Leonard Cohen: Classic or Dud

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Songs of Love and Hate is one of the most perfect albums I've ever heard. His later synth stuff easily matches the early folk mumblings, esp. 'I'm your man'. Baffled by the hate for him. I tried one of his books though, it was unreadable.

Affectian (Affectian), Thursday, 29 May 2003 15:08 (twenty-three years ago)

seven months pass...
Woah. Just put I'm Your Man on my iPod and.....some of it is just not good. At all. "Jazz Police"? Woah.

Baked Bean Teeth (Baked Bean Teeth), Friday, 9 January 2004 21:43 (twenty-two years ago)

Really, BBT? Had you heard the record before? "Tower of Song" and "I'm Your Man" are the best songs, I think. "Tower of Song" is really beautiful. "First We Take Manhattan" is pretty great as a kind of gesture of overblown grandeur. And you gotta admit it's pretty funny. Maybe you just don't like the synth textures?

Broheems (diamond), Friday, 9 January 2004 21:53 (twenty-two years ago)

there's some lovely stuff on there, but I really can't deal with the production (and "jazz police" is pretty harsh)

s1ocki (slutsky), Friday, 9 January 2004 21:55 (twenty-two years ago)

"Jazz Police" is almost indigestible. I'd have thought "Everybody Knows" was another that was hard to hate from IYM...

Oh, CLASSIC btw, especially the first decade or so.

Nag! Nag! Nag! (Nag! Nag! Nag!), Friday, 9 January 2004 22:16 (twenty-two years ago)

I like "Jazz Police". It doesn't take itself too seriously and it's kind of funky in a strange way.

o. nate (onate), Friday, 9 January 2004 22:49 (twenty-two years ago)

Classic, but more so as a lyricist than singer.

anode, Friday, 9 January 2004 23:15 (twenty-two years ago)

get his latest. it is his best. and they are all so fuckin class!

alex in mainhattan (alex63), Saturday, 10 January 2004 00:14 (twenty-two years ago)

I love Cohen's songs, but generally can't stand the way he arranges them - the first version of Hallelujah I heard was Jeff Buckley's, and hearing the original was a huge disappointment. I'll get 'first we take manhattan' in my head, think fantastic song, weren't it?, put the record on and just stop, take it off, put it away again, because it can't ever live up to my expectations of it.

Suzanne is exempt from this, though. It's always great.

cis (cis), Saturday, 10 January 2004 00:22 (twenty-two years ago)

songs of love and hate is my fave.

s1ocki (slutsky), Saturday, 10 January 2004 05:28 (twenty-two years ago)

dealing with the production is i think kind of the point of his latter three albums

my fave is typically whatever i'm listening to at the point but i tend to listen to "love and hate" and "new skin" most of all

amateur!st (amateurist), Saturday, 10 January 2004 17:58 (twenty-two years ago)

new skin rules too.

s1ocki (slutsky), Saturday, 10 January 2004 18:00 (twenty-two years ago)

yea

amateur!st (amateurist), Saturday, 10 January 2004 18:01 (twenty-two years ago)

Broheems, yeah, the stilted over-synthed rhythms on that record are somewhat hard to take. I am much more partial to the early '70s stuff. IYM has a few good trax, including the title track, "Tower of Song" and "I Can't Forget," but the other stuff hasn't connected much with me, musically. It's evocative to me of a really bad era of musicianship or something.

Baked Bean Teeth (Baked Bean Teeth), Saturday, 10 January 2004 20:59 (twenty-two years ago)

five months pass...
Leonard cohen has always been hip in a beardy, low key sort of a way. Who wants some guy with sunglasses that can play show off guitar anyhoo?

The lyrics to Avalanche are sheer genius. Ditto fer Dress Rehearsal Rag, Susanne, Lady Midnight and Story Of Isaasc. He totally fuckin' rocks dude.

Also other great songwriters seem pretty inconcise or repetitive compared to Lenny the Great.

The arrangements are good to. The eighties stuff is kinda weird. Although Tower of Song has a nice production effect. At least he didn't go techno.

