Archiv für den Monat: August 2022
KW-33-2022: My lil corona-tagebuch: wacken ist vorbei, rocco del schlacco auch und was ist mit den inzidenzen ?
KW-33-2022: Neuerscheinung im September: NEW BOOK ON BOB DYLAN – Neues Buch über BOB DYLAN – Never Ending Tour – : Pre-Order possible – BOB DYLAN – On The Road – Never Ending Tour 1988 – 2021 – feat. an Essay on Dylan & Cohen – Picasso & Matisse – a Never Ending Comparison between two Singer/ Songwriter (Book will be out in 09/2022) feat. also an Interview with KISS-Founder Gene Simmons who talks about Leonard Cohen & Bob Dylan in the book. Hereby an excerpt of this Interview on YOUTUBE:
Pre-Order possible – BOB DYLAN – On The Road – Never Ending Tour 1988 – 2021 – feat. an Essay on Dylan & Cohen – Picasso & Matisse – a Never Ending Comparison between two Singer/ Songwriter (Book will be out in 09/2022)
feat. also an Interview with KISS-Founder Gene Simmons who talks about Leonard Cohen & Bob Dylan in the book. Hereby an excerpt of this Interview on YOUTUBE:
KW-32-2022: Eine interaktive Tour Of Leonard Cohen’s Montreal
Montreal’s
Leonard Cohen
comes home
The poet and singer who once said he was ’not interested
in posterity‘ is now woven into the landscape of his hometown.
https://www.cbc.ca/news2/interactives/leonard-cohen-montreal-legacy/
KW-32-2022: Little Axel: The sad story of the boy who grew up with Leonard Cohen A new documentary about the son of Marianne Ihlen, the Canadian singer/songwriter’s girlfriend and muse, portrays a man who has spent most of his life in psychiatric care since his bohemian youth
KW-32-2022: Heute in UK erschienen: An Update of the Deluxe Ultimate Music Guide To Leonard Cohen vom UNCUT MAGAZIN –
It’s been a while now, but mention of 2016 can still prompt an involuntary shudder in music fans. The passing of so many legendary artists and top-class musicians in that year didn’t only prompt sadness and retrospective admiration; on isolated occasions it also led to talk of achieving a kind of perfection.
For some artists, their death came to seem like their latest meticulously planned creative step. David Bowie’s Blackstar album, for example, was released on his 69th birthday – just two days before he died on January 10. The passing later in the year of Leonard Cohen (at 82, though his gravitas made him seem far older) might well be thought of as confronting a finality for which his whole life had been a preparation.
Cohen began life as a poet and novelist, pragmatically became a musician, and – as Richard Williams points out in his review of the posthumous 2019 album Thanks For The Dance, in which Cohen’s final song sketches are spoken softly over a newly tracked backing – ultimately returned to poetry. You might choose to see that as completion of a perfect circle.
As you’ll read in this Deluxe, 148-page Ultimate Music Guide, what occurred between those points was often turbulent, but Cohen seemed to take it all in his stride. His private life is sometimes portrayed as an eventful itinerary of romances, but was founded on longstanding complex relationships and deep self-questioning, which all found a place in his songs.
Nor were things uneventful professionally. Cohen’s recording life often seemed a battle: a historic conflict between artistic achievement and commercial expectations. One of the features we have added to this new edition is Stephen Troussé’s forensic investigation of Leonard’s tumultuous early 1970s, when he thought he was all washed up – and leading a band, not uncoincidentally, called the Army.
How all this manifested itself in the work, from the self-lacerating Songs Of Love And Hate to the deranged Phil Spector collaboration Death Of A Ladies’ Man you can read about in greater depth in the reviews collected here. What emerges in the longer feature articles, meanwhile, is a picture of a person who made not much attempt to conceal what he was going through (“Make this your last interview,” he says to Roy Hollingworth in 1973, “and let’s quit together”). There were trials, but there were also lessons, however bitter they may have been.
For his fans, Leonard Cohen is a poet, a songwriter, a tunesmith (Bob Dylan particularly praised his melodies). Those who worked closely with him seem more impressed by an artist at the peak of his powers, but who achieved a rare equanimity. Hattie Webb, one of his backing singers, recalled how he behaved during a worrying mid-air incident during Leonard’s 2008 tour.
“All the people around me were very frightened,” she recalled. “I was gripping hold of my drink and seeing my life flashing before my eyes, and I looked over at Leonard. He was completely and utterly calm, and said: ‘Don’t worry, darling, nothing can happen to you – it’s just the way it is.’ That’s what we take from Leonard. He worries about the small things and deals with those. And with the big things, he lets nature take its course.”
Enjoy the magazine.
Buy a copy of the magazine here. Missed one in the series? Bundles are available at the same location…