Archiv für den Monat: September 2020

KW-39-2020: FAR OUT MAGAZINE today, on 21st of Septembre 2020, LC`s 86th birthday: Ranking all of Leonard Cohen’s albums in order of greatness

Ranking all of Leonard Cohen’s albums in order of greatness

https://faroutmagazine.co.uk/leonard-cohen-album-ranked-worst-to-best/?fbclid=IwAR0rjUEEYgBrnteJ8MoK_EBiXSvXmsyfPQxIMufF4YakAo-xWMpMJq8fFUw

Leonard Cohen’s albums from worst to best:

15. Popular Problems (2014)

  1. guess what it is ?

 

 

KW-39-2020: Vol. 4 – ZEN & POESIE – Das Leonard Cohen – Lexikon – The Cohenpedia Series Vol. 4: LEONARD COHEN – UN HOMMAGE – REPRINTED & EXPANDED – (bilingual: Deutsch/ Francais/ English) – OUT NOW

Vol. 4 – ZEN & POESIE – Das Leonard Cohen – Lexikon – The Cohenpedia Series Vol. 4: LEONARD COHEN – UN HOMMAGE – REPRINTED & EXPANDED – (bilingual: Deutsch/ Francais/ English) – OUT NOW: 08/2020

KW-38-2020: #blog_leonardcohen_de : Ein bisschen Nostalgie darf erlaubt sein: Der „blog.leonardcohen.de“ geht ins 7. Jahr. Im September 2014 startete ich meinen blog.leonardcohen.de als Teil meiner website www.cohenpedia.de . Deren Ursprünge gehen bis ins Jahr 1996 zurück. Bis zum heutigen Tag gibt es 2346 Blog-Einträge. Die teils bilingualen (dt./ engl.) und stets kostenfreien Einträge sind nach Kalenderwochen und Monaten geordnet. Konzerterinnerungen, Informationen über vergangene und gegenwärtige Veröffentlichen sowie Links zu weiterführenden Informationen sind die zentralen Elemente. Inhaltlich spiegeln die blog-einträge meine popkulturellen Interessen, basierend auf der Kunst, dem Leben und Werk des kanadischen Singer/ Songwriters und Rockpoeten #Leonard_Cohen wieder. Aber auch Cohen-affine und – fremde Künstler und Werke finden in blog.leonardcohen.de immer wieder Beachtung. Aktuell werden auch podcasts zum Thema eingepflegt. – a lil bit of nostalgia : 7th year of blog.leonardcohen.de – a matter of my cultural interests, based on the art, life & work of Canadian rockpoet #Leonard_Cohen. In Septembre of 2014 I start my blog.leonardcohen.de as a part of my www.cohenpedia.de – files

Ein bisschen Nostalgie darf erlaubt sein: Der „blog.leonardcohen.de“ geht ins 7. Jahr. Im September 2014 startete ich meinen blog.leonardcohen.de als Teil meiner website www.cohenpedia.de  . Deren Ursprünge gehen bis ins Jahr 1996 zurück. Bis zum heutigen Tag gibt es 2346 Blog-Einträge. Die teils bilingualen (dt./ engl.) und stets kostenfreien Einträge sind nach Kalenderwochen und Monaten geordnet. Konzerterinnerungen, Informationen über vergangene und gegenwärtige Veröffentlichen sowie Links zu weiterführenden Informationen sind die zentralen Elemente. Inhaltlich spiegeln die blog-einträge meine popkulturellen Interessen, basierend auf der Kunst, dem Leben und Werk des kanadischen Singer/ Songwriters und Rockpoeten #Leonard_Cohen wieder. Aber auch Cohen-affine und – fremde Künstler und Werke finden in blog.leonardcohen.de immer wieder Beachtung. Aktuell werden auch podcasts zum Thema eingepflegt.

A little nostalgia may be allowed: The “blog.leonardcohen.de” is in its 7th year. In September 2014 I started my blog.leonardcohen.de as part of my website www.cohenpedia.de  Its origins go back to 1996. To date, there are 2346 free blog entries. The partly bilingual (German / English) entries are arranged according to calendar weeks and months. Concert reminders, information about past and present publications as well as links to further information are the central elements. In terms of content, the blog entries reflect my interests in pop culture, based on the art, life and work of the Canadian singer / songwriter and rock poet #Leonard_Cohen. But also Cohen-affine and – foreign artists and works attract attention in blog.leonardcohen.de again and again. Podcasts on the topic are currently being added.

KW-38-2020: #Leonard_Cohen_and_#Jimi_Hendrix – Both joined the #Isle_Of_Wight-Festival in 1970

 

Jimi Hendrix was a tough act to follow under the best of circumstances. But to follow him onstage after midnight in front of a crowd of more than half a million people that had been setting fires and throwing bottles at the stage seemed like an impossible task for a poet with an acoustic guitar and a gentle band of backing musicians. Yet Leonard Cohen turned the volatile situation at the 1970 Isle of Wight Festival into one of the most magical performances of his career.

A little piece of land four miles off the southern coast of England, the Isle of Wight was host to three great music festivals from 1968 to 1970. The last of these was something of a cross between Woodstock and Altamont: flower power with an undercurrent of menace. Like the Woodstock festival the year before, the 1970 Isle of Wight festival was crashed by thousands of unpaying fans.

Headliners for the five-day festival included Hendrix, Miles Davis, the Who and the Doors. By the time Cohen appeared–near the very end of the rainy final night–the atmosphere had become dangerous. During the Hendix performance, someone threw a flare onto the top of the stage and set it on fire. Journalist Sylvie Simmons describes the scene in her book, I’m Your Man: The Life of Leonard Cohen:

Tension had been rising at the festival for days. The promoters had expected a hundred and fifty thousand people but half a million more turned up, many with no intention of paying. Even after the promoters were forced to declare it a free festival, ill will remained. During a set by Kris Kristofferson, bottles were thrown and he was booed offstage. „They were booing everybody,“ says Kristofferson. „Except Leonard Cohen.“

As Cohen and his producer and keyboard player Bob Johnston stood watching the mayhem during Hendrix’s performance, Cohen stayed calm. „Leonard wasn’t worried,“ Johnston told Simmons. „Hendrix didn’t care and neither did we. Leonard was always completely oblivious to anything like that. The only thing that upset him was when they told him that they didn’t have a piano or an organ–I don’t know, someone had set them on fire and pushed them off the stage–so I couldn’t play with him. Leonard said, ‚I’ll be in the trailer taking a nap; come and get me when you’ve found a piano and an organ.'“

According to most accounts it was a little after two o’clock in the morning when Cohen took the stage. His backup band, or „Army,“ included Johnston on keyboards, Charlie Daniels on fiddle and bass, Ron Cornelius on lead guitar and Elkin „Bubba“ Fowler on banjo and bass, along with backup singers Corlynn Hanney, Susan Musmanno and Donna Washburn. Cohen had a glazed-over look in his eyes throughout the performance, the result of his taking the sedative Mandrax. „He was calm because of the Mandrax,“ Johnston told Simmons. „That’s what saved the show and saved the festival. It was the middle of the night, all those people had been sitting out there in the rain, after they’d set fire to Hendrix’s stage, and nobody had slept for days.“