Scottish talent show sensation has unveiled the official music video for her new holiday-themed single, “Perfect Day.” The solemn, chorale rendition of Lou Reed’s classic is featured on The Gift, the second release from the famed Britain’s Got Talent contestant and a follow-up to last year’s blockbuster debut I Dreamed a Dream. This time out, [...]
Posts Tagged ‘Leonard Cohen’
Susan Boyle “Dancing With The Stars†Performance Sidelined By Throat Infection
Scottish songstress Susan Boyle has pulled out of live performance on Tuesday night’s Dancing With The Stars Results Show after falling ill with a crippling throat infection. Her condition is reportedly so severe, doctors have ordered the former spinster not to leave her Scotland home. Yikes! SuBo is getting an early start promoting the release [...]
Leonard Cohen Cancels Hawaii Show; Adds Vancouver & Oakland
FINAL WORLD TOUR DATES SCHEDULED FOR THE FORESEEABLE FUTURE
![]() Leonard Cohen |
AEG Live has announced the cancellation of Leonard Cohen‘s previously scheduled December 4
performance in Honolulu, Hawaii due to prohibitive and insurmountable logistical issues. However, newly added
dates have been scheduled in Vancouver, BC and Oakland, CA to round out the artist’s final dates of his current
world tour.
Ticketholders for the cancelled December 4 performance in Hawaii will be fully refunded. Additionally, ticketholders
for the Hawaiian date will have a private, first-opportunity window to re-purchase tickets to any of the newly
announced dates. *Eligible ticket holders for the December 4th performance have been individually alerted by AEG
Live via email with details on their ticket exchange window.
Fan Club pre-sales for Vancouver and Oakland dates will run from October 7 (10:00am Pacific) to October 8
(10:00pm Pacific) at www.LeonardCohenFiles.com.
Local presales will run on Friday, October 8 (from 10:00am to 10:00pm Pacific). The public on-sale for the
Vancouver performance is Saturday, October 9 at 10AM. The public on-sale for both Oakland performances is
Sunday, October 10 at 10AM.
At the conclusion of Mr. Cohen’s current world tour, a return to the studio is planned, making these shows the final
dates scheduled for some time.
LEONARD COHEN WORLD TOUR FINAL DATES:
Dec 2 – Rogers Arena – Vancouver, BC
Dec 5 – Paramount Theatre – Oakland, CA
Dec 6 – Paramount Theatre – Oakland, CA
Dec 8 – Rose Garden Theater of the Clouds – Portland, OR
Dec10 – The Colosseum at Caesars Palace – Las Vegas, NV
Dec11 – The Colosseum at Caesars Palace – Las Vegas, NV
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Leonard Cohen: Final Tour Dates
WORLD TOUR CONCLUDES WITH INTIMATE DECEMBER SHOWS
![]() Leonard Cohen |
Leonard Cohen‘s current
world tour will be extended with four North American performances at intimate, 3,000-capacity venues before
coming to a close in December.
An extended pre-sale window for fans will be available beginning September 7 at 10:00 AM and extending through
September 24 at 10:00 PM at www.leonardcohenfiles.com.
LEONARD COHEN WORLD TOUR FINAL DATES:
Dec 4 Blaisdell Concert Hall Honolulu, Hawaii
Dec 8 Rose Quarter Theatre of the Clouds Portland, Oregon
Dec10 The Colosseum at Caesars Palace Las Vegas, Nevada
Dec11 The Colosseum at Caesars Palace Las Vegas, Nevada
As he has been throughout his world tour, Mr. Cohen will be joined by Sharon Robinson and the Webb
Sisters (background vocals), Roscoe Beck (bass, vocals), Neil Larsen (keyboards &
Hammond
B3 accordion), Bob Metzger (electric, acoustic & pedal steel guitar), Javier Mas (bandurria, laud,
archilaud, 12 string acoustic guitar), Rafael Gayol (drums, percussion), Dino Soldo (sax, clarinet
dobro – keys).
Leonard Cohen
Tour Dates
::
Leonard Cohen News
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Phil Collins bags prestigious Johnny Mercer song writing award
Phil Collins, former member of Genesis, has bagged the prestigious Johnny Mercer Award at the Songwriters Hall of Fame gala. This year”s inducted songwriters include Leonard Cohen, Jackie DeShannon, David Foster, and R&B band Earth Wind and Fire. “For a songwriter, it”s a huge honour. I was very surprised when I got the news,” the [...]
