Leonard Cohen Index. Oct. 2016: You Want It Darker New Album Death (11th November 2016)
Leonard Cohen Cassettes
Biography Career Private Life Gallery Mailing Addresses Leonard Cohen Record Price Guide UK & Europe CD Price Guide Anjani's Blue Alert Europe CD Album (2006) Recommended Releases Leonard Cohen signed items @ ebay.co.uk (direct link to signed items) Available : amazon.co.uk You Want It Darker Front Cover Enlarged You Want It Darker Back Cover You Want It Darker Digipack You Want It Darker CD You Want It Darker Lyric Booklet - Credits You Want It Darker Lyric Booklet - Cover You Want It Darker Inner Digipack Cohen was made for the crackling of vinyl so look out for this release on that format as well. Direct link to vinyl @ amazon.co.uk Rolling Stone: "a late career triumph" The Telegraph: "a bleak masterpiece..., five stars" (full marks) The Guardian "wise and honest"..., five stars" (full marks) Pitchfork: "feels like a pristine, piously crafted last testament, the informed conclusion of a lifetime of inquiry" What a poet. What a musician. The voice, the exquisite gruff voice that stays with you throughout your life; the words and the lines that are so clever and have spoken to so many people. Life is life and Cohen captured the underbelly as well as its splendour like no other. I came late to the party of melancholy, when first finding Various Positions and I'm Your Man. But hearing that voice for the first time ... well I bet most people can remember the first time they heard such gravel tones. And seeing him for the first time in concert at the ROyal Albert Hall for The Future shows where he talked to the audience between songs, made them laugh and made them think ('Closing Time comes soon enough') - I still rank it as my most rewarding concert by a country mile despite seeing numerous other stars. There will never be anyone remotely like him. He left us with You Want It Darker. Available : amazon.co.uk You Want It Darker Reviews Rolling Stone: "a late career triumph" The Telegraph: "a bleak masterpiece..., five stars" (full marks) The Guardian "wise and honest"..., five stars" (full marks) Pitchfork: "feels like a pristine, piously crafted last testament, the informed conclusion of a lifetime of inquiry" Ah, the voice. Yes, Cohen is a renaissance man. Gifted songwriter, poet, novelist, performer, a man with an intellect capable of describing man's deepest fears and sorrow ... but it's that voice which expresses the aforementioned intellect in so compelling a way and breathes life into his songwriting. What a voice! How could anyone have a voice like that, or how could anyone get his voice to sound like that, as, surely, a ballerina must train hundreds of hours for a certain routine, Cohen must have smoked 60 cigarettes a day for years to get it that gruff! But boy, every last drag on every last cigarette was worth it! To experience the voice at its best you would have had to see him live. Sure the CDs are great and his body of work (especially, for me, from the mid-80s to early-90s) is second to none. But it doesn't prepare you for the majesty of his voice when you hear it live for the first time. I saw him in the early-90s in concert in the beautiful splendour of the Royal Albert Hall in London. The sumptuous surroundings certainly befitted so great a performer. But beyond the sheer pleasure of seeing the guy going through his back catalogue, the voice is what stayed with me, and, I suspect, the rest of the audience. Every low-pitched speaking-singing utterance he made that night lived on in me as his lyrics and the way he expressed them, seemed the words of the wisest, oldest sage, who knew not only of the despair of life that would be in front of me, behind me and beyond me, but also the joy of life that was hand-in-hand with that despair. A zen thing, I suppose, but then again it isn't. The highlight of that concert and the moment the crowd went wild was during the song Tower of Song, where Cohen, probably ironically but then probaly not, uttered: I was born like this That night Cohen was in top form. Nudging 60, I wondered whether that would be his last tour and that would be the one and only time I would see him live. He was touring to promote the album The Future (1992) and as he was well known for working and recording soooo slowly (by that stage you were lucky if you got a new album every four or five years), I knew I would be in for a long, maybe hopeless, wait at the very least. So I waited. And waited. A live album was released but it seemed inadequate compensation. Where was the new material? Then I found out that after the tour Cohen had retreated to the Mount Baldy Zen Center, near Los Angeles, to train as a Rinzai Zen Buddhist monk. Then it went quite again until 1999 when he left the seclusion of the center. Two albums followed, Ten New Songs in 2001, and Dear Heather in 2004, a colloboration with his current partner Anjani Thomas. A new album is pencilled in for release in 2006 as well as a new book of poetry and drawings (Book of Longing). Oh, and a tour is in the offing. So why all the sudden activity? Well, money, or lack of it, is behind the comeback. Cohen thought that he had $5 million in his retirement fund. That $5 million turned out to be $150,000 so Cohen has had to file suit against his then manager of 14 years and on-off again partner Kelley Lynch for gross misappropriation of funds. Unsurprisingly, Cohen was under new manangement by 2005. The case has all got extremely messy and nasty. Cohen is in turn being sued by other former business associates. There