Leonard Cohen
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Leonard Cohen Biography
One of the most fascinating and enigmatic -- if not the most successful
-- singer/songwriters of the late '60s, Leonard Cohen has retained an
audience across four decades of music-making interrupted by various
digressions into personal and creative exploration, all of which have
only added to the mystique surrounding him. Second only to Bob Dylan
(and perhaps Paul Simon), he commands the attention of critics and
younger musicians more firmly than any other musical figure from the
1960s who is still working at the outset of the 21st century, which is
all the more remarkable an achievement for someone who didn't even
aspire to a musical career until he was in his thirties.
Cohen was born in 1934, a year before Elvis Presley or Ronnie Hawkins,
and his background -- personal, social, and intellectual -- couldn't
have been more different from those of any rock stars of any
generation; nor can he be easily compared even with any members of the
generation of folksingers who came of age in the 1960s. Though he knew
some country music and played it a bit as a boy, he didn't start
performing on even a semi-regular basis, much less recording, until
after he had already written several books -- and as an established
novelist and poet, his literary accomplishments far exceed those of Bob
Dylan or most anyone else who one cares to mention in music, at least
this side of operatic librettists such as Hugo Von Hoffmanstahl or
Stefan Zweig, figures from another musical and cultural world.
He was born Leonard Norman Cohen into a middle-class Jewish family in
the Montreal suburb of Westmount. His father, a clothing merchant (who
also held a degree in engineering), died in 1943, when Cohen was nine
years old. It was his mother who encouraged Cohen as a writer,
especially of poetry, during his childhood. This fit in with the
progressive intellectual environment in which he was raised, which
allowed him free inquiry into a vast range of pursuits. His
relationship to music was more tentative -- he took up the guitar at
age 13, initially as a way to impress a girl, but was good enough to
play country & western songs at local cafes, and he subsequently
formed a group called the Buckskin Boys. At 17, he enrolled in McGill
University as an English major -- by this time, he was writing poetry
in earnest and became part of the university's tiny underground
bohemian community. Cohen only earned average grades, but was a good
enough writer to earn the McNaughton Prize in creative writing by the
time he graduated in 1955 -- a year later, the ink barely dry on his
degree, he published his first book of poetry, Let Us Compare
Mythologies (1956), which got great reviews but didn't sell especially
well.
He was already beyond the age that rock & roll was aimed at -- Bob
Dylan, by contrast, was still Robert Zimmerman, still in his teens, and
young enough to become a devotee of Buddy Holly when the latter
emerged. In 1961, Cohen published his second book of poetry, The Spice
Box of Earth, which became an international success critically and
commercially, and established Cohen as a major new literary figure.
Meanwhile, he tried to join the family business and spent some time at
Columbia University in New York, writing all the time. Between the
modest royalties from sales of his second book, literary grants from
the Canadian government, and a family legacy, he was able to live
comfortably and travel around the world, partake of much of what it had
to offer -- including some use of LSD when it was still legal -- and
ultimately settling for an extended period in Greece, on the isle of
Hydra in the Aegean Sea. He continued to publish, issuing a pair of
novels, The Favorite Game (1963) and Beautiful Losers (1966), with a
pair of poetry collections, Flowers for Hitler (1964) and Parasites of
Heaven (1966) around them. The Favorite Game was a very personal work
about his early life in Montreal, but it was Beautiful Losers that
proved another breakthrough, earning the kind of reviews that authors
dare not even hope for -- Cohen found himself compared to James Joyce
in the pages of The Boston Globe, and across four decades the book has
enjoyed sales totaling well into six figures.
