Quotes:
"You've got to watch your mind all the time or you'll awaken and find a strange picture on your press."
| Quotes By: Lord Buckley |
Quotes:
"You've got to watch your mind all the time or you'll awaken and find a strange picture on your press."
| Artist: Lord Buckley |
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| Discography: Lord Buckley |
| Wikipedia: Lord Buckley |
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Lord Richard Buckley (b. Richard Myrle Buckley, April 5, 1906 Tuolumne, California; d. November 12, 1960 New York City) was an American recording artist, a monologist, and Hip poet/ comic.
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Buckley's father William had emigrated from England. In the 1950s Buckley was cast as one of America's top hipsters, a "way-out swinger," enjoying cult status among those who were exposed to his work.
Buckley adopted his "hipsemantic" from his peers Cab Calloway, Louis Armstrong, Redd Foxx, Pearl Mae Bailey, Count Basie, and Frank Sinatra, as well as Hipsters and the British aristocracy. Occasionally performing to music, he frequently punctuated his monologues with scat singing. His most significant tracks are his retelling of historical or legendary events, mostly fictionalized, imbued with his style of humor. These include the stories "My Own Railroad" and "The Nazz". The latter, first recorded in 1952, describes Jesus' working profession as that of a "carpenter kitty." Other historical figures include Gandhi ("The Hip Gahn") and the Marquis de Sade ("The Bad-Rapping of the Marquis de Sade, the King of Bad Cats"). He also retold several classic documents such as the Gettysburg Address and a version of Edgar Allan Poe's "The Raven." In "Mark Antony's Funeral Oration", he recast Shakespeare's "Friends, Romans, countrymen, lend me your ears" as "Hipsters, flipsters and finger-poppin' daddies: knock me your lobes."
Buckley enjoyed smoking marijuana. He wrote reports of his first experiences with LSD, under the supervision of Dr. Oscar Janiger, and of his trip in a United States Air Force jet. Ed Sullivan reflected "...he was impractical as many of his profession are, but the vivid Buckley will long be remembered by all of us."
On October 19, 1960, he was scheduled to play club dates and another appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show in New York, but his cabaret card was seized, purportedly because of a 1941 arrest for marijuana possession. The card was necessary to appear in nightclubs and were often withheld for political reasons, and as a way to solicit payoffs. Without the card he was unable to perform. He attempted to get the card reinstated and more than three dozen major figures in the entertainment and arts world showed up for a hearing on the matter.
Richard 'Lord' Buckley died November 12, 1960 at New York City's Columbus Hospital. A hearing held two days after his death turned into a raucous confrontation between Police Commissioner Stephen Kennedy and Buckley's friends and supporters, including Quincy Jones, George Plimpton and Norman Mailer. The scandal of Buckley's death, attributed at least in part to his loss of the card, led to the removal of Kennedy in 1960 and the abolition of the cabaret card system by 1967, some 7 years later.
Lord Buckley's funeral was on November 16, 1960 at the Frank E. Campbell Chapel on 88th Street in New York City. Lord Buckley was cremated at the Ferndale Cemetery in Hartsdale, New York and eventually, according to Richard Buckley Jr, his ashes were scattered in Red Rock Canyon about 15 miles outside of Las Vegas by his mother Lady Buckley with the sword from a steel statue of Kierkegaard welded by John Muir.[citation needed]
Lord Buckley recorded over 15 long playing albums in a studio setting. Lord Buckley recordings can be found on bgmrecordings, RCA Records, VAYA, World Pacific, Capitol Records, Elektra Records, Frank Zappa's Straight Records label and United Artists, with titles such as "Blowing His Mind," "Euphoria," "A Most Immaculately Hip Aristocrat," "The Bad Rapping of The Marquis De Sade" and "The Best of Lord Buckley", "Wild Truth", "Professor of Hipology", "Drama King" and "Hip Classics".
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