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Jeff Buckley's only studio album, "Grace," turns 30 this month. NPR's Adrian Ma talks with Rolling Stone writer Brittany Spanos and musician Tony Bernardo about the album's enduring legacy.
When Jeff Buckley died at 30 on May 29, 1997, he left behind one album that was to become one of the most admired, even beloved, records of the late 20th century.
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‘Grace'-Land: Jeff Buckley's Memphis Home Is Being Turned Into a ‘Tribute' Airbnb - MSNBuckley moved to Memphis in the years after he released his lone studio album, 1994's Grace.He spent almost a year there, working on new music with his band, before his death: He had gone swimming ...
Jeff Buckley's only studio album, "Grace," turns 30 this month. NPR's Adrian Ma talks with Rolling Stone writer Brittany Spanos and musician Tony Bernardo about the album's enduring legacy.
Jeff Buckley's only studio album, "Grace," turns 30 this month. NPR's Adrian Ma talks with Rolling Stone writer Brittany Spanos and musician Tony Bernardo about the album's enduring legacy.
Buckley, of course, never got to see the impact Grace would have on the world. He drowned in the Wolf River Harbor in Memphis on May 29, 1997, at the age of 30. His autopsy ruled it an accident.
On this day in 1994, Jeff Buckley's 'Grace' was released in the United States. Though his voice dripped with heartache, a levity and flick of hope always weaved between the woe.
The Jeff Buckley documentary It's Never Over, Jeff Buckley, will be released in theaters on August 8.The Amy Berg-directed feature about the mesmerizing musician who tragically died at 30 when he ...
Jeff Buckley's only studio album, "Grace," turns 30 this month. NPR's Adrian Ma talks with Rolling Stone writer Brittany Spanos and musician Tony Bernardo about the album's enduring legacy.
Jeff Buckley's only studio album, "Grace," turns 30 this month. NPR's Adrian Ma talks with Rolling Stone writer Brittany Spanos and musician Tony Bernardo about the album's enduring legacy.
Jeff Buckley's only studio album, "Grace," turns 30 this month. NPR's Adrian Ma talks with Rolling Stone writer Brittany Spanos and musician Tony Bernardo about the album's enduring legacy.
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