Casper, Thursday, 1 July 2004 05:55 (twenty-one years ago)

Cohen's songs always strike me as sitting there waiting for their definitive versions. Does that make any sense? The Pixies, for instance, own "I Can't Forget." R.E.M. can have "First We Tale Manhattan" if they want. Etc.

joseph cotten (joseph cotten), Thursday, 1 July 2004 07:26 (twenty-one years ago)

Take. Take Manhattan. Ugh.

joseph cotten (joseph cotten), Thursday, 1 July 2004 07:26 (twenty-one years ago)

eleven months pass...
"Roshi said something nice to me one time. He said that the older you get, the lonelier you become, and the deeper the love you need. Which means that this hero that you're trying to maintain as the central figure in the drama of your life -- this hero is not enjoying the life of a hero. You're exerting a tremendous maintenance to keep this heroic stance available to you, and the hero is suffering defeat after defeat. And they're not heroic defeats; they're ignoble defeats. Finally, one day you say, 'Let him die -- I can't invest any more in this heroic position.' From there, you just live your life as if it's real -- as if you have to make decisions even though you have absolutely no guarantee of any of the consequences of your decisions."

-- Leonard Cohen, Rolling Stone interview 2003.

Mark (MarkR), Thursday, 9 June 2005 16:37 (twenty-one years ago)

he uses language beautifully, even in interviews.

Amateur(ist) (Amateur(ist)), Thursday, 9 June 2005 23:50 (twenty-one years ago)

one month passes...
By and large, no tunes. So, dud.

avery keen-gardner (avery keen-gardner), Saturday, 23 July 2005 22:05 (twenty years ago)

Wrong, wrong, wrong. Cohen has written some great tunes.

Palomino (Palomino), Saturday, 23 July 2005 22:10 (twenty years ago)

so classic.

AaronK (AaronK), Sunday, 24 July 2005 04:40 (twenty years ago)

three weeks pass...
Classic or not, he's broke. Why do they always a) live outwith their means, b) trust their financial people?

stet (stet), Friday, 19 August 2005 00:54 (twenty years ago)

one month passes...
i just read this and it made me very sad.

all-time classic, no doubt.

barbarian cities (jaybob3005), Tuesday, 18 October 2005 10:21 (twenty years ago)

dud

corey c (shock of daylight), Tuesday, 18 October 2005 16:49 (twenty years ago)

Classic. "Everybody Knows" never gets the love it deserves, though Atom Egoyan used it well in the opening credits of Exotica.

Adam Harrison-Friday, Tuesday, 18 October 2005 19:04 (twenty years ago)

three years pass...

The ladyfriend is watching The Backwoods on TV now, which features a number of songs by Leonard (also features Gary Oldman...).

Got me back in the mood for him again.

FTWWW (PappaWheelie V), Saturday, 14 February 2009 20:55 (seventeen years ago)

I had the honor of interviewing him many years ago and what stuck out beyond his modesty was how when I transcribed the tape it read like third draft English. He spoke so eloquently and with a natural poetry. It didn't feel like a put on. He wasn't trying to be something or putting on airs (is that the right use of that word?). He was generous and really made it hard for me to interview a 20-something year old hipster after that without thinking, "listen, dude, you can't be giving me this much attitude if a man of LC's accomplishment can treat people with greater respect."

smurfherder, Saturday, 14 February 2009 22:13 (seventeen years ago)

jazz police amazing

conrad, Sunday, 15 February 2009 00:10 (seventeen years ago)

I had the honor of interviewing him many years ago and what stuck out beyond his modesty was how when I transcribed the tape it read like third draft English. He spoke so eloquently and with a natural poetry.

schlump, Sunday, 15 February 2009 01:24 (seventeen years ago)

When I see questions like this I always think of the Steve Wright gag: 'I got a tape for my car, Best of Music. I only like the first side.'
Is there really anyone out there for whom Len is on side 2 of that tape?

Dr X O'Skeleton, Sunday, 15 February 2009 20:19 (seventeen years ago)

one month passes...

he just played a 3 1/2 hour show, pretty epic

fucken cumlord (omar little), Sunday, 12 April 2009 07:35 (seventeen years ago)

Love his music but it always bums me out when smart people fall for gurus.

thirdalternative, Sunday, 12 April 2009 13:42 (seventeen years ago)

He's a Buddhist monk. That hardly makes him the follower of some wacky new age guru.

Classic, of course. I'm Your Man is my favourite. I think Jazz Police is really funny. Great Thelonius Monk as derange cocktail bar pianist solo too.

Beautiful Losers is far and away the best novel ever written by a rock musician. Granted, the competition isn't exactly fierce, so let's put it another way: it's one of the best transgressive novels of the 1960s, up there with Burroughs, Trocchi, Baldwin et al and a great piece of postmodern fiction too.

