Dark Entries
At long last, Q Lazzarus says hello to Dark Entries.
Q Lazzarus is the moniker of Diane Luckey, born in New Jersey in 1960. While living in the East Village in New York City in the 1980s, Diane met songwriter Bill Garvey at a party and they recorded âGoodbye Horsesâ in his home studio. As the story goes, Luckey met Hollywood director Jonathan Demme when she picked him up in her taxi during a snowstorm in 1986. Demme was wowed by her demo tape, which was playing in the cab, and they ended up hanging out at a restaurant for hours talking about life and music. âHe liked it so much, I gave him the tape I was listening to, he said he would call me for one of his movies, but I didnât really take it seriously.â said Luckey. Demme would have the song âGoodbye Horsesâ first appear in his offbeat comedy Married to the Mob, and then again more memorably in Silence of the Lambs when Buffalo Bill changes into womenâs clothing while drowning out his intended victimâs pleas with loud music. Despite the exposure, both Luckey and Garvey languished in relative obscurity. âGoodbye Horsesâ is the definition of a cult classic, an ethereal tearjerker driven by Garveyâs lush synth work and Luckeyâs unmistakably powerful voice. Garvey says, “the song is about transcendence over those who see the world as only earthly and finite.”
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