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Lord Buckley Bibliography
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| Avant Gardist Of Humor |
| by Wayne D. McGinnis, Henderson State University, Reprinted from AMERICAN HUMOR: AN INTERDISCIPLINARY NEWSLETTER. Volume II, Number 1, Spring, 1975 |
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| Hipster Saint Lord Buckley |
| by Gene Sculatti, from The Catalog of Cool, edited by Gene Sculatti, Warner Books, ISBN 0-446-37515-2 (USA) |
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| Lord Buckley Rides Again! |
| by Douglas Cruickshank, SALON MAGAZINE (on-line), June 2002. NOTE: this link will take you to Salon.com |
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| The Word of The Lord from "Flappers to Rappers: American Youth Slang" |
| by Tom Dalzell, Flappers 2 Rappers, 1996, Merriam-Webster (ISBN 0-8779-612-2), Pgs 108-109 (Also a paragraph on page 101), A most cool tome swinging with the sweet sound of American youth slang. The Buckley section is a gasser! |
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| Tongue Dancer |
| by Ian Anderson, FROOTS magazine, Issue 194/195, August/September 1999, pages 63-67. Editor/writer Ian Anderson tells the story of the noblest wig bender of them all, the blessed Lord Buckley. |
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| BAM Magazine |
#496N, 11/1/96, The Resurrection of Lord Buckley, by James Sullivan, page 13.  |
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| Been Down So Long It Looks Like Up To Me |
| by Richard Farina, Penguin Books USA, ISBN 0140189300, Chapter 4. Special thanks to Prince Richard Lavery for hipping us to this cool tome citing. |
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| Breaking It Up - The Best Routines of the Stand-up Comics |
Edited by Ross Firestone - 1975 1st Edition -  |
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| Buckley: High Lord of the Hip, Cool Groove |
| by Lawrence Christon, Los Angeles Times magazine Calendar, 9/18/83 |
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| Chronicles: Volume One |
by Bob Dylan, Simon & Schuster, ISBN: 0743244583, In Chapter 5 Dylan writes about Lord Buckley for one paragraph, 2004 .  |
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| Cabaret-Card Fight Set Off by 'Lord' Buckley's Death |
| author not listed, the village VOICE, 11/17/60 |
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| Dance of the Sleepwalkers - The Dance Marathon Fad |
| by Frank M. Calabria , published by Bowling Green State University Popular Press, 1993, ISBN: 0-87972-569-9 Clothbound, 0-87972-570-2 Paperback, Dick "Lord" Buckley is mentioned on Page 31. |
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| Dark Horse - The Private Life of George Harrison |
| by Geoffrey Giuliano, published by PLUM, page 155, ISBN 0-452-26700-5. |
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| Dead Funny |
| an article about Bill Hicks, Lenny Bruce and Lord Buckley in the magazine Cannibis Culture, Feb/Mar 2005 issue |
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| Dig Infinity! - the life and art of Lord Buckley |
| by Oliver Trager, published by Welcome Rain Publishers, 405 pages, photograph section, CD with Buckley performances and interviews, ISBN 1-56649-157-6. |
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| Far Out With Lord Buckley |
| by Jim Burns, Beat Scene #19, pages 30 - 34. An article about Lord Buckley. Published by The Beat Scene Press. |
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| From Birdland to Broadway - scenes from a jazz life |
by Bill Crow, Oxford University Press, 1992, ISBN 0-19-508550-7, pages 58-60.  |
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| From Flappers to Rapper: American Youth Slang |
by Tom Dalzell, Dover Publications, paperback 304pgs, highly readable exploration of slang from the end of the 1800's right up to the pounce of now.  |
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| Heah's Yo Ole Dady, Lord Buckley! |
| by Albert Goldman, High Times magazine, circa 1977, article begins on page 75. |
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| Hell's Angels |
| by Hunter S. Thompson, Penguin Paperbacks, 1966, page 192, Thompson mentions Lord Buckley in reference to the behavior of one of the Angels. Thanks to Roger Mexico for teasing this citation out of the literary fabric. |
