Though “I Know We Could Be So Happy (If We Wanted to Be)” is one of the rougher demos on Sketches for My Sweetheart the Drunk, it has all the marks of a classic Buckley track. Everything from the brooding, circling guitar riff to the fantastic yet melodramatic chorus rings true of the finer moments on Grace. – Dusty Henry 24. “You & I” From Sketches for My Sweetheart the Drunk The subtletly of “You & I” might be the most stirring part about it. The track seems to have more in common with a Gregorian chant than a rock track, with Buckley warbling over low and moody rumbling. It doesn’t sound like it belongs in the ‘90s, let alone the 20th century.
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– Dusty Henry 23. “Morning Theft” From Sketches for My Sweetheart the Drunk In reading this list, you’re going to read a lot about the almost preternaturally beautiful and unique pairing of Buckley’s vocals and guitar work. “Morning Theft” takes a proud place among the best examples of Buckley’s uniquely paired talents, but it also stands alone. Much of the praise Buckley earned was in reference to the artist’s tremendous range. “Morning Theft” is an example of a muted, gentle, and careful Buckley. His voice rests easily in the middle of his tenor range and his guitar work is elegantly strummed and never ostentatious. As the song’s deadly sad sentiment progresses, Buckley just barely stretches into his falsetto range, doing an incredible amount with just a little.
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Powerful Buckley at his most calm, composed, and confident. – Kristofer Lenz 22.
Play full-length songs from Sketches For My Sweetheart The Drunk by Jeff Buckley on your phone, computer and home audio system with Napster. An album by Jeff Buckley on Napster. Join now Log In. So Real: Songs from Jeff Buckley is a 'best of' compilation album of Jeff Buckley material, released on May 22, 2007. It reached #1 in the Irish Albums Chart and has also reached #26 in Australia. The album peaked at #16 in the UK, becoming Buckley's 3rd consecutive top 20 album and since the success of the top 3 single 'Hallelujah' has seen sales increase dramatically in the early part of 2009.
“Opened Once” From Sketches for My Sweetheart the Drunk Buckley’s penchant for textures makes another appearance on “Opened Once”, where soft, glowing notes highlight the background. Yet, one cannot help but frown at the noticeably unfinished nature of the song. The meandering we are accustomed to never materialize, and the result is another beautiful skeleton hanging in the closet. – Kevin McMahon 21. “Forget Her” From Grace (Legacy Edition) Buckley had a tumultuous relationship with “Forget Her”. Though it was recorded during the Grace sessions, he opted to leave it out and faced considerable pushback from the label. With Grace feeling so definitive at this point, it’s just as hard to imagine an 11th track as it is to think up a 13th Beatles album.
Even still, “Forget Her” is a fine moment of Buckley working at full pop-rock capacity. His woe-is-me pining is in full form. For many artists, this would be a stand-out track, for Buckley this is cutting room material. – Dusty Henry.