Leonard Cohen Reschedules Europe Dates Due to Injury
Leonard Cohen Reschedules European Performances Due To Injury
Leonard Cohen |
AEG Worldwide has announced that a run of performances by Leonard Cohen have been rescheduled to allow proper time for a sports-related injury sustained by the artist to heal.
While exercising recently, Mr. Cohen suffered a compression injury in his lower back. He has been advised by physicians to follow the typical four to six month regime of physical therapy prescribed for athletes with similar injuries.
“Doctors have confirmed that Mr. Cohen is otherwise in terrific shape, thanks to years of exercise and careful diet, and simply needs appropriate time to recover from the lower back injury,” stated Cohen’s manager, Robert Kory.
Since his return to the stage in May 2008, Mr. Cohen has played 191 sold out shows around the world, headlined the 2009 Coachella Music Festival and was hailed by Spin Magazine as the “Comeback of the Year” for 2009.
On January 30, Mr. Cohen received the 2010 Lifetime Achievement Special Merit Award from the National Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences (NARAS) and was honored the following night on the Grammy Awards broadcast.
The rescheduled dates below will be amended shortly to reflect all thirteen rescheduled dates:
09/15/10 Caen @ Zenith
09/17/10 Grenoble @ Palais Des Sports
09/19/10 Strasbourg @ Zenith
09/21/10 Marseille @ Le Dome
09/23/10 Tours @ Parc Des Expositions
09/25/10 Lille @ Zenith Grande Palais
10/04/10 Katowice @ Spodek
10/07/10 Moscow @ Kremlin Palace
10/13/10 Bratislava @ Sibamac Arena
The Heavy Guilt: Free MP3s New Band for J Smart & Al Howard
Take Two Tracks & Pass It On, Free MP3s from The Heavy Guilt
New Band Featuring J Smart & Al Howard
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The Heavy Guilt is offering two free songs on its website theheavyguilt.com, if you dig the sounds, forward the MP3s to friends. If you email 10 friends and cc the band on the email (info@theheavyguilt.com), they’ll mail you a free autographed full-length CD. The full length debut, Lift Us Up From This is available at theheavyguilt.com and on iTunes.
The Heavy Guilt is an unlikely composite of divergent influences meeting in the middle to form something raw, fresh and potent. The emphasis is on the unique and gritty voice of Erik Canzona. He howls like the lament of generations, with a whiskey stained roar from another time. Like a seasoned tempest tearing through small towns with brave new poetic visions, this young troubadour moans for the alleyways of America, for love and its opposite, for desolation and most importantly, for hope. He belts these songs rooted where folk, soul, indie rock and psych meet.
The band’s first album, Lift Us Up From This, features Josh Rice on the Fender Rhodes and Hammond B3 and
Alfred Howard on lyrics and percussion. These two played together in
the K23 Orchestra for seven years. They had been writing material for almost as long that didn’t fit within the psychedelic funk stylings of the K23, but was more inspired by Leonard Cohen, Tom Waits, Neutral Milk Hotel, Wilco, Rimbaud, Radiohead and infinite others. When they heard Canzona’s voice there was an instantaneous click, the kind of
serendipitous moment you find at the heart of really great music. Creative lightening struck and in a quick instant, the seeds were planted for a band to be formed. Sean Martin is on the electric guitar and Jason Littlefield plays upright and electric bass, the two have played hundreds of gigs together in Skirt Alert and various jazz ensembles in San Diego. They are virtuosos on their instruments, teachers of students ages 6 to 90, seasoned musicians who can glide over scales with terrifying speed and dexterity or hit that perfect note, sparse, chilling and precise.
On the kit is Jason Smart, formerly of Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey and frequent collaborator with
Fareed Haque, he’s another brilliant musician who finds comfort in a drum throne behind any style. He laid down the framework for this album perfectly. His drumming takes it, at points, to a frenzied fevered pitch and can just as quickly drop down to a soulful “less is
more” approach. This is a group of hidden all stars, disparate masters speaking through the common language of song, no house hold names, just bold players, great lyrics and a voice like an exclamation point. This debut album drives their stake hard into the soil of music, The Heavy Guilt is here.