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| High Times, Hard Times |
| by Anita O'Day, G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1981. O'Days biography includes a description of Buckley in the Chicago nightclub scene during the '30s. ISBN 0-87910-118-0 |
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| Hiparama of the Classics |
| by Lord Buckley, City Lights Books. 1960. Transcriptions of Lord Buckley routines. A number of transcriptions of His Lordship's work are available at this website in the Transcriptions area of The Word section here at LBC. |
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| Hipsters & Flipsters, Your Lord Returneth |
| by Ed Batchelder, in the magazine JAZZIZ, page 15, article about Tom Calagna's "Lord Buckley Alive !" stage performance, Volume 16 Number 2, February 1999 |
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| Hipsters and Flipsters |
| by Gariel Favoino, in his column The Pop Side, Chicago Sun-Times, section three, page 8, 8/28/60 |
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| Hipsters, Flipsters and Skin-Poppin' Daddies: The Way-Out, Sick, Beat Humor of Lord Buckley and Lenny Bruce |
| by Don Waller, The Rolling Stone Book of the Beats. New York: Rolling Stone Press, 1999, pp. 307-313. The article also features a photo of Lord and Lady Buckley on p. 309. Another essay in the same volume, Brian Hassett's "Abstract Expression: From Bird to Brando," includes two paragraphs about His Lordship, quoting Oliver Trager and Ken Kesey. A royal swingin' bow and nod to Lady Maggie Newman who hipped us to this jumpin' focal point. |
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| His Humor's Both Hip And Healthy |
| by Don Keown, Independent-Journal, San Rafael, CA, 1960, pages M5-M6, 6/18/60 |
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| His Lordship's Last Days |
| by Harold L. Humes, Swank magazine, Volume 8 No. 2, May 1961, pages 55-57, also see The Hipster's Nero by Lord Buckley in the same issue. |
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| King of Cats |
| by RJ Smith, Los Angeles Magazine, Special Comedy Issue June 2005, page 96. |
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| Lenny Bruce: The making of a prophet |
| by Thomas, William Karl, Archon Books, Hamden, Conn, 1989. There is a short (about 2 pages, easy to find because the book is well indexed) but very thoughtful take on Bruce's relationship with Lord Buckley, and the difference between Bruce's pessimistic, political humour and and Buckley's joyful appreciation of life and its strangeness. Special thanks to Prince Andrew Wilson for this hip citation. |
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| Lord Buckley |
| by Alan Weberman, "Changes" a bi-weekly newspaper, New York City, Changes Publications, Volume 1 Number 9, page 12, 1969 |
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| Lord Buckley |
| Introduction by Richard Buckley, Jr., Extreme Exposure - An Anthology of Solo Performance Texts from the 20th Century - includes several transcriptions of Lord Buckley routines including God's Own Drunk, Willie the Shake, and James Dean -Paperback: 450 pages, Theatre Communications Group; 1st edition (March 1, 2000), ISBN: 1559361557 |
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| Lord Buckley Benefit |
| by Ira Gitler, in the column Caught in the Act, Downbeat Magazine, 2/16/61 |
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| Lord Buckley Is Dead |
| Penthouse (Volume 2, #11), October 1967. |
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| Lord Buckley Steals His Last Show |
| by Normand Poirier, New York Post, 12/6/60 |
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| Lord Buckley - Tuolumne's Most Unlikely Native Son |
| by Ron Pickup, Central Sierra Seasons Magazine, Winter/Spring 2006. |
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| Lord of the Hepcats |
| by Bill Reed, Reader, Vol. 4, No. 7, 11/27/81 |
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| Meet Me In The Lobby: The Story of Harold Koplar and the Chase Park Plaza Hotel |
