A recording artist who can put out an album in his eightieth year and sell well of course hardly needs introduction. Yet it is true that for most of his career, he was discovered rather than sold. I discovered him in 1967. My literature professor included him in his last lecture later that spring of 1968. Then he was a one hit wonder almost, but as a writer for other singers.
His singing was utterly different and no one expected much of that. Yet this is all almost fifty years ago already.
I accepted him then as a truly great poet and his remarkable achievement was to translate that into song so that it could be shared. A great poet who will be ranked up there with the top twenty or so found a way to be heard. Understand that please. He had to disregard all other roads that others had failed on and find a new way to connect his voice and his words with truly sophisticated ears and without compromising a word.
Today he is getting his due and i think he may even be happy. Enjoy this review.
Loser on the Moon: On Leonard Cohen, Fandom, and Posterity
By Kevin Mandel posted at 6:00 am on January 8, 2015 7
http://www.themillions.com/2015/01/loser-on-the-moon-on-leonard-cohen-fandom-and-posterity.html
For those among the world’s inhabitants who take for granted that one
day, in some far flung corner of the cosmos, a preternaturally
melancholic being — earthling or otherwise — will come by chance to hear
a Leonard Cohen song and thereby be made if not suddenly blissful then at least able to enjoy his, her, or its melancholy a little more, a recent edition of Rolling Stone
will hold interest. In an interview timed to coincide with the release
of Mr. Cohen’s 13th studio album, an event in turn coinciding with his
80th birthday, the man says essentially that he cares not at all what
becomes of his work after he dies, nor what his legacy will be. The
music? The poems? The novels? The life? He could give a damn.
Ouch, a Cohen believer might predictably reply.
They who tend to be a mite sensitive to begin with. And remember also
the bad old days, before the present éminence grise phase of the
career. When to speak too lovingly about Leonard Cohen was a sure way to
get one’s emotional stability called into question. So now might be
excused for getting their backs up. Certain that a blasphemy has gone
down, in an “et tu, Brute” kind of way.
At least that’s what I feel, but why? What is it about Leonard Cohen
that not only commands my interest but can also set off no small burst
of emotion? Something else, too: what exactly is my legitimate stake in
someone else’s posterity? Even as a fan. Somewhere in my bones I hear my
late grandmother putting it this way: if Leonard Cohen doesn’t care
what becomes of his work and legacy after he dies — what’s that your business?
Theory # 1: Adolescent Attachments
Like many people, whether they know it or not, my adolescence extended
well into my 20s. With the most challenging aspect coming all at once,
after college, and brought on by what at the time was a bewildering
discovery: the world I’d entered in no way resembled the one of my
childhood conception. And, as bewildering, the role I’d set myself up to
play, based in commerce and convention — in this much ruder, rougher,
cynical, uncinematic world — contained neither of the things I ended up
needing most, which were creativity and risk.
There I was, making great money at an international accounting and
consulting firm, living in Manhattan, in the thick of a super-abundant
social scene; with everything, supposedly, in front of me to make a
fulfilling, even enviable life. Why was it then I felt increasingly
anxious and in despair? And carried about a suspicion that in all but
the physical sense I was engaged in a form of gradual self-mutilation?
With this condition exacerbated by a lack of understanding from a
beloved parent, and my own weakness, ignorance, insecurity, confusion.
And it was in the midst of this storm I found Leonard Cohen’s music.
Found and grasped immediately that, more than a perfectly exquisite
soundtrack to my suffering, these sounds and words could somehow help me
come through. I remember those first experiences well. Alone in a room,
sitting or more often lying down, listening and letting my mind unravel
was the primary activity. Something done in anticipation of relief, and
compelled by a purely intuitive sense that the music was functioning as
a kind of cure.
