Tim Buckleyโ€™s prodigious musical gifts bloomed in inverse proportion to his paternal instincts. The legendary folk-jazz singer wrote some of the most beautiful songs ever and sang like a demonic angel. Butโ€”unfortunately for his son Jeff, also an inordinately talented vocalist/composerโ€”Tim couldnโ€™t father worth a damn (he reputedly saw his child only twice). โ€œMy wife hates my musicโ€ seems to be his rationale to cheat.

Greetings from Tim Buckley revolves around the conflict the ignored offspring feels about performing at a tribute concert in Brooklynโ€™s St. Annโ€™s Church for his absentee pa, who died at 28 of an accidental drug overdose. (Jeff died at 30 while swimming fully clothed in Memphisโ€™s Wolf River.) Light on dramatic tension, the film toggles between Jeffโ€™s preparation for the 1991 eventโ€”and the attendant mixed feelings toward his fatherโ€™s legacyโ€”and Timโ€™s musical and sexual conquests circa 1966, the year Jeff was born.

The extraordinarily cheekboned Penn Badgley portrays Jeff as a tormented artiste who broods cutely. He adequately approximates Buckleyโ€™s soaring, ululating vocal style, and at the climactic concert, he aces two Tim songsโ€”โ€œI Never Asked to Be Your Mountainโ€ and โ€œPhantasmagoria in Twoโ€โ€”with the makeshift band, including Jeffโ€™s real-life musical partner, Gary Lucas. The show concludes with Jeff owning the tenderly gorgeous ballad โ€œOnce I Wasโ€ solo. Thus, Jeff Buckleyโ€™s career was launched.

The budding-romance side plot between Jeff and tribute-concert factotum Allie (Imogen Poots) adds little to the real meat of Greetings: the immortal compellingness of Tim Buckleyโ€™s songsโ€”even in the filmโ€™s rearranged versions of them. (For a more thorough homage to Timโ€™s music, see the 2007 doc My Fleeting House.) recommended

Dave Segal is a journalist and DJ living in Seattle. He has been writing about music since 1983. His stuff has appeared in Gale Research’s literary criticism series of reference books, Creem (when...