by Candace O'Conner, Virginia Publishing Co., St. Louis. 2005. ISBN: 1-891442-32-5, Page 40 - a vivid one paragraph description of Lord Buckley in his element. Many thanks to the Marquis D' Mexico for his fine work in this direction. To view page 40 of Meet Me In The Lobby click here Click here to view cover  |
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| Modern Teen |
Lord Buckley's "The Raven" is featured in this the first issue of a new magazine from the editors of Dig magazine, Issue #1 June 1957.  |
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| New Music Express |
| magazine - album review, 1/29/1983 |
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| Offbeat: Collaborating with Kerouac |
| by David Amram, published 2002 by Thunder's Mouth Press an Imprint of Avalon Publishing Group Incorporated, Pages 43-44, 172, 239, ISBN 1-56025-362-2. Hardy thanks to Roger "The Marquis" Mexico for hipping LBC to this new tome. |
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| On the enigmatic Lord Buckley's trail |
| by James Sullivan, San Francisco Chronicle, Datebook section page D1, July 9, 2002. |
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| One Groovy Flower - Lord Buckley takes the stage |
| by Jim Christy, Nuvo Magazine, Spring 2005, Vol. 8. #1. |
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| One-Man Show Recreates Satirist Lord Buckley |
| by Loren King, The Advocate, 8/25/94. Article about Frank Speiser's one man show "Are You There?". |
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| Posthumous Stardom for a Once and Future Lord - The Lord Buckley Phenomenon |
| by Albert Goldman, Life Magazine, 12/19/69. |
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| Seriously Funny |
| by Gerald Nachman, Pantheon Books, 2003, a book about the rebellious comedians of the '50s and '60s, Lord Buckley is mentioned on pages 32, 395, 571 |
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| Surrealism and It's Popular Accomplices |
| City Lights Books; December 1980 |
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| Swing It ! An Annotated History of Jive |
by Bill Milkowski, Diane Pub Co, ISBN: 0756762596, Buckley is listed in a Who's Who.  |
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| The Caberet Cards - Have They Killed A Man? |
| author unknown, Downbeat Magazine, 12/22/60 |
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| The Hip: Hipsters,Jazz and the Beat Generation |
| by Roy Carr, Brian Case and Fred Dellar, a tribute to the Hip and Cool of the 50s Jazz and Beat Scene - London, Faber&Faber, 1986. |
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| The Hiperama, Jack |
| by Brian Case, Wire Magazine, date unknown probably the late '80s. Note: this is not from the cyber magazine Wired. |
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| The Hipster's Nero |
| by Lord Buckley, Swank magazine, Volume 8 No. 2, May 1961, see back cover for beginning of article, article continues from pages 53-55, this article is a transcription of His Lordship's routine "Nero", also see His Lordship's Last Days by Harold Hume in the same issue. |
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| The Last Laugh |
by Phil Berger, Ballantine Books, New York, Published March 1976, contains some wonderful ancedotes about Lord Buckley, pgs 31, 48-61, 92, 206.  |
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| The Life and Times of the Mad Prince of Jive |
| by Albert Goldman, High Times magazine Janary 1978, page 75. |
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| The Lord Was A Swinger |
by Bob Ellison, Fling Festival magazine, Volume 7 Fall Edition 1961, pages 63-70.  |
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| The United States Of Poetry |
| By Joshua Blum, Bob Homan, and Mark Pellington, Harry N. Abrams, Inc. Publishers, 1996, an extract from "The Train" can be found on page 33. |
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| Those Swinging Years |
| By Charlie Barnet, describes seeing Lod Buckey audition at Slapsie Maxie's club in Hollywood. |
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| To Have the Sweet Fragments of Serenity Rock Your Wig |
| by Denny Blouin, Shambhala Sun, 5/95. |
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| Tuolumne Museum honors Lord Buckley |
| by K. Nicola Dyes, The Union Democrat, front page, April 7, 2008. |
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