And in this, by the way, I’m far from alone. Legion are the stories
about the outsized role Leoanrd Cohen’s music has played for those in
distress. Stories like the one told to me by a woman in a bar: how as a
teenager, while in a dark-night-of-the-soul kind of way, she ventured
into a blizzard to attend a Leonard Cohen concert, and was turned around
by it, made okay (And how, years later, she had the opportunity to
describe this experience to Leonard Cohen directly, and he replied, ”Do
you mean the night it snowed?”). Stories to be found on the vast array
of Leonard Cohen-related fan websites, including Here It Is, a
site whose sole purpose is to collect such personal anecdotes,
testaments, expressions of gratitude. Stories like the one recounted by Christopher Hitchens in his book Mortality
connecting terminal illness and the increased likelihood of Leonard
Cohen’s music turning up in the mail as an otherwise unprompted gift.
Something is there: in the bare, honest, intrepid voice; the
lamenting, mysterious, romantic, at times oddly rejoicing lyrics; the
oft-austere, never showy arrangements. Something that at the very least
harmonizes extraordinarily well with psychic dissonances; and at most,
for some, if they possess the Leonard Cohen gene, induces an outright
religious feeling. One all the headier for its universalist and literary
qualities, but also the uniqueness of its source: a popular culture
figure, somehow both playing the popular culture game and standing
outside it, engaged in a seemingly authentic contemporary struggle
between the sacred and profane.
Certainly,
during my hard time, all of the above were at play. But also something
else, which had to do with my only listening to the first three albums —
Songs of Leonard Cohen, Songs From a Room, Songs of Love and Hate
— which are the most pained, wrenching, raw of his catalogue. These,
when listened to in a focused manner, first song to last, reliably
brought about the kind of reaction Aristotle attributed
to Attic tragedy; that is, a feeling of purging and catharsis, for
having both experienced and escaped a fate worse than my own!
So then, yes, adolescent attachment — of course don’t mess with it. But is it this alone twisting me out of shape? No. Probably not.
Theory #2: Rug Pull
The Leonard Cohen I thought I knew was an ambitious artist. Early on,
while still in his 20s and well before he turned to music, he was a
serious and flamethrowing Canadian poet in the romantic tradition; and
like the romantics he esteemed, his aspirations appeared anything but
modest. Indeed, evidence of this — and a first rate riff in its own
right — is something Cohen is reported to have said about his dear
friend and fellow flamethrowing Canadian poet, Irving Layton:
“I taught him how to dress and he taught me how to live forever.”
Was I wrong to take this more or less at face value? Especially when
combined with a motif I remembered Cohen often bringing up in
interviews, wherein he would describe himself as being a “minor” artist —
minor in that he knew he was not a William Shakespeare or Homer, but a rung below, a Percy Bysshe Shelley or John Keats,
that felt about where he was hanging, or at least trying to hang. This
implied a great insight, I thought, about the nature of artistry overall
— that ultimately there are three types of practitioners: Major, Minor,
Biodegradable. But also, by extension, that if Cohen gave such thought
to rank and stature, and saw himself in or near the strata wherein a
major perk would seem to be that your name and work live on, that this
same might hold attraction for him.
So I was surprised by what I read in Rolling Stone. And
somewhat embarrassed, if only to myself, in the way one can get when
exposed for being less the expert one thought on a topic of passion and
interest.
And this, I think, along with my adolescent ties, makes a good start
at untangling my present feelings; and puts me in view of what I’d like
to think is inside these feelings, at their root.
Theory # 3: What We Talk About When We Talk About Leonard Cohen
Put simply: it’s up there, in the heights, among the best our culture
has produced in the last 50 years. And I’m not referring to the two
novels, both published in the ’60s and still in print, which were
ambitious, well reviewed, and retain their contingent of champions. Nor
to the poetry, Cohen’s original calling, and a form he’s never stopped
working in, both for the purpose of song lyrics as well as stand alone
works; he is in fact on most lists of Canada’s major poets, and in
recent years his verse has even begun to appear in The New Yorker. No, it’s the music I’m of course referring to, which has proved to be his most penetrating and popular means of expression.
Thirteen studio albums, 135 or so songs, released over the course of
44 years. Hardly a prolific rate of output — Cohen has a famously
laborious process — but then again how can care, patience, resistance to
commercial pressure, and the evident life lived around and between
these efforts be held against him? Especially when the end result is
large enough that it spins out and looms like its own solar system?