The Heavy Guilt currently have a couple shows scheduled in San Diego, you can see all dates here.
Phish: Festival 8 Band To Play Last Record Alive
Phish Festival 8: Band To Play Last Record Alive
Phish‘s Festival 8 site has released a list of 99 albums of which the band will pick one to play on Halloween.
Several albums have already been “killed off” and a note on the site indicates that Phish will “play the last record alive.” See below for a complete list, including those that have already been “killed.”
Special thanks to jamtopia.com for compiling the potential albums list below.
Possible Phish Halloween Cover Albums
Phish |
1.AC/DC | Back In Black
2.Aerosmith | Toys In The Attic
3.Allman Brothers Band | Eat A Peach
4.Arcade Fire | Funeral
5.Beastie Boys | Hello Nasty
6.BeeGees | Saturday Night Fever
7.Black Sabbath | Paranoid
8.Blind Faith | Blind Faith
9.Bob Dylan | Blood On the Tracks
10.Bob Dylan & the Band | The Basement Tapes
11.Bob Seger | Against The Wind
12.Boston | Boston
13.Brian Eno | Before And After Science
14.Bruce Springsteen | Born To Run
15.Chicago | The Chicago Transit Authority
16.Creedence Clearwater Revival | Green River
17.Curtis Mayfield | Superfly Soundtrack
18.David Bowie | Hunky Dory
19.David Bowie | Ziggy Stardust
20.David Bowie | Scary Monsters
21.Devo | Freedom of Choice
22.Duran Duran | Rio
23.Eagles | Hotel California
24.Elton John | Goodbye Yellow Brick Road
25.Elvis Costello (nee Declan McManus) | This Year’s Model
26.Eric Clapton | 461 Ocean Blvd
27.Firehose | Flyin’ the Flannel
28.Fleetwood Mac | Rumours
29.Frank Zappa | Apostrophe
30.Frank Zappa | Hot Rats
31.Genesis | The Lambs Lie Down On Broadway
32.Grateful Dead | American Beauty
33.Guns & Roses | Appetite For Destruction
34.Hall & Oates | Private Eyes
35.Huey Lewis And The News | Sports
36.Jane’s Addiction | Ritual de Lo Habitual
37.Jimi Hendrix | Are You Experienced?
38.Jimi Hendrix | Electric Ladyland
39.John Lennon | Plastic Ono Band
40.Modern Lovers | The Modern Lovers
41.Journey | Escape
42.KISS | Alive II
43.King Crimson | Larks’ Tongues In Aspic
44.Led Zeppelin | I
45.Led Zeppelin | IV (Zoso)
46.Leonard Cohen | I’m Your Man
47.Love | Forever Changes
48.Manu Chao | Clandestino
49.Medeski, Martin & Wood | Shack Man
50.Metallica | Master Of Puppets
51.MGMT | Oracle Spectacular
52.Michael Jackson | Thriller
53.Michael McDonald | If That’s What It Takes
54.Miles Davis | A Tribute To Jack Johnson
55.Minutemen | Double Nickels On The Dime
56.Neil Young | Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere
57.Neil Young | Tonight’s The Night
58.Nirvana | Nevermind
59.Pavement | Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain
60.Pearl Jam | Ten
61.Peter Gabriel | So
62.Pink Floyd | Meddle
63.Pink Floyd | The Wall
64.Pixies | Come On Pilgrim
65.Pork Tornado | Pork Tornado
66.Primus | Sailing The Seas Of Cheese
67.Prince | Purple Rain
68.Queen | A Night At The Opera
69.Radiohead | Kid A
70.Rage Against The Machine | Evil Empire
71.Rolling Stones | Exile on Main Street
72.Rolling Stones | Sticky Fingers
73.Rush | Moving Pictures
74.Steely Dan | Pretzel Logic
75.T.Rex | Electric Warrior
76.Talking Heads | Fear Of Music
77.Television | Marquee Moon
78.The Band | The Band (aka Brown Album)
79.The Beach Boys | Pet Sounds
80.The Beatles | Rubber Soul
81.The Clash | London Calling
82.The Doors | The Doors
83.The Police | Ghost In The Machine
84.The Ramones | Ramones
85.The Roots | Phrenology
86.The Who | Who’s Next
87.Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers | Damn The Torpedoes
88.Tom Waits | Rain Dogs
89.U2 | Joshua Tree
90.Van Halen | Van Halen
91.Van Morrison | Astral Weeks
92.Velvet Underground | Velvet Underground And Nico
93.Violent Femmes | Violent Femmes
94.Ween | White Pepper
95.White Stripes | Elephant
96.Wilco | Yankee Hotel Foxtrot
97.X | Los Angeles
98.Yes | The Yes Album
99.ZZ Top | Tres Hombres
What album do you want them to play? Tell the world on the JamBase Forums.
