Re: Robert Christgau on Leonard Cohen

Liste des GroupesRevenir à ra poems 
Sujet : Re: Robert Christgau on Leonard Cohen
De : will.dockery (at) *nospam* gmail.com (W.Dockery)
Groupes : alt.arts.poetry.comments rec.arts.poems
Date : 22. Feb 2025, 05:45:50
Autres entêtes
Organisation : novaBBS
Message-ID : <0eef19f59547bace575faf4d9746dac9@www.novabbs.com>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
User-Agent : Rocksolid Light
General-Zod wrote:
Will Dockery wrote:
General-Zod wrote:
Will Dockery wrote:
>
https://www.robertchristgau.com/xg/music/cohen-16b.php
>
Our Man, the Sophisticate: Robert Christgau Remembers Leonard Cohen
>
Leonard Cohen--poet, novelist, and musician--represented something,
regardless of age, we all wanted to become.
>
>
>
Good evening, agreed.
>
>
Worth adding to the archive...
>
********************************************************************
>
Leonard Cohen--poet, novelist, and musician--represented something,
regardless of age, we all wanted to become.
book cover
Before we contemplate Leonard Cohen's mortal soul, let's run some
numbers.
>
Born September 21, 1934, Leonard Cohen was the oldest major musician to
emerge in the high 60s. A modestly renowned Canadian poet and novelist
when Songs of Leonard Cohen materialized at the end of 1967, he began
productive if not quite prolific--four studio albums in seven years. But
over the next 34 years, up till 2008, he added just seven more. And then
in 2009 he exploded. In the final eight years of his life, Cohen
generated three studio albums and four live ones without slackening his
lifelong perfectionism. The studio work measures up, not quite Songs of
Love and Hate or I'm Your Man but sharper than Death of a Ladies' Man or
Dear Heather. And where most artists' concert albums are filler, these
are summations.
>
True, on 2010's Songs from the Road many titles are a touch less than
prime, and on 2014's Live in Dublin performances fine-tuned in hundreds
of venues seem rather redundant even so. But what renders them so is the
album that proved how alive Cohen was at 76: 2009's Live in London,
which blows away not just his three earlier live placeholders but his
various best-ofs, culminating his lifework as it portends the new songs
that would amplify it. And having shrewdly reclaimed shiny shards of
catalogue, 2013's overlooked Can't Forget: A Souvenir of the Grand Tour
ends by topping off a monologue about the six stages of male sex
appeal--irresistible, resistible, transparent, invisible, repulsive, and
cute--with his single greatest quatrain: "I said to Hank Williams how
lonely does it get/Hank Williams he hasn't answered me yet/But I hear
him coughing all night long/A hundred floors above me in the Tower of
Song."
>
Inflected by multiple religious fascinations and quests, song and sex
are the bulwarks of Cohen's legend and achievement. Emerging at an
ancient 33 in a sober haircut and dark suit, he played the worldly-wise
yet spiritual ladies man to a poetry-curious audience of hirsute hippies
whose idea of free love was let's-spend-the-night-together--where
Stephen Stills was a blond demigod who fucked lots of chicks, Cohen was
a jaded roué who bedded lots of women. Many women felt his musical
magnetism, too. But with males the attraction was trickier--his
sophistication was a fantasy so far beyond these guys that it narrowed
the appeal of his dry wit, drier melodic gift, and calm verbal command.
>
Me, I admired Cohen's sacramentally sexed-up novel Beautiful Losers in
1966, dug his supposedly overproduced debut album, and raved early about
Robert Altman's Cohen-suffused McCabe and Mrs. Miller. Clearly, only
some kind of genius could have burst upon us intoning "Suzanne," "So
Long, Marianne," and "Bird on a Wire." But that genius was
inconsistent--his underproduced second album, Songs from a Room, is one
of several decided sub-classics. Nor did his fallback pessimism or the
women and faiths he engaged so readily and discarded so inevitably
betoken true enlightenment. He was always a bigger star in Europe than
the USA, and due to some amalgam of perfectionism and chronic depression
was never fully comfortable on the road, which along with copyrights
provided the bulk of his income. So having toured successfully enough
behind 1988's confident I'm Your Man and 1992's ominous The Future, he
climbed Mount Baldy to initiate the oft-told tale: five years as a Zen
monk, publishing rights sold with the windfall hidden in a tax shelter,
long sojourns in Mumbai studying Advaita Hinduism, fine post-9/11 album,
and the 2004 discovery that his windfall had been embezzled away,
leaving t
h
e author of "Hallelujah" broke at 72.
>
The dream had been to quit music, write what he pleased when he pleased,
and, as Yeats advised 40-year-olds around the time Cohen was born, begin
the preparation for his death. But he wanted to leave his two children
something, and although abstemious by roué standards had no appetite for
poetic penury. So he did the only thing he could do and by combatting
economic duress became a better man--ironically for someone who had
always been old, a more mature man. After meticulous rehearsals with a
road band so intelligently curated it could hit every note every night
while evoking the responsive flexibility of a crack jazz combo, he
embarked on his grand tour.
>
There Cohen accepted himself for what he was: a superb songwriter and
canny, gracious performer who after four decades was loved worldwide by
an audience that would never match his sophistication but had achieved
enough wisdom to enjoy la différence. Where before his doomed retirement
he had downed multiple bottles of Château Latour to warm up for shows,
now it was half a stout or nothing at all. Where before he was a
compulsive perfectionist, now he was a working man who always hit the
nail on the head. Where before he sometimes felt discomfited by his
fans' adoration, now he was enlarged by it. I was 70 when I saw him at
Madison Square Garden in 2012, so it would be inconsistent not to quote
myself verbatim: "This was not a nostalgia trip, a comforting or at best
invigorating lookback at pleasures and potencies past. It posited a
clear-eyed future in which the fruits of a well-spent life remain at
your disposal. Leonard Cohen is the 78-year-old 68-year-olds hope to
become."
>
Yet simultaneously he prepared for his death by finishing 28 of many
available song fragments. These he spread over three albums that taken
together posited a future in which his soul would leave this coil. The
exact date remained obscure--when a recent New Yorker profile surmised
that it was imminent, Cohen riposted that he intended to live forever.
But just as 2010's Old Ideas packed a sardonic punch worthy of a
78-year-old road dog, on 2016's You Want It Darker his voice was a husk.
It wasn't the first time. But in retrospect it seems a clear-eyed signal
that Leonard Cohen knew exactly what he was doing.
>
>
>
******************************************************************
>
>
Good read, Zod.
>
Yo. !
>
Robert Christgau had some interesting insights.
>
>
Right on
Great for another read.

Date Sujet#  Auteur
22 Feb 25 o Re: Robert Christgau on Leonard Cohen1W.Dockery

Haut de la page

Les messages affichés proviennent d'usenet.

NewsPortal