Starting with Songs of Leonard Cohen. A debut made at the
ripe age of 32, here is the best advertisement I know for artists
exploring new forms, especially at the moment in Cohen’s development
that he did: a confluence wherein he was in early maturity as a man and
artist, yet retained the youthful arrogance and iconoclasm upon which he
and so many young creatives first draw.
Sonically, the elements of the songs are familiar enough. A bare male
voice out front, accompanied by strings, mostly guitar. After this,
though, we’re onto new ground. First, with the largely unmodulated
arrangements, and recurring, hypnotic circularity to the guitar playing.
Also though, with the quality of the singing voice — lacking
mellifluousness, yes, like many singer-songwriters, but infused with a
willful courage, intelligence, utterly disarming honesty. But most of
all, with the lyrical content; the storytelling, or better,
mythologizing effect a song can have. Because here is a song cycle that
contains just enough that is ordinary — a platonic encounter in
“Suzanne,” a tenderhearted chance meeting in “Sisters of Mercy” — but
otherwise treads far, far, beyond. Abounding, for example, with
religious imagery; lonesome wanderings; suicidal meditations; erotic
power plays; and, no small part of the magic, the
almost-but-not-quite-discernible. Rendered all in what meets the ear as
finely pitched poetry.
The result is real estate, opened up for and around the listener.
And with the procession of albums, though they vary dramatically in
style and tone, came a deepening and enrichment of this space. Certainly
it has always been capable of nurturing far more than adolescents in
crisis, as I was when I first got hooked. And really, here is the key.
Contained in these recordings is a full literature for adults of a
certain bent. Those who gain something essential of themselves when they
pass through modern life’s deep and shadowy ravines — and all the more
so when their guide is the right kind of priestly, worldly, hungry,
humorous, humble; and possessed by a deft poetic gift.
Then there are the live performances, where all this can be
encountered and experienced in three dimensions. This from his first
tour in 1970, to his most recent, an extended series conducted between
2008 and 2013. And while, for the pre-2008 shows, I’m compelled to rely
on written accounts, for the latter my source is first hand. I attended
three shows, and here again religious themes must be employed. Leonard
Cohen the performer literally on his knees for large portions of the
evening, evincing reverence, effusive in his gratitude, and enacting a communion with the audience evidenced most tangibly among the latter in the form of tears.
Theory #4: Altruism
This is more of an anti-theory.
Because one thing I’m pretty certain not at play in my
upset, in the stake I feel in Leonard Cohen’s posterity, is altruism.
That is, when I ponder the possibility that future generations will
neither listen to Cohen’s music nor know his name, the feeling I’m left
with is largely indifference. A shame, I’m aware, as a do-gooder angle
would certainly play well. Would certainly be an easy and dare I say
fashionable way through this self-examination.
Why am I sharing this? I’m not at all sure. It could be in the spirit
of Leoanrd Cohen himself, the absolute value he places on truth telling
in his work. And/or it might be more pragmatic. As in I just need to
get this confession out of the way so I can get back to more promising
ideas.
Theory #5: What We Talk About When We Talk About Leonard Cohen — Part II
It matters who makes the art. We may like to think otherwise. That in
our consideration the creator and creation can be kept separate. But the
more we enjoy a song, picture, story, movie, the more our imaginations
seek out the biographical. And what we find informs our connection,
especially over time.
And so here is Leonard Cohen, who does far better than most in this regard.
Starting with the figure he cuts today, and has for the last many
years. The always well-attired gentleman with an aura that is part
ageing artiste, part Old Testament sage, part retired high-level
Hollywood fixer. A man who in interviews speaks thoughtfully,
incisively, playfully, at times elusively about his life, career,
spiritual pursuits, reputation as sexual gourmand, decades-long struggle
with depression (a struggle from which in his early 70s he emerged
victorious). Indeed, it’s hard to imagine someone encountering the
contemporary Leoanrd Cohen in interview or profile, or for that matter
the most recent biography, and not come away more favorably disposed.