It was around this time that he also started writing music again, songs
being a natural extension of his poetry. His relative isolation on
Hydra, coupled with his highly mobile lifestyle when he left the
island, his own natural iconoclastic nature, and the fact that he'd
avoided being overwhelmed (or even touched too seriously) by the
currents running through popular music since the 1940s, combined to
give Cohen a unique voice as a composer. Though he did settle in
Nashville for a short time in the mid-'60s, he didn't write quite like
anyone else in music, in the country music mecca or anywhere else. This
might have been an impediment but for the intervention of Judy Collins,
a folksinger who had just moved to the front rank of that field, and
who had a voice just special enough to move her beyond the relatively
emaciated ranks of remaining popular folk performers after Dylan
shifted to electric music -- she was still getting heard, and not just
by the purists left behind in Dylan's wake. She added Cohen's Suzanne
to her repertory and put it onto her album In My Life, a record that
was controversial enough in folk circles -- because of her cover of the
Beatles song that gave the LP its title -- that it pulled in a lot of
listeners and got a wide airing. Suzanne received a considerable
amount of radio airplay from the LP, and Cohen was also represented on
the album by Dress Rehearsal Rag.
It was Collins who persuaded Cohen to return to performing for the
first time since his teens. He made his debut during the summer of 1967
at the Newport Folk Festival, followed by a pair of sold-out concerts
in New York City and an appearance singing his songs and reciting his
poems on the CBS network television show Camera Three, in a show
entitled Ladies and Gentlemen, Mr. Leonard Cohen. It was around the
same time that actor/singer Noel Harrison brought Suzanne onto the
pop charts with a recording of his own. One of those who saw Cohen
perform at Newport was John Hammond, Sr., the legendary producer whose
career went back to the 1930s and the likes of Billie Holiday, Benny
Goodman, and Count Basie, and extended up through Bob Dylan and,
ultimately, to Bruce Springsteen. Hammond got Cohen signed to Columbia
Records and he created The Songs of Leonard Cohen, which was released
just before Christmas of 1967. Producer John Simon was able to find a
restrained yet appealing approach to recording Cohen's voice, which
might have been described as a appealingly sensitive near-monotone; yet
that voice was perfectly suited to the material at hand, all of which,
written in a very personal language, seemed drenched in downbeat images
and a spirit of discovery as a path to unsettling revelation.
Despite its spare production and melancholy subject matter -- or, very
possibly because of it -- the album was an immediate hit by the
standards of the folk music world and the budding singer/songwriter
community. In an era in which millions of listeners hung on the next
albums of Bob Dylan and Simon & Garfunkel -- whose own latest album
had ended with a minor-key rendition of Silent Night set against a
radio news account of the death of Lenny Bruce -- Cohen's music quickly
found a small but dedicated following. College students by the
thousands bought it; in its second year of release, the record sold
over 100,000 copies. The Songs of Leonard Cohen was as close as Cohen
ever got to mass audience success.
Amid all of this sudden musical activity, he hardly neglected his other
writing -- in 1968, Cohen released a new volume, Selected Poems:
1956-1968, which included both old and newly published work, and earned
him the Governor-General's Award, Canada's highest literary honor,
which he proceeded to decline to accept. By this time, he was actually
almost more a part of the rock scene, residing for a time in New York's
Chelsea Hotel, where his neighbors included Janis Joplin and other
performing luminaries, some of whom influenced his songs very directly.
His next album, Songs from a Room (1969), was characterized by an even
greater spirit of melancholy -- even the relatively spirited A Bunch
of Lonesome Heroes was steeped in such depressing sensibilities, and
the one song not written by Cohen, The Partisan, was a grim narrative
about the reasons for and consequences of resistance to tyranny that
included lines like She died without a whisper and included images of
wind blowing past graves. Joan Baez subsequently recorded the song, and
in her hands it was a bit more upbeat and inspiring to the listener;
Cohen's rendition made it much more difficult to get past the costs
presented by the singer's persona. On the other hand, Seems So Long
Ago, Nancy, although as downbeat as anything else here, did present
Cohen in his most expressive and commercial voice, a nasal but
affecting and finely nuanced performance.
Still, in all, Songs from a Room was less well received commercially
and critically -- Bob Johnston's restrained, almost minimalist
production made it less overtly appealing than the subtly commercial
trappings of his debut, though the album did have a pair of tracks,
Bird on the Wire and The Story of Isaac, that became standards
rivaling Suzanne -- The Story of Isaac, a musical parable woven
around biblical imagery about Vietnam (which is also relevant to the
Iraq War), was one of the most savage and piercing songs to come out of
the antiwar movement, and showed a level of sophistication in its music
and lyrics that put it in a whole separate realm of composition; it
received an even better airing on the Live Songs album, in a
performance recorded in Berlin during 1972.
