The good news is that Leonard didn't die. In fact, he looks, at age 78, a lot more sprightly than I am, frequently falling to his knees to sing to his audience (and springing back up again) and capering across the stage between sets and encores more like a silvery Puck about to put a girdle around the earth in forty minutes than a geriatric. In all he was on stage for about three hours, giving it his all - and what an all it was.In addition to several songs from his new album, 'Old Ideas', he played what must have been the soundtrack to the lives of most of the people in that space - so many standards that it's impossible to believe one man wrote them. I bet there are singer-songwriters who would give their eye-teeth to have written just 'Suzanne' or just 'Hallelujah' or 'I'm Your Man' - Leonard wrote all three, and 'Famous Blue Raincoat', 'The Future' and 'Alexandra Leaving' as well. Not to mention all the rest.
And he is such a gent, as evidenced by his witty and self-deprecating banter between songs and his generosity towards his illustrious band and backing singers who are always so much more than mere backing singers. The sublime Webb sisters performed a solo, and Sharon Robinson a divine version of the aforementioned 'Alexandra Leaving', surely one of the most perfect songs ever written. Every person on stage had their moment in the spotlight - literally - while Leonard took off his hat - literally - to pay his respects.
Oh so long, Marianne, it's time that we began to laugh and cry and cry and laugh about it all again ...
The birds, they sang at the break of day
Start again, I heard them say
Don't dwell on what has passed away
or what is yet to be ...
Every heart, every heart to love will come, but like a refugee ...
Love's the only engine of survival ...
And even though it all went wrong
I'll stand before the Lord of Song
with nothing on my tongue but Hallelujah












Thank you so much for this lovely description, Deborah. I feel the same way you do about Leonard Cohen. Did you ever read his early novels? I remember Beautiful Losers, probably published in the late 1960s.
ReplyDeleteI have such a strong memory of first hearing Suzanne during my university orientation week in 1971. It was like a thunderbolt. My younger daughter's second name is Shoshana, a kind of acknowledgment of that moment of pure eternal love.
Thanks, Anon. What a beautiful name Shoshana is.
DeleteI did read his novels, when I was about 16 or 17, and still have them on my shelves. I suspect a re-reading is overdue. I have, however, frequently returned to his poems. It's a given that he's a better songwriter than poet, but 'Book of Longing' is superb.