Jeff Buckley 1993-??-??
New York Garbage Can Tape, New York, NY
Set 1
Parchman Farm Blues (Bukka White)
If You See Her, Say Hello (Dylan)
I Know It’s Over (Morrissey/Marr)
Hallelujah (Cohen)
Killing Time [version 1] (Sioux/Budgie)
Madame George (Van Morrison)
Killing time [version 2] (Sioux/Budgie)
If You See Her, Say Hello (Dylan)
I Know It’s Over (Morrissey/Marr)
Hallelujah (Cohen)
Killing Time [version 1] (Sioux/Budgie)
Madame George (Van Morrison)
Killing time [version 2] (Sioux/Budgie)
Set 2
Set 3
Comment
Track 1: "Parchman Farm Blues" composed by Bukka White, his recording dates from 1940.
Track 2: "If You See Her, Say Hello" from Bob Dylan's 1975 album Blood on the Tracks.
Track 3: "I Know It's Over" from the Smiths' 1986 album The Queen is Dead.
Track 4: "Hallelujah" from Leonard Cohen's 1984 album Various Positions.
Track 5: "Killing Time" [version 1] from the Creatures' 1989 album Boomerang.
Track 6: "Madame George" from Van Morrison's 1968 album Astral Weeks.
Track 7: "Killing Time" [version 2] as per track 5. Features an unknown drummer (at 2:08 Jeff requests for the tempo to be lifted: "Bit faster baby")
Sometime during fall of 1996, East Village resident Barry Paddock was walking down 2nd Ave. At 12th Street he spotted a pile of cassette tapes left on top of a garbage dumpster. Curious, he decided to sift through he tapes to see if there was anything worthwhile. Most of the tapes were pre-recorded stuff like the Beastie Boys, which he didn’t particularly care for but one tape he found was a blank tape with a hand written label that read “J. Buckley Stuffâ€. Barry saved that tape from the trash and took it home.
Track 2: "If You See Her, Say Hello" from Bob Dylan's 1975 album Blood on the Tracks.
Track 3: "I Know It's Over" from the Smiths' 1986 album The Queen is Dead.
Track 4: "Hallelujah" from Leonard Cohen's 1984 album Various Positions.
Track 5: "Killing Time" [version 1] from the Creatures' 1989 album Boomerang.
Track 6: "Madame George" from Van Morrison's 1968 album Astral Weeks.
Track 7: "Killing Time" [version 2] as per track 5. Features an unknown drummer (at 2:08 Jeff requests for the tempo to be lifted: "Bit faster baby")
Sometime during fall of 1996, East Village resident Barry Paddock was walking down 2nd Ave. At 12th Street he spotted a pile of cassette tapes left on top of a garbage dumpster. Curious, he decided to sift through he tapes to see if there was anything worthwhile. Most of the tapes were pre-recorded stuff like the Beastie Boys, which he didn’t particularly care for but one tape he found was a blank tape with a hand written label that read “J. Buckley Stuffâ€. Barry saved that tape from the trash and took it home.
Sources
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Created At
Sun Feb 17 2013 20:58:16 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)
Updated At
Mon Sep 03 2001 13:40:45 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)
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