Is jeff buckley gay
Jeff Buckley? No thank you
Twelve years ago, on a balmy, blissful summer's afternoon at my very first Glastonbury, I fell in love, just like so many others did, with Jeff Buckley. Like the Lilac Wine he sang about on his first album, Grace, I was young, sweet and heady, and he caught me at the right moment, my heart having been bruised half an hour earlier by my darling Evan Dando, who had failed to turn up for his set at the Acoustic Stage because of "exhaustion". Tears misting in my cidery eyes, I wandered idly past the Pyramid Stage on my way back to a warm tent and a cold can, and there he was - this beautiful man in a beige shirt, his fringe falling onto his perfect forehead, his guitar strap held on by black masking tape, parting his beautiful lips, starting to sing. And lo, our romance began. Just like Pulp on that day in June , I lost an key part of my mind somewhere in a field in Wiltshire.
Twelve years later, and ten years to the week after his mythical death in the Mississippi River, plenty of people still have that sweet, heady love for Jeff Buc
Random questions.
I've been reading up on the guy a lot, in the three weeks that I've been consciously aware of his existence. But there are a few things I can't seem to uncover answers to by googling. Hopefully someone here knows.
1: The book Trailblazers the Tragic Lives Is the stuff it says about Jeff considered trustworthy at all? I don't tend if he was pansexual, but the exerpt I read sounded a lot like some sort of slash-fic. Like something the writer wishes happened. He claims Matt and Mick disliked each other, and that Jeff had a non-sexual love relationship with either Matt or Michael. Oh, and apparently Jeff made out with Keith a few minutes before he died, which he claims is from an interview with Mary G. He said plenty worse too. It has horrible ratings on Amazon.
2: How accepted is the theory that SMeyer based Edward's appearance on Jeff? As painful as it is to contemplate, talented people often inspire less talented people, and then stuff like Legolas by Laura happens. Or possibly Twilight. (Eddiekins is described as being &qu
Inger Lorre and Jeff Buckley their story
INGER LORRE by Victor Mejia I first spoke to Inger Lorre eight years ago. It was right after the planned overdose of her fiancee and soon before the demise of the Nymphs. We spoke for four days and I possess never felt so inspired speaking to another human existence in my life. Inger is so honest about things and has an infinite amount of emotional depth. She also has a pension for suffering. When the band broke up, she returned to art school, but finally after all this time she is back and I feel incredibly fortunate to have spoken with her. Adversity has given her strength. -PART ONE- I’ve been courteous of waiting for this to be able to speak to you again. I talked to you a drawn-out long time ago. One day you had to depart early to depart to the metropolis (New York) to get your eyebrow pierced. That was a long extended time ago You got a lot of the reality then, because that’s when I was like “fuck everything.” We talked about Courtney (Love) when we spoke way back then. And I talked to (Falling) James about her as adequately. That’s her ex-husband. She won’t admi
One of the greatest love songs ever made is one that was never supposed to be heard. Thrilling, isn’t it? During their brief yet intense passion sometime between , Jeff Buckley and the Cocteau Twins’ Elizabeth Fraser crafted their heavenly duet, “All Flowers in Time Angle Towards the Sun.” It was leaked after Buckley’s sudden death in , and Liz, understandably so, despises this. “Why execute people have to hear everything?” she vented in a scarce interview with The Guardian. “It’s unfinished… I don’t want it to be heard.”
It feels so deeply wrong to betray Liz and violate her privacy like this, especially after everything she’s given us. But the story behind “All Flowers in Time,” the story of Jeff Buckley and Elizabeth Fraser, is one of tenderness and tragedy–so rare yet so sincere that it’s bound to restore wish where it’s been lost, and then break your silly short-lived heart all over again.
Jeff Buckley was born in southern California in November of Though he was estranged from his biological father, the jazz/folk/rock artist Tim Buckley, he inherited his versatile singing voice (a