Bad Rapping of the Marquis de Sade

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AMG AllMusic Guide: Pop Albums:

Bad Rapping of the Marquis de Sade

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  • Artist: Lord Buckley
  • Rating: StarStarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: 1969
  • Total Time: 62:51
  • Type: Live
  • Genre: Spoken Word

Review

This is arguably the best of the Lord Buckley recordings to have made the transition from vinyl to CD. Buckley's unique brand of storytelling incorporates references to the burgeoning beatnik counterculture into his already Bunyan-esque tall tales. The fluidity of Buckley's delivery is likewise enhanced by his inimitable ability to verbally improvise with a feline-like sense of timing and precision. The results as heard throughout the routines on this album vacillate between mildly amusing to deeply and often profoundly funny. On the 1996 reissue, the program order has been amended slightly from the original 1969 disc. The final track, "Nero" -- available on the Buckley CD compilation His Royal Hipness -- is substituted for two additional extended studio recordings: "Maharajah" and "Scrooge." These tracks were initially issued on the second side of the 1966 release Blowing His Mind (And Yours Too). Lord Buckley's humor is normally relayed through extended narratives, such as the disc's infamous title track or his musings on the origination of the "Chastity Belt." Bad Rapping of the Marquis de Sade also includes a shorter work, "His Majesty the Policeman." His ability to shock and surprise is not based upon working "blue" (read: dirty or pornographic). His many references to sex, drink, and the consumption of questionable ingestibles are used to create and maintain a setting realistic to his socially subcultured audience, rather than being the substance of his shtick. The point at which Lord Buckley, humorist and human intersect is aptly stated at the outset of the "H-Bomb" in the assertion that "people should worship people." Not only does Buckley use various levels of humor to espouse and exemplify his philosophy, it is done in such an innocuous way it becomes practically subliminal. Part of the real beauty of the live portions -- recorded at the Golden Nugget in Oakland, CA, during the months just prior to Lord Buckley's death -- is hearing the immediate exchanges between the lords and the ladies of Buckley's "royal court of hip," which only adds psychic energy and fuel to the intensity of his recitations and interactions. Bad Rapping of the Marquis de Sade is nothing short of an essential -- yet oft overlooked -- treasure in the rich social tapestry of recorded American comedy. ~ Lindsay Planer, Rovi

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Mentioned in

A Most Immaculately Hip Aristocrat (1970 Album by Lord Buckley)
Lord Buckley (Comedy Artist, '40s-'60s)