Grace

Jeff Buckley

Sale - Sale price $31.99 CAD Regular price
Regular price $31.99 CAD
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Description

"Grace" is the debut and only studio album released during Jeff Buckley's lifetime, recorded at Bearsville Studios in Woodstock, New York and released in August 1994 on Columbia Records. Produced by Andy Wallace — known for his work on Nirvana's "Nevermind" — alongside Buckley himself, the album arrived with relatively modest commercial impact at the time of its release but has since undergone one of the most remarkable critical reappraisals in modern music history, now routinely appearing near the top of lists ranking the greatest albums ever made. Buckley assembled a tight band for the record — guitarist Michael Tighe, bassist Mick Grondahl, and drummer Matt Johnson — and the four musicians recorded much of the album live off the floor, capturing an organic, spontaneous energy that studio overdubbing alone could never have manufactured. The sound is dense, layered, and emotionally overwhelming, drawing on an extraordinarily wide range of influences including rock, folk, soul, gospel, flamenco, and avant-garde music.

The album's centrepiece and most enduring legacy is Buckley's devastating interpretation of Leonard Cohen's "Hallelujah," a performance so definitive that it has effectively become the standard version of the song for most contemporary listeners, eclipsing Cohen's own recording in popular consciousness. Beyond that singular achievement, "Grace" contains a remarkable collection of original songwriting — "Last Goodbye," "Lover, You Should've Come Over," and the ferocious title track all demonstrate Buckley's extraordinary range as both a composer and vocalist. His voice remains the album's most astonishing element: a four-octave instrument of almost supernatural flexibility and emotional expressiveness, capable of moving from a barely audible whisper to a full-throated wail within a single phrase. The album also includes striking covers of Benjamin Britten's "Corpus Christi Carol" and the traditional "Lilac Wine," each transformed entirely by Buckley's interpretive genius.

Details
detail icon barcode
Barcode :
0199584332895
detail icon publisher
Publisher :
Columbia / Legacy
detail icon genre
Genre :
Folk
Product Dimensions
detail icon width
Length x Width x Height :
6 x 5.2 x 0.5 in
detail icon weight
Weight :
90 g

Grace

Jeff Buckley

Sale - Sale price $31.99 CAD Regular price
Regular price $31.99 CAD
Sold Out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Description

"Grace" is the debut and only studio album released during Jeff Buckley's lifetime, recorded at Bearsville Studios in Woodstock, New York and released in August 1994 on Columbia Records. Produced by Andy Wallace — known for his work on Nirvana's "Nevermind" — alongside Buckley himself, the album arrived with relatively modest commercial impact at the time of its release but has since undergone one of the most remarkable critical reappraisals in modern music history, now routinely appearing near the top of lists ranking the greatest albums ever made. Buckley assembled a tight band for the record — guitarist Michael Tighe, bassist Mick Grondahl, and drummer Matt Johnson — and the four musicians recorded much of the album live off the floor, capturing an organic, spontaneous energy that studio overdubbing alone could never have manufactured. The sound is dense, layered, and emotionally overwhelming, drawing on an extraordinarily wide range of influences including rock, folk, soul, gospel, flamenco, and avant-garde music.

The album's centrepiece and most enduring legacy is Buckley's devastating interpretation of Leonard Cohen's "Hallelujah," a performance so definitive that it has effectively become the standard version of the song for most contemporary listeners, eclipsing Cohen's own recording in popular consciousness. Beyond that singular achievement, "Grace" contains a remarkable collection of original songwriting — "Last Goodbye," "Lover, You Should've Come Over," and the ferocious title track all demonstrate Buckley's extraordinary range as both a composer and vocalist. His voice remains the album's most astonishing element: a four-octave instrument of almost supernatural flexibility and emotional expressiveness, capable of moving from a barely audible whisper to a full-throated wail within a single phrase. The album also includes striking covers of Benjamin Britten's "Corpus Christi Carol" and the traditional "Lilac Wine," each transformed entirely by Buckley's interpretive genius.

  • Blu-ray