Yet really this seems so for all the figures he’s cut:
aging-but-still-trenchant cult figure of the ’80s and ’90s, whose
musical activities were significantly curtailed by depression and
spiritual pursuits, including a five-year residency in a Zen Buddhist
monastery. A-list supporting player in the ’60s and ’70s zeitgeist — an
always fierce but decidedly non-Aquarian voice whose friendships,
adventures, liaisons connected him to the likes of Joni Mitchell, Jimi Hendrix, Bob Dylan, Nico, Lou Reed, Andy Warhol, Brigitte Bardot, Robert Altman, Judy Collins, Leonard Bernstein, Janis Joplin, and the Chelsea Hotel.
Before this, the serious writer living on a Greek island, pushing
boundaries with literary narrative and obscenity laws on a regimen of
sun, acid, barbiturates, fasting, family life with a Norwegian woman and
her young son.
Preceded by Montreal, where Cohen grew up and found himself before
the age of 20 the junior member of a school of like-minded artists; a
group amped up on poetry, bohemian ideals, friendship, swinging the
first axes at Canada’s still petrified cultural milieu.
So, wow, a bio that actually holds the light; that is, among other things, posterity-worthy. And, I realize, whether I like it or not, enforces my attachment to the man, and enriches my enjoyment of his music.
Theory #6: Me, Me, Me
True, also, it occurs in all this there might be some measure of ego involved — mine in particular.
That really, what is fandom anyway, if not an extension of self into
the wider world? A blinking light of identity — and the bigger the fan
the brighter the shine — wired to what one holds of great value? Worth
defending? Getting really, really pissed off over?
And through this association a kind of contract is struck. With the
fan, in exchange for a chunk of their identity, getting certain rights,
namely to partake in the object of their fandom’s success, honor,
recognition, glory. With some not-so-fine print stipulating a further
condition: that the fan also suffers their object’s failures, dishonor,
slights, nasty crap people post about it online.
Yes, absolutely, and the details of the relationship matter. That is,
how long has it been going on between the fan and the object of their
fandom? And where exactly was the object when the two first got
together?
And while in my situation I’m not claiming to be the equivalent of the first shmoe in Memphis to say Hey, that Presley guy might actually have something,
I have been a Leonard Cohen fan for over 25 years. And got on board
when he was still a relatively obscure figure. Still prompted a lot of
“Leonard who?” And to many who had heard of him, he was still something
of a punch line. Misunderstood and underappreciated, even by his
ostensible friend Leon Wieseltier, whose 1988 profile in The New Yorker was titled “The Prince of Bummers,” and ignored almost completely the spiritual dimension of Cohen’s work, person, appeal…
So where was I?
Right — ego, mine, and that old playground saw: you mess with my guy and you mess with me…
Theory #7: Beautiful Losersville
Confession: I can’t really recommend Leonard Cohen’s second novel, Beautiful Losers.
Oh, it has its merits — supercharged intimacy and urgency, smart
hipster philosophy, and an underlying scheme that successfully
co-locates the personal, political, and spiritual planes of modern life.
Nonetheless, I find the narrative somewhat quickly bogs down. That the
acid, amphetamines, and still-youthful mysticism the influence of which
he significantly wrote it under are a bit too much on display; while
things like coherence, economy, restraint — all guiding values of his
music — are nowhere to be found. Creating, all things considered, an
effect wherein the mad visions and esoteric riffs tend to go on and on,
the plot not so much.
Still, I can’t overstate the importance of this novel to me — this for the title alone.
Beautiful Losers does it for me. The phrase itself. I can
hardly think of one I find more brilliant and expressive, apposite for
the beat and bankrupt but still somehow divine world I see around me.
Or, for that matter, a phrase that works at once as taxonomy,
sanctification, a cold hard fact.
And though I don’t recall the precise moment I encountered it, I know
it was in my late 20s, which is to say toward the end of my
adolescence. This also being several years after I’d gone AWOL on the
life I’d stepped into out of college. Several years after recognizing
how important engagement with art was for my survival, I had begun to do
some writing myself. What an impression this juxtaposition — at least
to my American ears! — made. How well it meshed with my own increasingly
mashed up ideas on matters large and small, including the various
things a person might end up becoming, want to become, the tricked-out
words ‘losing’ and ‘winning’ themselves. And, if only implicitly, what
validation that my struggle to find a way to live had been worth it. The
pleasure I derived evidence that one of the unforeseeable rewards of
becoming your self is the capacity to find society, with people as in
ideas.