Stew, Sunday, 12 April 2009 15:14 (seventeen years ago)

This thread SUCKS

Hadrian VIII, Sunday, 12 April 2009 15:54 (seventeen years ago)

one year passes...

uh, yeah.

leonard cohen is basically god. so there.

by another name (amateurist), Saturday, 31 July 2010 01:46 (fifteen years ago)

oh man, confession time...i've tried really hard, but makes my skin crawl....someone direct me to something to change my mind

iago g., Saturday, 31 July 2010 01:49 (fifteen years ago)

iago how much do you care about lyrics? I can't imagine anybody feeling more than "that's pleasant" about any LC unless they are very into lyrics.

gross rainbow of haerosmith (underrated aerosmith albums I have loved), Saturday, 31 July 2010 02:03 (fifteen years ago)

yeah, i haven't sit down and focused, just put it on and did other stuff...always figured the way in was the words.

iago g., Saturday, 31 July 2010 02:06 (fifteen years ago)

is it early stuff you've heard or later stuff? because I always kinda liked his so-called classic early stuff, but it wasn't til I dug into the 80s albums that I became convinced of his genius.

tylerw, Saturday, 31 July 2010 03:39 (fifteen years ago)

yeah I mean Leonard Cohen is specifically for people who are listening for the lyrics. The music can be quite compelling but it's only in the context of the lyrics.

gross rainbow of haerosmith (underrated aerosmith albums I have loved), Saturday, 31 July 2010 04:21 (fifteen years ago)

iago how much do you care about lyrics? I can't imagine anybody feeling more than "that's pleasant" about any LC unless they are very into lyrics.

― gross rainbow of haerosmith (underrated aerosmith albums I have loved), Friday, July 30, 2010 9:03 PM (Yesterday) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink

i fucking hate this notion. lyrics and music ARE NOT TWO SEPARATE THINGS. they are fundamentally intertwined.

by another name (amateurist), Saturday, 31 July 2010 06:56 (fifteen years ago)

also the idea of people being uniquely "into lyrics" seems kind of absurd to me.

by another name (amateurist), Saturday, 31 July 2010 06:57 (fifteen years ago)

there's lots of ppl who dont care abt lyrics?

just sayin, Saturday, 31 July 2010 09:40 (fifteen years ago)

all i wanna say is that they don't really care about lyrics

by another name (amateurist), Saturday, 31 July 2010 09:46 (fifteen years ago)

naw some of the music's great - fuck it, all of the music's great; the arrangements on the first record are other worldly, the mellotron-rising strings, the jankity faraway fairground sounds, etc; there's a sensitivity and detail akin to the first nico record maybe. they're all such closely recorded, imtimate records, like it's a man's world or something. and there's such gallop to some of them - the partisan, fingerprints, the rowdy ones on love and hate.

anyway: thought this might've been bumped re: bird on a wire, the little seen thought-lost documentary that just got found and is showing again in a couple of weeks (dvd forthcoming etc). my mom saw it at the cinema in the seventies and - i forget whether this is from the docu or from something someone who saw him in concert said - still laughs at the memory of leonard's singers coming on stage to their 'ooooo's, and then leaving the stage until the next oooos.

baby i know that you think i'm just a lion (schlump), Saturday, 31 July 2010 10:25 (fifteen years ago)

oooh sweet didn't even know about that, thanks.

by another name (amateurist), Saturday, 31 July 2010 11:01 (fifteen years ago)

also, best comment on leonard's appeal came from the singer out of lamb, appearing in some documentary: "he's like isaac hayes, for poetry girls"

baby i know that you think i'm just a lion (schlump), Saturday, 31 July 2010 11:05 (fifteen years ago)

i fucking hate this notion. lyrics and music ARE NOT TWO SEPARATE THINGS. they are fundamentally intertwined.

that's a nice opinion, but it's not true; one can reproduce the lyrics of a song on paper, and there you go, the lyrics, all by their lonesome; one can do an instrumental version of a song, and what do you know, the music, a totally separate thing. you can argue that they're best together but your present argument is that there's no such thing as a hot dog or mustard, just a dog with mustard because the flavors intertwine

gross rainbow of haerosmith (underrated aerosmith albums I have loved), Saturday, 31 July 2010 14:08 (fifteen years ago)

of course you could always say "for me, the two are fundamentally intertwined, and it's hard for me to imagine how people don't think of it that way," and who could argue with you there?

gross rainbow of haerosmith (underrated aerosmith albums I have loved), Saturday, 31 July 2010 14:10 (fifteen years ago)

But was there ever a good version of"Bird on a Wire"?

dow, Saturday, 2 November 2024 02:57 (one year ago)

Johnny Cash's and Joe Cocker's?

birdistheword, Saturday, 2 November 2024 04:56 (one year ago)