Nathan Moore: Tip of the Iceberg
By: Andrew Bruss
Nathan Moore |
Everything about singer/songwriter Nathan Moore is befitting of a modern-day troubadour. Whether it’s his background, his nomadic lifestyle, his onstage persona or his speech patterns, Moore comes off as a man who was born for his craft. His latest release, Folk Singer (released August 18 on The Royal Potato Family – see our review here), is a bare-bones collection of old-school folk songs that is void of any “studio magic,” and leaves the listener with a naked picture of Nathan Moore, the songwriter. But Moore’s views on music – folk or otherwise – share a lot with his views on life, and when you get him talking, he’s not afraid to go deep.
“I think [folk] goes back to the poets before [singers like Joe Hill and Bob Dylan], who were troubadours themselves, in the way that their poetry was received. I don’t look at something and say, ‘I want to try to be that,’ but I definitely gravitate towards things I feel I could become, which I’ve always thought was interesting,” says Moore. “I always thought the things I liked the most are the things I thought I could possibly do. I like Led Zeppelin, but in terms of my table of heroes with all the Townes Van Zandts and John Prines and Tom Waits, it struck me as strange that I like things, I think on some level, I could pull off like Leonard Cohen. I’ll hear that and say, ‘Wow that’s amazing,’ but deep down, I’m thinking, ‘I could do that.’”
During a phone conversation with Moore following the release of Folk Singer, he discussed music, politics, life on the road, and life at home, but what stood out most about him was his degree of engagement. Moore will take any question you give him, analyze it and answer, piece by piece, often using his own answer as a platform to discuss a whole array of subjects that he somehow manages to fit within the specific context of the original question.
Nathan Moore |
When asked about the current state of political songwriting, Moore used the opportunity to not only answer the question, but to analyze the political activity of his generation at large.
“I’d say that when Obama was running, we all went for it for a little while. Before [the election], and even before that, Bush brought out the fighting spirit in us, but one of the regretful things about Obama winning is a lot of people said, ‘Alright! It’s alright for us to pull the Hawaiian shirt out of the closet and get back to drinking piña coladas [laughs].’ That’s sort of a shame because we still need to be seeking the truth with a passion that doesn’t seem to be that common place these days,” Moore says. “I think there still is [a silence within the artistic community]. I think Bush was a good opportunity and a lot of people seized on it, but I think there’s a certain depth of idealism that contemporary culture has created. We all saw the ’60s come and go, even if it was through the lens of history. We know that time period. It’s a new day and a different, interesting time. It stills my heart that there are young idealists. There always have been and there always will be. My generation was a terrible example in terms of activism or taking those ideals and making them glorious.”
Aside from the perceived ideological failures of his generation, Moore seemed to feel as though the role of a folk singer is the same as it ever was. Both articulate and concise, Moore spoke in stream-of-consciousness-like sentences, breaking to breath, but ever-ready to continue vocalizing his train of thought.
“I think there’s a timeless roll [to being a folk singer],” he says. “I was wondering whether it’s the same as it’s always been, but ultimately it’s the folk singer’s roll to mark in time stories of our day, and sort of [be] a historian encapsulating pictures of the world around us, and then preserve those stories for everybody. And in terms of performance and singing, it’s giving people a chance to… feel.”