is talk of Lynch needing money to fund a gigolo; of a Los Angeles Police Department SWAT Team descending on Lynch's home and arresting her in her bathing suit; of Lynch being involuntarily admitted to a psych ward and drugged. Lynch, in turn, has suggested that it was Cohen's own lavish spending that was the problem. Looking from the outside I would think this improbable as Cohen had spent five years (1994-99) at Mount Baldy Zen Center and I wouldn't have thought Cohen could have committed lavish spending in that environment even if he had wanted to! Furthermore, one of the business associates suing Cohen, Neal Greenberg, suggests that Cohen and his attorney, Robert Kory, had conspired to falsely blame him for Cohen's financial woes and had threatened to use Cohen's celebrity to extort money from Greenberg. Come on! Cohen the guy who lived for five years as a Buddhist monk threatening extortion!!! Well, to me, it sounds far-fetched to say the least. But whoever is right one wonders how much of his money Cohen will see even if he wins the case. It does seem heartbreaking that a guy who is now 71 has to go through this and who may not even see the financial rewards that at the end of the day are his due. When you hear he has had to re-mortgage his home to fund the suit you begin to wonder about the very people around him who were responsible for looking after him. The deal does seem rotten. Cohen once said: "I didn't want to write for pay. I wanted to be paid for what I write." I just hope that he isn't now inverting this, that the new work is a result of a need of money and the result of that alone. I can't say I'm a big fan of the new work though I hope it grows on me as his work has done in the past. To me, at the end of the day just a fan, the biggest crime this case could commit would be if it were responsible for Cohen releasing sub-standard work. His legacy deserves better. © Paul Page - February 2006 As a teenager he formed a country-folk group called the Buckskin Boys. His father's will left him a modest trust income which meant that Cohen was fortunate enough to be able to pursue any artistic ambitions with the safety new of that income; something most of us can only dream of ever having. In the 1950s, he pursued a career as a poet. His first book of poetry, Let Us Compare Mythologies was published in 1956 and the follow-up, The Spice-Box of Earth, in 1961.After a move to the Greek island of Hydra, he published the poetry collection Flowers for Hitler in 1964. He also wrote two novels, The Favourite Game in 1963, and Beautiful Losers in 1966. By 1967, he had re-located to New York to work as a folk singer-songwriter. Judy Collins had a hit with his song, Suzanne, and he was soon signed to Columbia Records. He released his first album, Songs of Leonard Cohen, that year, followed by Songs from a Room in 1969 and New Skin for the Old Ceremony in 1974. Death of a Ladies' Man was released in 1977 and the following year he released a further book of poetry, Death of a Lady's Man. Phil Spector produced the album and his elaborate 'wall of sound' technique hardly suited Cohen's minimal technique. The recording was, er, fraught, to say the least, if you can call having a gun pointed at you as Cohen suggests Spector did on him, fraught! The album is generaly considered by Cohen's fans to be his weakest. He returned to some kind of form with his next release, Recent Songs. But it was really the follow-up, Various Positions (1984), which cemented his reputation in Europe especially. Columbia declined to release it in the US where interest in Cohen's music seemed to be on the decline. It was a haunting album and, I for one, thought he had reached the pinnacle of his career. I was wrong. Various Positions turned out to be just the precursor. 1988's I'm Your Man release was Cohen at his best. It was critically acclaimed and did well commercially. It was even released in the US where Jennifer Warnes had released a Cohen tribute album, Famous Blue Raincoat, the year before and that had help revive his career there. I'm Your Man was followed by The Future in 1992. The Future was a good album but not in the same class as I'm Your Man. Thereafter, Cohen retreated to the Mount Baldy Zen Center near Los Angeles. The song So Long, Marianne is about his relationship with Marianne Jensen which occured in the 60s when he lived in Hydra. She died in July 2016 of leukemia. On hearing of her immiment passing he wrote her one of the most beautiful and poignant letters you will ever read: "Well Marianne it's come to this time when we are really so old and our bodies are falling apart and I think I will follow you very soon. Know that I am so close behind you that if you stretch out your hand, I think you can reach mine. And you know that I've always loved you for your beauty and your wisdom, but I don’t need to say anything more about that because you know all about that. But now, I just want to wish you a very good journey. Goodbye old friend. Endless love, see you down the road". His passing was just over three months later. Around the time of the release of the album The Future (1992), he was romantically involved with the much younger actress, Rebecca De Mornay. I recall her, maybe wrongly, as executive producer on the album, though what executive producer actually means is anyone's guess. He is currently involved with Anjani Thomas. Cohen lives in Los Angeles (see death). Leonard Cohen Addresses are unverified so send any memorabilia at your own risk. Top of Page You Want It Darker Front Cover Enlarged |