnidur_ his son was better he's in the top 500 rolling stones best singers I think Tim buckely is on there (maybe) but he's lower on the list. Jeff is 168. On the list.
I had the great joy to see Timmy twice live in concert. Once at UMBC outside of Baltimore, 1968 i think, and in Richmond at VCU-1970 or so, if my memory serves me well. Both times i was so blown away we all just sat shocked at how great he was. we cried like babies when he died
Jeff may have denied Tim, but at a genetic level he had no choice. Jeff's mom must have been very high rate too, like Tim's. Thirty five years later I'm still blown away by Tim, and Jeff's music has always fascinated me because of the inate vocal similarity to his Dad. They were a gift to the world spanning two generations.
Oh man, Tim was a jazzy dude equal to Miles Davis. They were both so cool it took twenty years to see how great they were, still are. I like it a lot, thanks.
@@briannemeth3296i mean, In A Silent Way was one of tims biggest influences during this era, it was one of the few records he actually owned because he was broke
this is true jazz -blues.He didnt even concider himself or labeled him as '''jazz'' musician and he was creative as hell....In adition with nowdays posh jazz loby..... Come on ....Fucking genius,creative and hamble...Sits and dress hamble like a middle class casual person with a simple acoustic guitar...Damn dope and true...
if u like4 this u will like any of his last 3 albums. greetings from la sefronia look at the fool however i luv his middle 3 albums and enjoy his first 3. and i luv his kid,what a gift he was to us old buckley fans.
you can tell the influence he would have on later experimental musicians like Sonic Youth and such. He really gave popular rock music a kick in the ass.
Thank you for posting this footage, which documents my favourite phase of Tim's career (the smack-addled bit.) This is simply priceless, even if his sweater does need a wash..."Come Here Woman"?..."Come Hither & Attend To My Laundry", more like...I love his T.V. interview where he has a dig at the oil guzzlin' squares, man!
Amazing footage, thank you. Hard to say which version's BETTER, the album or this....I think it's cool that the album version seems as intuitive as this one does, just more instruments.
Yes. Yes. Yes. This performance let's me imagine what he must be like doing Sweet Surrender. Since Sweet Surrender doesn't seem to be available. This does nicely.
@wipers86 My understanding is that he had an F-212XL or F-412 early on and then had Guild make a custom model with some enhancements. There's some discussion of it in Lee Underwood's book (Tim's lead guitarist) if you want to know more... I don't remember all the details. Tim also sometimes played a Fender Electric XII (as on the Whistle Test videos). He had some sweet f---ing 12-strings, for sure.
@katalukon Just a flat pick and incredible stamina. You can't see the pick, but his hand movements are the tip off, and at some points he repositions it between verses. He did use finger and thumbpicks sometimes, just not here.
It's funny, I always found it hard to believe Jeff would ever have been influenced by Tim, but after watching this video, it's hard to believe Jeff could've never seen this and looked up to him... even down the way he moves his head when hitting the high notes is so similar
Many many thanks ! I never thought I could watch this. Good version, good quality recording, Tim, Starsailor period... Incredible. I wonder if other songs from this show have been recorded. Do you know, laupsek ?
yeah, I noticed that too, it kinda sounds like the drummer got really carried away and was trying to find his way home and if the drummer is lost everyone is
@b0lly Actually, I'd have to dispute that if you count the Cardigan that Kurt Cobain rocked during the Nirvana unplugged performance. Nobody beats Buckley, but it has to be a tie.
What happened to his sweater? Did he go swimming in a hot spring in it? And those high faces he's making are amazing! lol I need to try whatever he's on for myself. Though I really love the bass players pants.
Some movie director should really think about getting James Franco to portray him in a film because he looks somewhat like Tim Buckley, at least i see it.
wow u really destroyed "findingusernamesucks" i figure that he was just sayin and letting himself let carried away until he found this wall haha and he never saw it comin... nice review on tim's voice btw
jeff's interest and influences were much more wide ranging from Qwallii=sufi music from Pakistan to Purcells operatic aria Dido's lament to Led Zepplin and Bob Dylan. So much more I perferred the son but the father was interesting and original.
tim was 22 years old here. can you imagine? barely into his twenties and already making music that few artists outside of jazz could ever hope to come close to touching. this is quite different from the album version of "come here woman", so i think it's safe to say a healthy amount of improvisation was involved in the performance. the fact that "starsailor" hasn't been remastered and re-released is nothing short of criminal. it's one of the most fearlessly original albums ever made by anyone.
Luckily the "Complete Albums" box came out recently, so you can pick up everything by him, individually packaged, from his debut to "Greetings from L.A." in one package!
Definitely one of the most fearlessly original albums ever made by anyone... He was a genius I think, the inventiveness on that album is surprising to listen to even now.
Very few artists inside of jazz touch this
He was pure genius
I think Starsailor has continually been in print on vinyl
this is the hardest anybody has rocked while wearing a brown sweater.