Nathan Moore by Anne Staveley |
“I guess with the new album there’s a picture of hard times, of the recession that we’re involved in, and there’s a little bit of the traveling vibe [incorporated] but from the perspective of a traveling troubadour, so there are Walmarts instead of boxcars,” Moore says. “This really is an EP, in the sense that it’s an introduction, a beginning of a new relationship with a label, so this is more of a half guitar/travel/calling card thing that we’ve made. If I was making an album, I’d be sure I was making a well-rounded expression, but with this, the thought process was a little different. It’s a little more utilitarian, and a little less conceptual. When I make an album, everything complements each other and makes a story. This wasn’t a storytelling album.”
Moore seems to feel the role of a folk singer is to tell tales of the world around him. But, the world starts at home, and this concept is far from lost on Nathan Moore.
“I’m getting a little older and I’ve found that the balance that home brings to my life, in terms of going out and having fun and getting loose on the road, but then coming home to a stable community and a beautiful home life, is pretty ideal for me. It keeps me balanced, as opposed to when I was in my twenties and entirely nomadic. Now I’m more balanced.” With pride in his roots, Moore built upon his connection to his community, saying, “You go downtown and you see so many people that you know. I went to the same high school my grandmother went to. It’s a tight community with a lot of history.”
Even in describing his life on the road, Moore emphasized his connection to his hometown.
“When I left home I felt like a pioneer, but what was Columbus without Spain? I got to discover new worlds, but in my community’s name and behalf. I always had a sense of that with what I was doing, way more than my community. I always felt like a pioneer for my home town,” he says. “I had a revelation recently where I realized how important it is to me where I come from. ‘Remember where I’m from.’ It’s a stabilizing mantra for me. It brings me back to what I have to offer.”
Nathan Moore |
The authenticity Moore radiates in conversation is just as apparent, if not more so, in his songwriting. When asked about his creative process, he describes his songwriting as being nothing but from the heart. “I can’t just sit down and say, ‘I need a song that’s marketable or danceable like that, or catchy like this.’ If it doesn’t come through my heart then it doesn’t happen,” he says. “I write as a means of survival. It’s like the air that I breathe, so in that sense, I’m not trying to sell anything really. I’m just trying to exist.”
Although he said very little about Surprise Me Mr. Davis, his rock project alongside the three members of The Slip, Moore did comment that although for now he’s promoting Folk Singer, “We have 2010, [and] we’re going to take over the world.”
When talking about the big picture, be it past, present, or future, Moore has a way of making things seem specific. When asked what his future holds, he dabbled in metaphors that beat around the bush, yet managed to give a very clear answer anyway. “I’ve been feeling good about things,” he says. “We’re dealing with a lot with Folk Singer and Davis, [but] I feel like we’re still at the tip of the iceberg. There’s a lot about to come from me into the world, so people should stay tuned.”
Nathan Moore is on tour now; dates available here.
You can download “Hard Times” off Folk Singer for FREE here.
See more of Nathan Moore’s performance with Big Light at the JamBase offices over here.
JamBase | Tuned In
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Iggy Pop:Preliminaires
By: Ron Hart
“I don’t know where my spirit went, but that’s alright,” Iggy Pop croons on Preliminaires (released June 2 on Astralwerks) , the Detroit punk legend’s first solo album since 2003′s Skull Ring. It also serves as the first piece of music Pop delivers in the wake of the news surround the untimely passing of his lifelong friend and Stooges bandmate, guitarist Ron Asheton. And, appropriately enough, it is by far his quietest album to date, and his finest since his last attempt at downtempo on 1999′s underrated collaboration with Medeski Martin & Wood, Avenue B.
Ig’s 15th studio endeavor is all but devoid of the trademark electric punch of such classic Pop albums as Lust For Life, New Values and Instinct. Well, save for one tune, “Nice To Be Dead,” which is more like a more kinetic outtake from Brick by Brick than a full-on sonic assault from Kill City. Overall, Preliminaires, inspired by French novelist Michel Houellebecq’s 2005 post-apocalyptic clone caper The Possibility of an Island, finds Iggy singing in French on a cover of the classic Joseph Kosma/Jacques Prevert composition “Autumn Leaves,” which opens and closes the album, trying on Dixieland jazz with “King of the Dogs,” playing the real folk blues on “He’s Dead/She’s Alive” and pulling off a straight-faced cover of Antonio Carlos Jobim’s bossa nova standard “How Insensitive.” Iggy even does a spot of spoken word, reciting text from Houellebecq’s book on “A Machine for Loving.” He pulls it all off quite swimmingly, too, as his trademark deep baritone bears a striking similarity to that of Leonard Cohen circa Death of a Ladies Man. Though his pipes are not as well defined as Cohen’s, the sincerity is there, and it’s pretty damn cool to hear the same guy who once cut himself with glass onstage and sutured his wounds with peanut butter come off so dignified here. This is Iggy Pop at age 61, trying to find a balance between the chaos of his past and the calmness of his future. Here’s hoping he continues to keep it mellow in his old age.
