Leonard Cohen, legendary singer-songwriter, dies aged 82
He was not on the list.
Leonard Cohen, the legendary singer-songwriter whose work
inspired generations, has died at the age of 82.
A post to his official Facebook page on Thursday 10 November
announced the musician’s passing in Los Angeles.
“It is with profound sorrow we report that legendary poet,
songwriter and artist, Leonard Cohen has passed away. We have lost one of
music’s most revered and prolific visionaries,” the post said.
“A memorial will take place in Los Angeles at a later date.
The family requests privacy during their time of grief.” According to the Leonard
Cohen forum, often well informed on the singer, he died on Monday 7 November
and has already been buried in a private ceremony in Montreal.
In a recent interview with the New Yorker, Cohen spoke about
the prospect of death with calmness and clarity: “I am ready to die. I hope
it’s not too uncomfortable. That’s about it for me.”
Tributes poured in across social media for the Canadian
musician, who had just released his 14th album, You Want It Darker, in October,
to great acclaim.
The Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau said the “world
will miss him” while , actors Rob Lowe and Russell Crowe, musicians Ben Folds,
Peter Hook, Slash, Carole King, Lily Allen and Bette Midler all heaped praise
on the star.
No other artist's music felt or sounded like Leonard
Cohen's. Yet his work resonated across generations. Canada and the world will
miss him.
Cohen, who was born in Montreal, came to prominence in the
1960s as a poet, novelist and singer-songwriter. Originally focusing on
literary pursuits, he shifted his attention to music in the late 60s when he
moved to New York. His first album, Songs of Leonard Cohen, was released in
1967 and became a cult hit.
Cohen’s influence on the music industry has been likened to
that of his contemporaries Bob Dylan and Joni Mitchell and is perhaps best
known for his song Hallelujah. Only a modest hit on its release in 1984, it
found a much wider audience after it was covered by John Cale in 1991 and by
Jeff Buckley in 1994.
After the song was taken to No 1 in the UK by X-Factor
winner Alexandra Burke in 2008, Cohen said: “I think it’s a good song, but I
think too many people sing it.”
Despite his immense popularity, Cohen often appeared to be
shy of the stage. Judy Collins, who had success with his song Suzanne, once
described how she had to coax him back on stage after he left halfway through a
performance.
He came out of retirement in his late 70s to embark what
would end up being a five-year, worldwide tour, after his former manager,
Kelley Lynch, was found guilty of stealing millions of dollars from him.
Cohen recently wrote a letter to his longtime muse, Marianne
Ihlen, who was the subject of his songs So Long, Marianne, and Bird on a Wire,
saying: “You know that I’ve always loved you for your beauty and your wisdom,
but I don’t need to say anything more about that because you know all about
that. But now, I just want to wish you a very good journey. Goodbye old friend.
Endless love, see you down the road.”
For much of the 1960s, he lived with Ihlen on the Greek
island of Hydra, during which time he wrote numerous books of poetry, including
his experimental novel Beautiful Losers, and his first album.
In the 1970s, after his relationship with Ihlen dissolved,
Cohen began a relationship with the artist Suzanne Elrod. The couple had two
children, Adam and Lorca.
You Want It Darker was co-produced by Adam Cohen. Speaking
recently with CBC Radio host Tom Power, he talked about working with his father
on the album that many believed would be his last. “This old man, who was truly
in pain and discomfort, would at some intervals get out of his medical chair
and dance in front of his speakers,” he said. “And sometimes, we would put on a
song and listen to it on repeat just like teenagers, with the help of medical
marijuana.
“I think in states of pain and discomfort, what do you seek
with more energy and more clarity than joy and jubilance?”
Adam described his father as “the last of his kind”.
The bleak and sparse arrangements of Leonard Cohen’s 14th
studio album make his repeated leave-taking all the more exquisite
“Unlike so many from
that golden era, from which he comes, he’s not a nostalgia act,” he said. “This
guy is speaking from his particular vantage point, he’s speaking about things
that are meaningful to him at his particular rung in life – he will be leaving
a giant void when he leaves us.”
You Want It Darker added to an impressive body of work.
Cohen’s second album, 1969’s Songs for a Room, featured what would become one
of his most popular songs, Bird on the Wire. The song has been covered by
artists including Johnny Cash, Joe Cocker, Willie Nelson, kd lang and Paul
Kelly. Kris Kristofferson once said that he wanted the opening lyrics from Bird
on the Wire engraved on his tombstone.
A year later, Cohen embarked upon an intense period of
touring through Europe, Canada and the United States. He released his third
album, Songs of Love and Hate, in 1971, which included the song Famous Blue
Raincoat. The song, with its haunting depiction of the aftermath of a love
triangle, was much-loved by fans, but Cohen reportedly told BBC in 1994 that he
was never quite happy with the lyrics.
Cohen’s next two albums, New Skin for the Old Ceremony and
Death of a Ladies’ Man, marked a shift to a new sound and a dip in his
popularity. The latter was also an album fuelled by controversy; at one point
during recording, producer Phil Spector reportedly held a gun to Cohen’s head
in the studio.
In addition to giving his song Hallelujah a major boost,
covers played a significant role and helped Cohen find a new audience in the
late 80s, when the American artist Jennifer Warnes released a tribute album to
him, effectively refashioning his image in the public eye.
Cohen was born into a Jewish family, but in the 1970s he
began to devote significant attention to studying Buddhism. He met and became a
disciple of Joshu Sasaki Roshi, a Zen Buddhist monk. Between 1994 and 1999,
Cohen lived as the monk’s friend and student at the Mount Baldy Zen Center in
Los Angeles.
Cohen continued to record and tour in the 1980s and early
90s. He released his album Ten New Songs in 2001, after emerging from the
monastery, launching a new phase of his already decades-long career.
Cohen was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in
2008.
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