Cohen may not have been a widely popular performer or recording artist,
but his unique voice and sound, and the power of his writing and its
influence, helped give him entr�e to rock's front-ranked performers, an
odd status for the now 35-year-old author/composer. He appeared at the
1970 Isle of Wight festival in England, a post-Woodstock gathering of
stars and superstars, including late appearances by such
soon-to-die-or-disband legends as Jimi Hendrix and the Doors; looking
nearly as awkward as his fellow Canadian Joni Mitchell, Cohen strummed
his acoustic guitar backed by a pair of female singers in front of an
audience of 600,000 ( It's a large nation, but still weak ), comprised
in equal portions of fans, freaks, and belligerent gatecrashers, but
the mere fact that he was there -- sandwiched somewhere between Miles
Davis and Emerson, Lake & Palmer -- was a clear statement of the
status (if not the popular success) he'd achieved. One portion of his
set, Tonight Will Be Fine, was released on a subsequent live album,
while his performance of Suzanne was one of the highlights of Murray
Lerner's long-delayed, 1996-issued documentary Message to Love: The
Isle of Wight Festival.
Already, he had carved out a unique place for himself in music, as much
author as performer and recording artist, letting his songs develop and
evolve across years -- his distinctly noncommercial voice became part
of his appeal to the audience he found, giving him a unique corner of
the music audience, made of listeners descended from the same people
who had embraced Bob Dylan's early work before he'd become a mass-media
phenomenon in 1964. In a sense, Cohen embodied a phenomenon vaguely
similar to what Dylan enjoyed before his early-'70s tour with the Band
-- people bought his albums by the tens and, occasionally, hundreds of
thousands, but seemed to hear him in uniquely personal terms. He earned
his audience seemingly one listener at a time, by word of mouth more
than by the radio which, in any case (especially on the AM dial), was
mostly friendly to covers of Cohen's songs by other artists.
Cohen's third album, Songs of Love and Hate (1971), was his most
powerful body of work to date, brimming with piercing lyrics and music
as poignantly affecting as it was minimalist in its approach --
arranger Paul Buckmaster's work on strings was peculiarly muted, and
the children's chorus that showed up on Last Year's Man was spare in
its presence; balancing them was Cohen's most effective vocalizing to
date, brilliantly expressive around such acclaimed songs as Joan of
Arc, Dress Rehearsal Rag (which had been recorded by Judy Collins
five years before), and Famous Blue Raincoat. The bleakness of the
tone and subject matter ensured that he would never become a pop
performer; even the beat-driven Diamonds in the Mine, with its catchy
children's chorus accompaniment and all, and with a twangy electric
guitar accompaniment to boot, was as dark and venomous-toned a song as
Columbia Records put out in 1971. And the most compelling moments --
among an embarrassment of riches -- came on lyrics like Now the flames
they followed Joan of Arc/As she came riding through the dark/No Moon
to keep her armor bright/No man to get her through this night.... ;
indeed, hearing Cohen's lyrics 25 years on, one could almost find a
burlesque of Cohen's music in the songs of Lisa Kudrow's Phoebe Buffay
on Friends -- who, even money bet probably grew up on Songs of Love and
Hate in her fictional bio -- and lyrics like They found their bodies
the third day....
Teenagers of the late '60s (or any era that followed) listening
devotedly to Leonard Cohen might have worried their parents, but also
could well have been the smartest or most sensitive kids in their class
and the most well-balanced emotionally -- if they weren't depressed --
but also effectively well on their way out of being teenagers, and
probably too advanced for their peers and maybe most of their teachers
(except maybe the ones listening to Cohen). Songs of Love and Hate,
coupled with the earlier hit versions of Suzanne, etc., earned Cohen
a large international cult following. He also found himself in demand
in the world of commercial filmmaking, as director Robert Altman used
his music in his 1971 feature film McCabe and Mrs. Miller, starring
Warren Beatty and Julie Christie, a revisionist period film set at the
turn of the 19th century that was savaged by the critics (and, by some
accounts, sabotaged by its own studio) but went on to become one of the
director's best-loved movies. The following year, he also published a
new poetry collection, The Energy of Slaves.
