| 
       Das 66er Debüt wird oft unter den Teppich gekehrt, weil hier bekannte 
        Macher wie Jac Holzman (Elektra Chef), Doors Produzent Paul Rothchild, 
        Love und Doors Soundengineer Bruce Botnick und Jack Nitzsche (Streicherarrange-ments) 
        nach dem so typischen 60er-Elektra-Folkrock Blueprint arbeiteten und so 
        Buckleys zart keimende Persönlichkeit etwas unterdrückt wurde. 
        Aber der zerbrechlichen Schönheit der Songs und dieser ungewöhnlichen 
        Magie der Stimme des damals knapp 19-jährigen kann man sich nicht 
        entziehen. 
      (Glitterhouse) 
     | 
  
   
    |  
       Buckley's 1966 debut was the most straightforward and folk-rock-oriented 
        of his albums. The material has a lyrical and melodic sophistication that 
        was astounding for a 19-year-old. The pretty, almost precious songs are 
        complemented by appropriately baroque, psychedelic-tinged production. 
        If there was a record that exemplified the '60s Elektra folk-rock sound, 
        this may have been it, featuring production by Elektra owner Jac Holzman 
        and Doors producer Paul Rothchild, Love and Doors engineer Bruce Botnick, 
        and string arrangements by Jack Nitzsche. That's not to diminish the contributions 
        of the band, which included his longtime lead guitarist Lee Underwood 
        and Van Dyke Parks on keyboards. Buckley was still firmly in the singer-songwriter 
        camp on this album, showing only brief flashes of the experimental vocal 
        flights, angst-ridden lyrics, and soul influences that would characterize 
        much of his later work. It's not his most adventurous outing, but it's 
        one of his most accessible, and retains a fragile beauty.  
      (by Richie Unterberger, All 
        Music Guide) 
     | 
  
   
    |  
       With Buckley barely out of high school, he hadn't yet moved towards the 
        lengthy, jazz-influenced arrangements of his mature period. So here he 
        sticks with two- to three-minute running times and a folk-rock formula 
        that's sometimes derivative (the Byrds-like blues "Understand Your Man"). 
        He works with Elektra/Doors production regulars Paul Rothchild, Jac Holzman, 
        and Bruce Botnick, with Jack Nitzsche arranging the strings, Van Dyke 
        Parks playing keyboards, Frank Zappa associate Billy Mundi on drums, and 
        a few more obscure musicians like Lee Underwood (guitar), who became Buckley's 
        most reliable sideman. Buckley's already writing tons of catchy and clever 
        tunes ("Song For Janie"), and his amazing vocal abilities are already 
        apparent. But at this point his delivery is uptight and grandiose, a la 
        Joan Baez; and the occasional orchestration is interesting, much like 
        Love's Forever Changes, but dated. The good news is some startling, 
        moody experimentation ("Song Slowly Song") that points the way to his 
        later achievements.  
      (Wilson and Alroy's Record 
        Reviews) 
     |