What's wrong with Cohen's original? If you mean was there ever a good *cover* version, Jennifer Warnes's is excellent.

bored by endless ecstasy (anagram), Saturday, 2 November 2024 07:05 (one year ago)

The Lilac Time also covered "Bird on a Wire" in a 1991 tribute album called "I'm Your Fan" released by Les Inrockuptibles.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AiJTv92K5uU

That album is full of oddities like John Cale doing Hallelujah and Lloyd Cole doing Chelsea Hotel.

felicity, Saturday, 2 November 2024 08:00 (one year ago)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S2qisdKKMpU

biting your uncles (Tom D.), Saturday, 2 November 2024 10:15 (one year ago)

Jennifer Warnes' "Bird on a Wire" is good.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0xsJXDwIL2k

Blitz Primary (tipsy mothra), Saturday, 2 November 2024 17:13 (one year ago)

I favour the Willie Nelson version, it sounds very natural when he sings it

Patti The Pone (flamboyant goon tie included), Saturday, 2 November 2024 17:33 (one year ago)

I already mentioned that one. xp

bored by endless ecstasy (anagram), Saturday, 2 November 2024 18:18 (one year ago)

Oh, haven't that one, thanks---seems likely, considering his refreshing version of "Hallelujah."
But otherwise, it's always seemed the most abject, sympathy or pathos-seeking dirgethon---the failed twin of "After The Gold Rush," a masterpiece, because it builds that "transcendent" fantasy of escaping ruined Mother Earth---then honestly keens," all in a dreeam"--earns its pathos like "Bird" doesn't,in my ears----but I'll check Willie and some of those others, thanks.

dow, Saturday, 2 November 2024 21:04 (one year ago)

(Also "Gold Rush" honestly and still has the appetite for "There was a band, playing in my head, and I felt like getting high," and honestly, inexorably ties that into "I was thinkin' about what a friend had said, and hopin', it was a lie." What have we come to, when that's what we hope of our friends! It's--the 70s, a new mornin'.

dow, Saturday, 2 November 2024 21:09 (one year ago)

"Bird On The Wire" ain't got none of that, or not enough.

dow, Saturday, 2 November 2024 21:09 (one year ago)

This is the only Joe Cocker track I really enjoy, "Marjorine" (1968):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NYtb5vEk3FA

dow, Saturday, 2 November 2024 21:14 (one year ago)

"Bird on a Wire" is miles better than "After the Goldrush".

biting your uncles (Tom D.), Saturday, 2 November 2024 21:36 (one year ago)

I think those two songs are attempting v different things, written in different songwriting languages. A closer cousin for me, to “Bird On A Wire”, is Buffy’s “Until It’s Time For You To Go”, ballads that occupy a space between Tin Pan Alley and country

“After The Goldrush” is charming in its hippie-ness, a song-length version of the last chapters of Canticle For Leibowitz (which I assumed was the song’s inspiration, and a Google concludes I’m not the only person to make that assumption)

Patti The Pone (flamboyant goon tie included), Saturday, 2 November 2024 22:08 (one year ago)

xp Stoney Edwards has a pretty good version if you like 70s country

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZHxwyHr1kps

bbq, Sunday, 3 November 2024 00:28 (one year ago)

Stoney Edwards! I should have known that; he didn't get to make many records.
Wild about Canticle, I only knew that the song was named after (and maybe other connections to) Dean Stockwell's screenplay of same title. Thanks yall!

dow, Sunday, 3 November 2024 01:47 (one year ago)

This thread led me to find this version with the 1979 Recent Songs band:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gDJ3Rts_XMA

bratwurst autumn (Eazy), Sunday, 3 November 2024 07:16 (one year ago)

And then that led to this:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fh6zyJyrrQI

bratwurst autumn (Eazy), Sunday, 3 November 2024 07:21 (one year ago)

there'll be fires on the road / and the white man dancing

— el Cohen (@ElCohenSincere) November 5, 2024

bratwurst autumn (Eazy), Wednesday, 6 November 2024 12:17 (one year ago)

https://www.instagram.com/reel/DCF8ExQuIB8/

bored by endless ecstasy (anagram), Wednesday, 20 November 2024 04:59 (one year ago)

that's wonderful!

willem, Wednesday, 20 November 2024 09:12 (one year ago)

great stuff

nxd, Wednesday, 20 November 2024 09:24 (one year ago)

It's the same location as this one:

https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/91dsne9AZsL._UF1000,1000_QL80_.jpg

Elvis Telecom, Saturday, 23 November 2024 04:37 (one year ago)


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