As was his won't, Cohen spent years between albums, and in 1973 he
seemed to take stock of himself as a performer by issuing Leonard
Cohen: Live Songs. Not a conventional live album, it was a compendium
of performances from various venues across several years and focused on
highlights of his output from 1969 onward. It showcased his writing as
much as his performing, but also gave a good account of his appeal to
his most serious fans -- those still uncertain of where they stood in
relation to his music who could get past the epic-length Please Don't
Pass Me By knew for certain they were ready to join the inner circle
of his legion of devotees after that, while others who only appreciated
Bird on the Wire or The Story of Isaac could stay comfortably on an
outer ring.
Meanwhile, in 1973, his music became the basis for a theatrical
production called Sisters of Mercy, conceived by Gene Lesser and
loosely based on Cohen's life, or at least a fantasy version of his
life. A three-year lag ensued between Songs of Love and Hate and
Cohen's next album, and most critics and fans just assumed he'd hit a
dry spell with the live album covering the gap. He was busy
concertizing, however, in the United States and Europe during 1971 and
1972, and extending his appearances into Israel during the 1973 Yom
Kippur War. It was during this period that he also began working with
pianist and arranger John Lissauer, whom he engaged as producer of his
next album, New Skin for the Old Ceremony (1974). That album seemed to
justify his fans' continued faith in his work, presenting Cohen in a
more lavish musical environment. He proved capable of holding his own
in a pop environment, even if the songs were mostly still depressing
and bleak.
The following year, Columbia Records released The Best of Leonard
Cohen, featuring a dozen of his best-known songs -- principally hits in
the hands of other performers -- from his previous four LPs (though it
left out Dress Rehearsal Rag ). It was also during the mid-'70s that
Cohen first crossed paths professionally with Jennifer Warnes,
appearing on the same bill with the singer at numerous shows, which
would lead to a series of key collaborations in the ensuing decade. By
this time, he was a somewhat less mysterious persona, having toured
extensively and gotten considerable exposure -- among many other
attributes, Cohen became known for his uncanny attractiveness to women,
which seemed to go hand in glove with the romantic subjects of most of
his songs.
In 1977, Cohen reappeared with the ironically titled Death of a Ladies'
Man, the most controversial album of his career, produced by Phil
Spector. The notion of pairing Spector -- known variously as a
Svengali-like presence to his female singers and artists and the most
unrepentant (and often justified) over-producer in the field of pop
music -- with Cohen must have seemed like a good one to someone at some
point, but apparently Cohen himself had misgivings about many of the
resulting tracks that Spector never addressed, having mixed the record
completely on his own. The resulting LP suffered from the worst
attributes of Cohen's and Spector's work, overly dense and
self-consciously imposing in its sound, and virtually bathing the
listener in Cohen's depressive persona, but showing his limited vocal
abilities to disadvantage, owing to Spector's use of scratch (i.e.,
guide) vocals and his unwillingness to permit the artist to redo some
of his weaker moments on those takes. For the first (and only) time in
Cohen's career, his near-monotone delivery of this period wasn't a
positive attribute. Cohen's unhappiness with the album was widely known
among fans, who mostly bought it with that caveat in mind, so it didn't
harm his reputation -- a year after its release, Cohen also published a
new literary collection using the title Death of a Ladies' Man.
Cohen's next album, Recent Songs (1979), returned him to the spare
settings of his early-'70s work and showed his singing to some of its
best advantage. Working with veteran producer Henry Lewy (best known
for his work with Joni Mitchell), the album showed Cohen's singing as
attractive and expressive in its quiet way, and songs such as The
Guests seeming downright pretty -- he still wrote about life and love,
and especially relationships, in stark terms, but he almost seemed to
be moving into a pop mode on numbers such as Humbled in Love. Frank
Sinatra never needed to look over his shoulder at Cohen (at least, as a
singer), but he did seem to be trying for a slicker pop sound at
moments on his record.
