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| length = 5:09
| length = 5:09
| label = [[Sony Music]]/[[Columbia Records|Columbia]]
| label = [[Sony Music]]/[[Columbia Records|Columbia]]
| writer = Jeff Buckley, [[Michael Tighe]]
| writer = Jeff Buckley, Michael Tighe
| producer = [[Tom Verlaine]]
| producer = [[Tom Verlaine]]
}}
}}


"'''The Sky Is a Landfill'''" is the first track on the posthumous ''[[Sketches for My Sweetheart the Drunk]]'' album release by [[Jeff Buckley]]. It was written by Buckley together with bandmate [[Michael Tighe]], whom he had worked with on "[[So Real (Jeff Buckley song)|So Real]]". Heavy, rocky and discordant, the track has a different tone from many of Buckley's songs from his debut album ''[[Grace (Jeff Buckley album)|Grace]]''.<ref name="PF">{{citation | title=So Real: Songs From Jeff Buckley|last=LeMay|first=Matt|publisher=[[Pitchfork Media]]|date=29 May 2007|accessdate=13 Jan 2012|url=http://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/10266-so-real-songs-from-jeff-buckley/}}</ref> Two live recordings, from performances at the New York's [[The Knitting Factory]] and [[Arlene's Grocery]] in 1997, can be found online and feature different lyrics.
"'''The Sky Is a Landfill'''" is the first track on the posthumous ''[[Sketches for My Sweetheart the Drunk]]'' album release by [[Jeff Buckley]]. It was written by Buckley together with bandmate Michael Tighe, whom he had worked with on "[[So Real (Jeff Buckley song)|So Real]]". Heavy, rocky and discordant, the track has a different tone from many of Buckley's songs from his debut album ''[[Grace (Jeff Buckley album)|Grace]]''.<ref name="PF">{{citation | title=So Real: Songs From Jeff Buckley|last=LeMay|first=Matt|publisher=[[Pitchfork Media]]|date=29 May 2007|accessdate=13 Jan 2012|url=http://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/10266-so-real-songs-from-jeff-buckley/}}</ref> Two live recordings, from performances at the New York's [[The Knitting Factory]] and [[Arlene's Grocery]] in 1997, can be found online and feature different lyrics.


The song is based on journalist [[Al Giordano]]'s essay "The Medium Is the Middleman", which Buckley, a friend of Giordano's, adapted:<ref name="RS">{{citation|publisher=[[Rolling Stone]]|date=30 Aug 2001|accessdate=13 Jan 2012|title=Hot Muckraker: Al Giordano|url=http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v01/n1462/a04.html}}</ref> "He applied my critique of the media industry to the music industry, and we had the exact same conclusions," says Giordano. "The concept of the song was that the media turned the airwaves into a garbage dump."<ref name="BP">{{citation|publisher=[[Boston Phoenix]]|title=Don't Quote Me: A conversation with Al Giordano|first=Dan|last=Kennedy|date=Apr 2001|accessdate=13 Jan 2012|url=http://www.bostonphoenix.com/boston/news_features/dont_quote_me/documents/01285285.htm}}</ref>
The song is based on journalist [[Al Giordano]]'s essay "The Medium Is the Middleman", which Buckley, a friend of Giordano's, adapted:<ref name="RS">{{citation|publisher=[[Rolling Stone]]|date=30 Aug 2001|accessdate=13 Jan 2012|title=Hot Muckraker: Al Giordano|url=http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v01/n1462/a04.html}}</ref> "He applied my critique of the media industry to the music industry, and we had the exact same conclusions," says Giordano. "The concept of the song was that the media turned the airwaves into a garbage dump."<ref name="BP">{{citation|publisher=[[Boston Phoenix]]|title=Don't Quote Me: A conversation with Al Giordano|first=Dan|last=Kennedy|date=Apr 2001|accessdate=13 Jan 2012|url=http://www.bostonphoenix.com/boston/news_features/dont_quote_me/documents/01285285.htm}}</ref>

Revision as of 23:11, 12 December 2022

"The Sky Is a Landfill"
Song by Jeff Buckley
from the album Sketches for My Sweetheart the Drunk
ReleasedMay 26th, 1998
Recorded1996, 1997
GenreAlternative rock
Length5:09
LabelSony Music/Columbia
Songwriter(s)Jeff Buckley, Michael Tighe
Producer(s)Tom Verlaine

"The Sky Is a Landfill" is the first track on the posthumous Sketches for My Sweetheart the Drunk album release by Jeff Buckley. It was written by Buckley together with bandmate Michael Tighe, whom he had worked with on "So Real". Heavy, rocky and discordant, the track has a different tone from many of Buckley's songs from his debut album Grace.[1] Two live recordings, from performances at the New York's The Knitting Factory and Arlene's Grocery in 1997, can be found online and feature different lyrics.

The song is based on journalist Al Giordano's essay "The Medium Is the Middleman", which Buckley, a friend of Giordano's, adapted:[2] "He applied my critique of the media industry to the music industry, and we had the exact same conclusions," says Giordano. "The concept of the song was that the media turned the airwaves into a garbage dump."[3]

Performance artist Penny Arcade, a friend of Buckley's, had called the song his "magnum opus".[3] The A.V. Club says that the song "seethes with his inimitable flair for epic drama."[4] Pitchfork Media says "it's clear that Buckley was beginning to explore a more discordant and subversive approach",[1] and Rolling Stone notes the "explosive garage-rock theater" in the album generally, referencing the "barking vocal rage and twisted-metal guitars" of the song.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b LeMay, Matt (29 May 2007), So Real: Songs From Jeff Buckley, Pitchfork Media, retrieved 13 Jan 2012
  2. ^ a b Hot Muckraker: Al Giordano, Rolling Stone, 30 Aug 2001, retrieved 13 Jan 2012
  3. ^ a b Kennedy, Dan (Apr 2001), Don't Quote Me: A conversation with Al Giordano, Boston Phoenix, retrieved 13 Jan 2012
  4. ^ Thompson, Stephen (19 Apr 2002), Jeff Buckley Sketches for My Sweetheart the Drunk, The A.V. Club, retrieved 13 Jan 2012