Ethereal and Eternal

Jeff Buckley’s 1994 album Grace, revered for its haunting vocals and poetic lyrics, stands out in 90s music. With diverse influences and raw emotion, it continues to inspire artists today.

When Jeff Buckley released Grace in 1994, the music world didn’t quite know what to do with it. In an era ruled by grunge, Buckley’s haunting falsetto, intricate guitar work, and poetic sensibility felt like a luminous outlier. Signed to Columbia Records—a label whose walls bore portraits of Bob Dylan, Miles Davis, and Thelonious Monk—Buckley understood the weight of such a legacy. He feared less being compared to Dylan than being cast as “the new Tim Buckley” the father he barely knew. Musically, though, he was wide open.

Before Grace, Buckley had already honed his craft in the intimate setting of New York’s East Village, particularly during his residency at the Sin-é café. Captured in the Live at Sin-é recordings, these performances reveal the breadth of his influences — from Leonard Cohen’s poetic gravitas to Nina Simone’s soul-stirring intensity, from the ecstatic qawwali of Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan to the chanson française of Edith Piaf, and even the jangly melancholy of The Smiths. This eclectic palette became the foundation upon which Grace was built, shaping its unique blend of rock, soul, folk, and classical elements.

Grace was his first and only completed studio album before his untimely death in 1997 at the age of 30, and yet it remains one of the most revered records of the 1990s—a singular work of artistry that continues to resonate decades later. Though it enjoyed modest commercial success at first, Grace quickly became a critic’s darling and grew in stature over time, now regularly appearing on lists of the greatest albums of all time, including Rolling Stone’s “500 Greatest Albums” rankings. Its influence can be heard in the works of Radiohead, Muse, Coldplay, Travis, Starsailor, and countless other artists who cite Buckley as an inspiration.

From the very first notes of Mojo Pin, the album’s opener, Buckley invites listeners into an emotional, otherworldly space. His voice—soaring and whispering in equal measure—serves as both an instrument and a confessional. The lyrics, co-written with former Captain Beefheart guitarist Gary Lucas, are elusive and dreamlike, touching on themes of longing, obsession, and surrender. It’s not an easy song, but it sets the tone for the journey to come. The title track, Grace, blends rock and classical influences into a dramatic crescendo of sound and sentiment. Buckley’s dynamic vocal range is on full display, as he shifts from hushed intimacy to cathartic wails. It is a song of farewells—reportedly inspired by an airport goodbye—and it perfectly encapsulates the album’s balance of the epic and the intimate. In the title track, Buckley sings, “Well it’s my time coming, I’m not afraid, afraid to die / My fading voice sings of love / But she cries to the clicking of time, oh, time.” In hindsight, these lines feel eerily prophetic, as if Buckley sensed the fleeting nature of his own journey.

Of course, no discussion of Grace is complete without mentioning Buckley’s transcendent cover of Leonard Cohen’s Hallelujah. Inspired by John Cale’s stripped-down interpretation, Buckley infused the song with emotional heat, avoiding the histrionics that later covers often embraced. Reduced to voice and electric guitar, his version feels like a prayer of exquisite vulnerability. It is often cited as one of the greatest covers of all time, and rightly so—there’s something almost sacred in the way he delivers each phrase, drawing out the pain and beauty hidden in Cohen’s lyrics. But Grace is more than just its most famous track. Songs like Last Goodbye and So Real reveal Buckley’s range as a songwriter. Last Goodbye, a bittersweet anthem of farewell, pleads, “Kiss me, please kiss me / But kiss me out of desire, babe, and not consolation” while So Real hesitates and erupts into chaos. And then there’s Lover, You Should’ve Come Over, perhaps the album’s crown jewel—a perfect six-minute odyssey that begins with a funereal harmonium and swells into a gorgeous, conversational exploration of lost love. In it, Buckley laments being “too young to hold on, And too old to just break free and run” capturing the paradox of emotional paralysis with devastating honesty.

His choice of covers adds yet another layer to the album’s eclecticism. His interpretation of Lilac Wine channels Billie Holiday by way of Nina Simone, and his haunting rendition of Corpus Christi Carol, a medieval hymn adapted by Benjamin Britten, was inspired by the English mezzo-soprano Dame Janet Baker. These selections show Buckley’s refusal to be confined to genre—he could move from Led Zeppelin’s raw power to Renaissance delicacy without missing a beat. The recording sessions at Bearsville Studios in Woodstock were designed to give Buckley creative freedom. Joined by bassist Mick Grondahl and drummer Matt Johnson, Buckley shifted between electric, acoustic/electric, and intimate folk-club arrangements, capturing the spontaneity that had defined his performances on New York’s Lower East Side. Producer Andy Wallace—best known for his work on Nirvana’s Nevermind—helped shape Grace into a dense, complex record that rewards repeated listens.

The album closes with Dream Brother, a haunting plea for self-awareness and emotional accountability, dedicated in part to Buckley’s estranged father, folk singer Tim Buckley. It’s a fitting end to a deeply introspective album—one that seeks truth in vulnerability and transcendence in pain. Listening to Grace today feels like uncovering a lost manuscript—delicate, uncompromising, and full of secrets. Buckley’s technical mastery and emotional openness set him apart from his contemporaries, and his tragic death at age 30 has only amplified the mythos surrounding him. Yet Grace doesn’t rely on that tragedy to find its power. The album stands on its own, timeless and untamed.

Grace is not a perfect album in the conventional sense—it’s too mercurial for that. But perhaps that’s why it endures. It doesn’t chase perfection. It captures something far more rare: raw, undiluted emotion, rendered with grace.

Rating [out of ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ ]:

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

Standout tracks 🎵:

Absolute 90’s #2

Absolute 90’s #2 is a carefully curated playlist that captures the emotional depth of the 1990s through intimate and underappreciated tracks. Evoking nostalgia, introspection, and a cinematic atmosphere, it offers a darker, more refined journey through the decade’s alternative soundscape.

A Sonic Time Capsule from the Edge

Some playlists are built for parties. Others are meant for escape. Absolute 90’s #2 is something else entirely — a journey through shadows, nostalgia, and emotional residue. This isn’t your typical 90s compilation. There’s no Wonderwall or Smells Like Teen Spirit here. Instead, these 20 tracks offer a more intimate and cinematic portrait of the decade — messy, mysterious, and strangely beautiful.

From the sensual trip-hop murmur of Portishead’s Glory Box to the industrial glam of Placebo’s Slave to the Wage, each song feels like a fragment of a film you once lived. You’ll find underappreciated alt-rock gems like Remote Control by The Age of Electric and El President by Drugstore — songs that still hold emotional voltage decades later.

There’s melancholy (This Is HardcoreCrystal), defiance (A Design for LifePush It), and existential introspection (The World I KnowNight and Day). And then there are tracks that defy easy labeling — Human Behaviour by Björk remains just as weird and wonderful now as it was in 1993.

🎧 This playlist is for those who remember the 90s not just as a cultural moment, but as a personal soundtrack.

If you’re ready to slip into a darker, more refined side of the decade — press play.