November 27, 2002 |
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Extreme Measures
by j.h. tompkins
IT WAS JUNE 1993, singer-songwriter Jeff Buckley had just drowned
in the Mississippi, a Muni bus rolled down Divisadero near Turk. The
young man wearing a white shirt, black slacks, and brown cordovans
I made him for a Morman sat down next to me, tapped my shoulder,
and asked if I knew about the accident. I nodded in his direction. "Don't
believe everything you hear," he said gravely.
I'm a magnet for lunatics and have learned not to flinch.
He mistook my courage for interest. "What was the name of Tim's
second album?" he asked. It wasn't a question. "Goodbye
and Hello, that's what. Coming and going. Death and life. Jeff Buckley
is a manifestation of Tim, an astral projection. Together they live."
Tim for those who don't know was Tim Buckley, Jeff's father,
a '60s-era singer-songwriter whose commercial failure and 1975 heroin
overdose ensured an eternity of cult worship. And if you're new to the
notion of astral projection, imagine telecommuting, but without a computer.
You'd know this if you'd ditch the SUV for Muni, where the core ridership
seekers, believers, the blessed, and the damned experience
and explain cosmic weirdness all the time. The kid clammed up, and I
considered the moment: an artist with but one EP and album under
his belt was dead, a cult figure born. I didn't anticipate the
mercenary strip-mining of Buckley's work that followed, but I knew he'd
be around: death rivals sex as a marketing tool.
Tragedy, talent, and obscurity are a prescription for rock romance
that births little-known heroes whose invisibility safe from
profit junkies, media hags, and marauding armies of fans (cults depend
on exclusivity) offers intrigue and at least the illusion of
control. Deceased British folkie Nick Drake epitomized the cult artist,
until he rode a VW commercial to stardom some 20 years A.D. Faithful
hearts were broken as a horde of claim-jumpers under the spell
of his lovely "Pink Moon" hopped onboard. Infuriated Drake
purists moaned about artistic intent and a misunderstanding of "the
real Nick Drake," as if time could stand still and reality was
fixed forever. But pop music is as much about context as it is about
sound, and the world had turned. Drake 1.0 was simply upgraded by later
versions.
A dip in the Big Muddy will work some magic, as well, turning casual
fans into a devoted flock and, this week, floating more Buckley remains:
The Grace EPs, an almost biblical stretching of his small body
of satisfying work. The Buckley cult has mushroomed since his death,
driven by his strange, posthumous career. His legacy as an artist has
been shaped by an estate and record label whose interests begin and
end at the bank, but if it bothers the flock, they aren't complaining.
"I taught him how to swim," my friend Eduardo said last week
when I asked what he knew about Buckley Jr. Eduardo had dropped by to
loot my record collection and show off the vintage 1974 Adidas, white
with three red stripes, that he'd recently scored on eBay. "Hey,
$230," he crowed. "Hadn't been worn in years." I'm not
into secondhand shoes call it an anti-foot fetish and
said so.
"That's why you're you and I'm me," he said pointedly. "This
any good?" He waved a copy of Iron Butterfly's In-a-Gadda-Da-Vida
in my direction. "I think you had to be there," I told him.
That's a lie, of course, but I was thinking about the Adidas I once
owned the same model collateral damage in a war waged
by an ex-wife to erase my past. Reality is flexible, and Eduardo's take
on In-a-Gadda-Da-Vida would be no less valid than mine
although calling so stunted an album mediocre should be a criminal offense.
Eduardo was born in 1970, two years after the record was released. As
far as he's concerned 1968 is just part of the historical
blur, not much different than 1776. "I just like old stuff,"
he explained. "It's new."
No surprise, then, that Eduardo likes Tim Buckley. "Can you buy
yellow contact lenses?" he once asked. He was referring to Buckley's
glowing iris on the cover of Goodbye and Hello. The album was
DOA in 1967, but for once Eduardo and I were on the same page; Buckley
looks fabulous. He was cool back in the day, although few people bought
his albums. His song "Morning Glory," rumored (in my neighborhood)
to have been inspired by the psychoactive properties of morning glory
seeds, prompted my sister and me to soften eight packs in boiling water
to better spread them onto peanut butter and jelly sandwiches. We ate
and before long found ourselves alone in a buzzing, rippling, oozing
universe where we remained for seven hours, minds racing, muscles cramping,
and stomachs heaving. I've stayed away from PB&J and Buckley zealots
since.
The late '60s, when Buckley Sr. emerged, were littered with memorable
moments, some heroic, others heroically stupid. That those days live
differently in the memories of veteranos those whose brain cells
still work and those of anyone born later, is a blessing. The
facts of history are boring, limited by actual events. After the fact,
however, facts offer a kind of fictional flexibility, adding luminous
possibility to daily life. Eduardo's $230, 30-year-old shoes are theatrical
props in an ongoing one-man show; mine, limited by the narrow boundaries
of my life, were just shoes. The years have stolen the psychedelic imperative
that lurked in Tim Buckley's eye, replacing it with a safer, more earthbound
mystery. And Jeff has released more material since he slipped into the
river than he did high and dry. Time only seems like a one-way street;
in pop music anyway, no one really dies.
E-mail J.H. Tompkins at tommy@sfbg.com.
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