And here again I’m not alone. The term having become a fairly steady
seller in pop culture vernacular — found today on t-shirts, tattoos,
graffiti, the title of a band, a semi-recent documentary, countless
pieces of journalism, miscellaneous communiqués in countless languages.
While, at the same time, maintaining heightened resonance for people
like me. A coinage acknowledged as being exceptionally representative of
a Leonard Cohen state of mind. And that also, it occurs, may still have
applications yet unexplored. I’m thinking in particular of something I
referenced earlier, the singular space Cohen’s music evokes. That if it
were ever to become an actual habitat, a locale perhaps for “the Leonard
Cohen afterlife” Kurt Cobain requests in his song “Pennyroyal Tea,” Beautiful Losers
might again find use. Would serve well, for example, as a password at
the border. Or motto on the currency. Or, in slight variation, a pretty
good name of the entire thing.
Theory # 8: The Ghost of Good Scenes Future
But then again, I might have been too hard on myself.
Earlier, when I stated that my emotional connection to Leoanrd Cohen,
and in particular the stake I feel in his posterity, has nothing to do
with altruism. This might not be altogether true. Which I appreciate.
Because while I came away from the prior theory forced to concede I was a
thoroughly selfish bastard, now I can reconsider, and make a case that
it’s only partially so.
The commonweal — there is an aspect about which I most definitely care: I want there to be good scenes.
And by “scenes” I mean in the sense that gained currency in the ’60s.
Counterculture slang, prompted in part by the advent of LSD,
verbalizing a sense that had for decades been making its way to the
fore: the way we experience our lives has become so influenced by the
stories we consume — especially from movies and TV — that for accuracy’s
sake, when describing life’s de facto fundamental unit, we may as well
employ the corresponding term. Scenes then being what we actually get, a
seemingly (but not) endless supply; our lives at any given moment, and
especially in retrospect, the net sum of their quality.
And I say, good scenes for one and all.
What qualifies? Perhaps the best definition relies upon a criterion
once used to legally define hardcore pornography; that is, we know it
when we see it. Because for sure there are as many definitions on the
planet as there are actors. Nonetheless, as a baseline, it can perhaps
be said that all good scenes involve connection, even when we are by
ourselves. Also this: a temporary suspension of what seems to make life a
burden, and the sensation, for however long it lasts, that we are
getting what we need.
And here is where Leonard Cohen comes in. Because without his music,
an entire genre of good scene is in jeopardy. A genre whose basic nature
should by now be evident. And, not incidentally, a genre whose best
days may still lie ahead — in the rapidly approaching time of outer
space habitation. A time when the near-incomprehensible distances
between celestial bodies will find their way into the relations between
people, with corresponding quotients of loneliness, alienation, drooping
and tattered human hearts. A time, in other words, in which Leonard
Cohen’s music will find optimal purchase, really make a difference,
absolutely pack a punch.
Skeptical?
Well, imagine there’s this guy. A nice enough fellow for a
dumb cluck, he’s living far from the world we now occupy, in some
down-market solar system, on some outer planet’s moon, waiting for a
sunrise that’s been weeks on the come. More, this confused young fellow,
say about 25, has time on his hands, having recently quit his job
trading rocket fuel futures. And psychically too he feels somewhat, no,
very much in flux. Is going through that thing when for the first time
in our lives we acknowledge certain truths. For example, how little we
know, or control, and therefore how uncertain is our future. That thing
when we start to feel fate differently. Feel fate, that is, as something
that might truly, quickly, unapologetically, no-joke-at-all run us
over; or maybe worse, leave us behind. With this depressing our young
man, but also, strangely, leaving him in a state of wonder, and open,
even hungry to let in more.
And just then a beam of light appears. The new day’s first. And he
puts on some Leonard Cohen. What song? It almost doesn’t matter, as
countless in the catalogue would do the trick, get him on his way into
deep good scene. And yet, there’s one in particular, one Leonard Cohen
song I’m thinking of, that might do even more. That is, take him through
and clear a good scene. To whatever might come next.
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