Then came 1984, and two key new works in Cohen's output -- the
poetic/religious volume The Book of Mercy and the album Various
Positions (1984). The latter, recorded with Jennifer Warnes, is
arguably his most accessible album of his entire career up to that time
-- Cohen's voice, now a peculiarly expressive baritone instrument,
found a beautiful pairing with Warnes, and the songs were as fine as
ever, steeped in spirituality and sexuality, with Dance Me to the End
of Love a killer opener: a wry, doom-laden yet impassioned pop-style
ballad that is impossible to forget. Those efforts overlapped with some
ventures by the composer/singer into other creative realms, including
an award-winning short film that he wrote, directed, and scored,
entitled I Am a Hotel, and the score for the 1985 conceptual film Night
Magic, which earned a Juno Award in Canada for Best Movie Score.
Sad to say, Various Positions went relatively unnoticed, and was
followed by another extended sabbatical from recording, which ended
with I'm Your Man (1988). But during his hiatus, Warnes had released
her album of Cohen-authored material, entitled Famous Blue Raincoat,
which had sold extremely well and introduced Cohen to a new generation
of listeners. So when I'm Your Man did appear, with its electronic
production (albeit still rather spare) and songs that added humor
(albeit dark humor) to his mix of pessimistic and poetic conceits, the
result was his best-selling record in more than a decade. The result,
in 1991, was the release of I'm Your Fan: The Songs of Leonard Cohen, a
CD of recordings of his songs by the likes of R.E.M., the Pixies, Nick
Cave & the Bad Seeds, and John Cale, which put Cohen as a
songwriter pushing age 60 right back on center stage for the 1990s. He
rose to the occasion, releasing The Future, an album that dwelt on the
many threats facing mankind in the coming years and decades, a year
later. Not the stuff of pop charts or MTV heavy rotation, it attracted
Cohen's usual coterie of fans, and enough press interest as well as
sufficient sales, to justify the release in 1994 of his second concert
album, Cohen Live, derived from his two most recent tours. A year later
came another tribute album, Tower of Song, featuring Cohen's songs as
interpreted by Billy Joel, Willie Nelson, et al.
In the midst of all of this new activity surrounding his writing and
compositions, Cohen embarked on a new phase of his life. Religious
concerns were never too far from his thinking and work, even when he
was making a name for himself writing songs about love, and he had
focused ever more on this side of life since Various Positions. He came
to spend time at the Mt. Baldy Zen Center, a Buddhist retreat in
California, and eventually became a full-time resident, becoming a
Buddhist monk during the late '90s. When he re-emerged in 1999, Cohen
had many dozens of new compositions in hand, songs and poems alike. His
new collaborations were with singer/songwriter/musician Sharon
Robinson, who also ended up producing the resulting album, Ten New
Songs (2001) -- there also emerged during this period a release called
Field Commander Cohen: Tour of 1979, comprised of live recordings from
his tour of 22 years before.
In 2004, the year he turned 70, Cohen released one of the most
controversial albums of his career, Dear Heather. It revealed his voice
anew, in this phase of his career, as a deep baritone more limited in
range than on any previous recording, but it overcame this change in
vocal timbre by facing it head-on, just as Cohen had done with his
singing throughout his career -- it also contained a number of songs
for which Cohen wrote music but not lyrics, a decided change of pace
for a man who'd started out as a poet. And it was as personal a record
as Cohen had ever issued. His return to recording was one of the more
positive aspects of Cohen's resumption of his music activities. On
another side, in 2005, he filed suit against his longtime business
manager and his financial advisor over the alleged theft of more than
five million dollars, at least some of which took place during his
years at the Buddhist retreat.
Four decades after he emerged as a public literary figure and then a
performer, Cohen remains one of the most compelling and enigmatic
musical figures of his era, and one of the very few of that era who
commands as much respect and attention, and probably as large an
audience, in the 21st century as he did in the 1960s. As much as any
survivor of that decade, Cohen has held onto his original audience and
has seen it grow across generations, in keeping with a body of music
that is truly timeless and ageless. In 2006, his enduring influence
seemed to be acknowledged in Lions Gate Films' release of Leonard
Cohen: I'm Your Man, director Lian Lunson's concert/portrait of Cohen
and his work and career. ~ Bruce Eder, All Music Guide