JamBase | Literary
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Mike Gordon Does Covers Coldplay and Leonard Cohen
Mike Gordon Covers Coldplay and Leonard Cohen
Last Wednesday night (09.09.09) Mike Gordon and his band busted out two never before played covers at a sold out show at the Somerville Theatre in Somerville, MA. First came Leonard Cohen‘s “Who By Fire,” and soon after, Coldplay‘s “God Put A Smile Upon Your Face” (check the video below).
09.09.09 | Somerville Theatre | Somerville, MA
Another Door, Rhymes, Jaded, The Grid, Spiral, Sound, Nobody Home^, Who By Fire*, The Field, God Put A Smile Upon Your Face**, Only A Dream
E: Suskind Hotel > She Said, She Said
* Leonard Cohen cover, first time played
^ Tom Cleary original, first time played
** Coldplay cover, first time played
Break Science feat. Adam Deitch opened
Mike Gordon is on tour now and will perform tonight (09.11) in Woodstock, NY. Complete tour dates available here.
Steven Weber: In a Sense, Abroad part quatre: You Bet They Canada!
I am currently in the northern territories on a work assignment, as seeking gainful employment in the wonderful world of television will occasion one…
The feelbad factor
Light, uplifting comedy has had its day. Give me the bleak, miserable stuff – it suits my crisis better
‘They give birth astride of a grave,” says Pozzo in Waiting For Godot. “The light gleams an instant, then it’s night once more.” Close your eyes and picture yourself giving birth astride of a grave. You shiver and moan. Your baby, once you’ve squeezed it out, drops six feet onto the ground. Oh yes, your mother was right. You should have gone private.
Beckett’s magnificent line is an example of feelbad. Feelbad confronts you with the darkness, futility and awfulness of existence, but does it with such imagination, bravado, soul and wit that you find yourself exhilarated. Feelbad is The Smiths, feelgood The Smurfs. I rest my case.
Charlie Kaufman’s Synecdoche, New York is a feelbad classic. I’ve seen it twice and urge you to do the same. Both times it gave me a mid-life crisis. But that’s a recommendation. I’m 56. A mid-life crisis means I’ll live to 112. It’s a masterpiece of anti-formulaic, genre-busting, unmarketable feelbad art, one that deserves the most off-putting advertising strapline to convey its uncompromising, uningratiating vision. I offer up, in all humility: “Delay your suicide two hours to see this film.”
If you haven’t seen it, look away now, as I’m about to divulge the plot. Here goes: a guy dies. That’s it. And, as the film makes clear, that’s not just the story of the guy in the film, it’s the story of everyone. Everyone dies. That’s the only story there is. Thank you, Charlie Kaufman. Thank you, Sammy Beckett.
En route to the Big D, our hero, a depressed, self-obsessed director and hypochondriac, conceives an epic theatre piece on the subject of (wait for it, wait for it) the brutal awfulness of human life. But he never finishes his theatre piece. Of course he doesn’t. This is feelbad. He just can’t get to the end, what with constant interferences from life itself – which have to be included in the piece – and his own dissatisfaction and decline. Decades pass without his completing his work. The film’s a sort of writer’s blockbuster.
You may have heard that it’s relentlessly bleak. This is not true. Feelbad doesn’t preclude warmth or a sly and delicate humour. (That’s why the ladies love Leonard Cohen.) I’m a professional comedy writer, so feelbad humour is a subject very close to my heart, which, of course, is just a few inches away from my wallet. I make my living supplying amusing stuff for popular consumption. I started my career writing jokes for the Two Ronnies, at a time when likeable, unchallenging, diminutive chaps like Ronnie Corbett and Ernie Wise were the giants of BBC Light Entertainment. You were instructed, when writing comedy, to provide three laughs a page. You were instructed, when performing it, to go out there and make them laugh. In other words, your motivation was to make the audience feel good, with comedy of a kind your maiden aunt would enjoy.