Joyce
I laughed so hard
I think this sweater was hand made by Mary,mother of his beautiful son,jeff.
Jeff mangum has entered the chat
Once Upon a Time Long Ago In a far away land were people that played and listened experiencing music live in public as well as on Television. It was a time when looks like brown sweaters were superfluous to the real reason they were there. It looks like a very good quality wool. In those times musicians could play,sing, and not need autotunes or added enhancements. It was called REAL, REAL feel,soul ,musicianship. No fast fashion and polyester shiney bling. The music was enough. Everybody was content and brown sweaters were irrelevant. This was Cool and unpretentious. Real talent didn't need flashy distraction to be called music. If only you were listening with your ears not eyesight. Sad ending . Ah boohoo for you child.☮️😥🤬😫☠️🔥💦
artistic courage and originality,criminally underrated.
This guy has one of the most badass voices ever.
That main riff is such a banger. I've had it in my head for weeks now. Tim was so ahead of his time
Please elaborate. THanks. WHich riff
@@alongalostaway Likely 3:02
To this day - way ahead of its time
idk free jazz was the 60s and Trout Mask Replica was 1969
There'll never be another one like him...
He Had A Son (?)
@@alongalostaway not even close
@@kolnidur_ his son was better he's in the top 500 rolling stones best singers I think Tim buckely is on there (maybe) but he's lower on the list. Jeff is 168. On the list.
@@husseymangtv i sure hope you're trolling here
@@kolnidur_ why compare them while they both were extremely good musicians with different styles despite some similarities in their vocals.
I had the great joy to see Timmy twice live in concert. Once at UMBC outside of Baltimore, 1968 i think, and in Richmond at VCU-1970 or so, if my memory serves me well. Both times i was so blown away we all just sat shocked at how great he was. we cried like babies when he died
big bang, universe, milky way, solar system, earth, this gentleman playing the drums.
Jeff may have denied Tim, but at a genetic level he had no choice. Jeff's mom must have been very high rate too, like Tim's. Thirty five years later I'm still blown away by Tim, and Jeff's music has always fascinated me because of the inate vocal similarity to his Dad. They were a gift to the world spanning two generations.
Jeff once said, when accused of stealing material from Tim, "The only thing I ever stole from my father was a fleeting glimpse."
Oh man, Tim was a jazzy dude equal to Miles Davis. They were both so cool it took twenty years to see how great they were, still are. I like it a lot, thanks.
Miles? 😆
More Coltrane than Miles, but I can dig it
@@briannemeth3296i mean, In A Silent Way was one of tims biggest influences during this era, it was one of the few records he actually owned because he was broke
That's where jeff gets his good looks and beautiful talent from ... Although jeff didn't grow up with tim he made his own unique vibe
The Greatest Voice Ever...🔥🔥🔥
The most beautiful voice - according Jacques Brel.
All I can say is ICON
Wow, mind blown
this is true jazz -blues.He didnt even concider himself or labeled him as '''jazz'' musician and he was creative as hell....In adition with nowdays posh jazz loby..... Come on ....Fucking genius,creative and hamble...Sits and dress hamble like a middle class casual person with a simple acoustic guitar...Damn dope and true...
This angelic face astonishes you with such a beautiful Song...
GENIUS
2:58 ‘’I’m the king and I know it’’ face...
Tim I LOVE U!!
if u like4 this u will like any of his last 3 albums.
greetings from la
sefronia
look at the fool
however i luv his middle 3 albums
and enjoy his first 3.
and i luv his kid,what a gift he was to us old buckley fans.
Sefronia is the business!
OMG!! LOVE HIS VOICE!!!
what a voice!
look at that sweater man
Well said...Glad to be in the company of fellow "Tim" followers
when Tim screams, it reminds me of his own son, Jeff. I'm glad his talent passed through to him.
Intense and brilliant!!!
Amazing
you can tell the influence he would have on later experimental musicians like Sonic Youth and such. He really gave popular rock music a kick in the ass.
Amazing!
the Legend of tim. cheers X
Awesome! ❤
O Maradona da música norte-americana...
Genial❗️
superb
he went to places not on any map.
Error 404 ,tim just Left space and time. To find MamA
Thank you for posting this footage, which documents my favourite phase of Tim's career (the smack-addled bit.) This is simply priceless, even if his sweater does need a wash..."Come Here Woman"?..."Come Hither & Attend To My Laundry", more like...I love his T.V. interview where he has a dig at the oil guzzlin' squares, man!
WoW!!!
COME HERE WOMAN
holy jesus. so this is where jeff gets it from!
Heard this on on Rutgers radio the other day. Don't know what channel but the whole channel was great.
damn man i didn't realize till now how much tim and jeff sound a like vocal wise that is.
You got to admit, the big band element ie brass, made this special
No body does brass these days sadly, no horns or sax
perfect!!