But Light Entertainment has transmuted, over the last three decades, into Heavy Entertainment. Darker it’s got and darker. Basil Fawlty had rage but was still unmistakably farcical and funny. David Brent? There were times when his awfulness was so real you had to cover your eyes. And Brent was nothing compared with the gallery of grotesques in The League of Gentlemen, or the savagery in the collected works of Chris Morris, or the cruelty in Nighty Night. It is as if the smile has been wiped off comedy’s face, to be replaced with an expression that’s darker but somehow more truthful.
We’re supposed, in these difficult times, to be crying out for comfort, for blandness, for kindness, for the smiley love of our mummies. But it doesn’t quite look like that from where I’m sitting. For a start, nobody has a maiden aunt any more. She’s doing unspeakable unmaidenly things with your bi-curious bachelor uncle, in the very living room where the telly’s broadcasting Psychoville. “I’ve done a bad murder,” runs a typical line from this series, now running on BBC2 as part of Thursday’s comedy night. Logically, that means there are good ones.
Feelbad is here to stay. People want bleakness, darkness and depression. They crave unpalatable extremes. Where’s it going to end, you ask. We all know the answer. It’s going to end in death. Enjoy.
The feelbad factor
Light, uplifting comedy has had its day. Give me the bleak, miserable stuff – it suits my crisis better
‘They give birth astride of a grave,” says Pozzo in Waiting For Godot. “The light gleams an instant, then it’s night once more.” Close your eyes and picture yourself giving birth astride of a grave. You shiver and moan. Your baby, once you’ve squeezed it out, drops six feet onto the ground. Oh yes, your mother was right. You should have gone private.
Beckett’s magnificent line is an example of feelbad. Feelbad confronts you with the darkness, futility and awfulness of existence, but does it with such imagination, bravado, soul and wit that you find yourself exhilarated. Feelbad is The Smiths, feelgood The Smurfs. I rest my case.
Charlie Kaufman’s Synecdoche, New York is a feelbad classic. I’ve seen it twice and urge you to do the same. Both times it gave me a mid-life crisis. But that’s a recommendation. I’m 56. A mid-life crisis means I’ll live to 112. It’s a masterpiece of anti-formulaic, genre-busting, unmarketable feelbad art, one that deserves the most off-putting advertising strapline to convey its uncompromising, uningratiating vision. I offer up, in all humility: “Delay your suicide two hours to see this film.”
If you haven’t seen it, look away now, as I’m about to divulge the plot. Here goes: a guy dies. That’s it. And, as the film makes clear, that’s not just the story of the guy in the film, it’s the story of everyone. Everyone dies. That’s the only story there is. Thank you, Charlie Kaufman. Thank you, Sammy Beckett.
En route to the Big D, our hero, a depressed, self-obsessed director and hypochondriac, conceives an epic theatre piece on the subject of (wait for it, wait for it) the brutal awfulness of human life. But he never finishes his theatre piece. Of course he doesn’t. This is feelbad. He just can’t get to the end, what with constant interferences from life itself – which have to be included in the piece – and his own dissatisfaction and decline. Decades pass without his completing his work. The film’s a sort of writer’s blockbuster.
You may have heard that it’s relentlessly bleak. This is not true. Feelbad doesn’t preclude warmth or a sly and delicate humour. (That’s why the ladies love Leonard Cohen.) I’m a professional comedy writer, so feelbad humour is a subject very close to my heart, which, of course, is just a few inches away from my wallet. I make my living supplying amusing stuff for popular consumption. I started my career writing jokes for the Two Ronnies, at a time when likeable, unchallenging, diminutive chaps like Ronnie Corbett and Ernie Wise were the giants of BBC Light Entertainment. You were instructed, when writing comedy, to provide three laughs a page. You were instructed, when performing it, to go out there and make them laugh. In other words, your motivation was to make the audience feel good, with comedy of a kind your maiden aunt would enjoy.