Amazing footage, thank you. Hard to say which version's BETTER, the album or this....I think it's cool that the album version seems as intuitive as this one does, just more instruments.
Any muso’s out there that can tell me Tim’s tuning? I reckon drop D or open D but I’m not sure.
I LOVE this song & performance ♥️
Cheers
Yes. Yes. Yes. This performance let's me imagine what he must be like doing Sweet Surrender. Since Sweet Surrender doesn't seem to be available. This does nicely.
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
@VegaVelecka I prefer this version to the one on starsailor!
WOW
@wipers86 My understanding is that he had an F-212XL or F-412 early on and then had Guild make a custom model with some enhancements. There's some discussion of it in Lee Underwood's book (Tim's lead guitarist) if you want to know more... I don't remember all the details. Tim also sometimes played a Fender Electric XII (as on the Whistle Test videos). He had some sweet f---ing 12-strings, for sure.
Wow, I didn't know that Dwight Shrute's father played drums!
@katalukon Just a flat pick and incredible stamina. You can't see the pick, but his hand movements are the tip off, and at some points he repositions it between verses. He did use finger and thumbpicks sometimes, just not here.
Much better than the album version......probably because it’s in the funk style of Greetings from L.A., Sefronia and Look at the Fool
Tim is playing a Guild F512 12-string with double pickguard
(see why at 1:10 ) .
This is the top of the line model (with gold hardware).
It's funny, I always found it hard to believe Jeff would ever have been influenced by Tim, but after watching this video, it's hard to believe Jeff could've never seen this and looked up to him... even down the way he moves his head when hitting the high notes is so similar
Absolute genius.Jeff just inherited his genes.
yes... he look s about 80% the same....and 70%?? about voice...?
Many many thanks ! I never thought I could watch this. Good version, good quality recording, Tim, Starsailor period... Incredible.
I wonder if other songs from this show have been recorded. Do you know, laupsek ?
❤️🔝
He goes so deep into himself it makes me shake, too: " ... like a powder keg and giving off sparks ..."
Psychedelic drugs + alcohol + women + raw talent = Tim Buckley.
awesome, no one is better at what he does.
At 5:50 he's wearing a brown sweater but at 5:53 it's white! Only noticed because I've enjoyed this performance so many times.
Im sure his dad would of gladly given it to him anyway and been proud his son carried on his music
I just realized, his shirt was brown until a second before they were done, then it turned white.
That riff is so sexy. 5/4.
so enthralling... i just wish there were close-ups of lee underwood.
bien
That 12 string ❤❤❤❤
just wish his voice was mixed higher... great performance, catharsis!
6/29/1975-6/29/2024❤️😪🌹🌹
god it sounds so good until 5:04 and then it sounds so comically horrible holy shit
yeah, I noticed that too, it kinda sounds like the drummer got really carried away and was trying to find his way home and if the drummer is lost everyone is
It sounds good to me
Is that Lee Underwood on guitar?
The drummer makes me laugh.
but hes a hell of a drummer.
@@ricardogigante881 I'll say! He fucking kills it on "Monterey"!
it was called video editing years ago and probably still is.I,m changing my sweater as I type.
Bonkers smacky capable of genius
You couldn't be more wrong!! the trumpet is integral to this piece.
Him and Jeff were very alike, dnt ya tink...
@b0lly
Actually, I'd have to dispute that if you count the Cardigan that Kurt Cobain rocked during the Nirvana unplugged performance. Nobody beats Buckley, but it has to be a tie.
What happened to his sweater? Did he go swimming in a hot spring in it? And those high faces he's making are amazing! lol I need to try whatever he's on for myself. Though I really love the bass players pants.
Anybody know if there’s another recording of this version out there?
who made his swaeter?
That drummer is seriously the most ridiculously looking man I have ever seen.
Some movie director should really think about getting James Franco to portray him in a film because he looks somewhat like Tim Buckley, at least i see it.
I never new Jeff dad was a talented musician. Definite similarities
guitar Lee Underwood /John Balkin on bass / buzz gardner , trumpet .....drummer Art Tripp ? doesn´t look like Art..
Drummer is Maury Baker.
@TheSegalman what a great privilege...
Bunk Gardner, ex-Mothers of Invention is in the offending green sweater!
shamanic revery and a voyage flight
White man with black voice!
R.I.P. Tim
Looks a bit like John Marshall (soft machine)
wow u really destroyed "findingusernamesucks" i figure that he was just sayin and letting himself let carried away until he found this wall haha and he never saw it comin... nice review on tim's voice btw
I'm pretty sure I shouldn't of been born in 1995 :"D hahaha
Godo
Was not happening that night.
Perhaps Maury Baker?
jeff's interest and influences were much more wide ranging from Qwallii=sufi music from Pakistan to Purcells operatic aria Dido's lament to Led Zepplin and Bob Dylan. So much more I perferred the son but the father was interesting and original.
Sweater choice is forgiven MOI and Frank were a class act.
Not my type,but it's a good song...powerful