But Light Entertainment has transmuted, over the last three decades, into Heavy Entertainment. Darker it’s got and darker. Basil Fawlty had rage but was still unmistakably farcical and funny. David Brent? There were times when his awfulness was so real you had to cover your eyes. And Brent was nothing compared with the gallery of grotesques in The League of Gentlemen, or the savagery in the collected works of Chris Morris, or the cruelty in Nighty Night. It is as if the smile has been wiped off comedy’s face, to be replaced with an expression that’s darker but somehow more truthful.
We’re supposed, in these difficult times, to be crying out for comfort, for blandness, for kindness, for the smiley love of our mummies. But it doesn’t quite look like that from where I’m sitting. For a start, nobody has a maiden aunt any more. She’s doing unspeakable unmaidenly things with your bi-curious bachelor uncle, in the very living room where the telly’s broadcasting Psychoville. “I’ve done a bad murder,” runs a typical line from this series, now running on BBC2 as part of Thursday’s comedy night. Logically, that means there are good ones.
Feelbad is here to stay. People want bleakness, darkness and depression. They crave unpalatable extremes. Where’s it going to end, you ask. We all know the answer. It’s going to end in death. Enjoy.
‘I’m blessed with a certain amnesia’
After his comeback to performing and Hallelujah’s unlikely chart domination, Leonard Cohen has had a remarkable year. He talks to Jian Ghomeshi about love, death and taking risks
What have you learned from being back on stage?
Leonard Cohen: I learned that it’s hard to teach an old dog new tricks. I’ve been grateful that it’s going well. You can’t ever guarantee that it’s going to continue doing well, because there’s a component that you really don’t command.
What component is that?
LC: Some sort of grace, some sort of luck. It’s hard to put your finger on it – you don’t really want to put your finger on it. But there is that mysterious component that makes for a memorable evening. You never really know whether you’re going to be able to be the person you want to be or that the audience is going to be hospitable to the person that they perceive. So there’s so many unknowns and so many mysteries connected – even when you’ve brought the show to a certain degree of excellence.
In 2001, you said to the Observer that you were at a stage of your life you refer to as the third act. You quoted Tennessee Williams saying: “Life is a fairly well-written play except for the third act.” You were 67 when you said that, you’re 74 now – does that ring more or less true for you still?
LC: Well, it’s well written, the beginning of the third act seems to be very well written. But the end of the third act, of course, is when the hero dies. My friend Irving Layton said about death: it’s not death that he’s worried about, it’s the preliminaries.
Are you worried about the preliminaries?
LC: Sure, every person ought to be.
Let me come back to the beginning of the first act. This was a brand new career for you that started in your 30s. How fearful were you of starting a second career?
LC: I’ve been generally fearful about everything, so this just fits in with the general sense of anxiety that I always experienced in my early life. When you say I had a career as a writer or a poet, that hardly begins to describe the modesty of the enterprise in Canada at that time – an edition of 200 was considered a bestseller in poems. At a certain point I realised that I’m going to have to buckle down and make a living. I’d written a couple of novels, and they’d been well received, but they’d sold about 3,000 copies. So I really had to do something, and the other thing I knew how to do was play guitar. So I was on my way down to Nashville – I thought maybe I could get a job. I love country music, maybe I’d get a job playing guitar. When I hit New York, I bumped into what later was called the folk-song renaissance. There were people like Dylan and Judy Collins and Joan Baez. And I hadn’t heard their work. So that touched me very much. I’d always been writing little songs myself, too, but I never thought there was any marketplace for them.
Some people would think it’s ironic to go into music to make money, given that it’s not necessarily the most lucrative of professions for most artists.
LC: Yeah, I know. In hindsight it seems to be the height of folly. You had to resolve your economic crisis by becoming a folk singer. And I had not much of a voice. I didn’t play that great guitar either. I don’t know how these things happen in life – luck has so much to do with success and failure.
People talk about the fact that you’ve written songs that you’ve almost grown into as you get older. How did starting a career in your 30s inform what you were writing?
LC: I always had a notion that I had a tiny garden to cultivate. I never thought I was really one of the big guys. And so the work that was in front of me was just to cultivate this tiny corner of the field that I thought I knew something about, which was something to do with self-investigation without self-indulgence. Just pure confession I never felt was really interesting. But confession filtered through a tradition of skill and hard work is interesting to me. So that was my tiny corner, and I just started writing about the things that I thought I knew about or wanted to find out about. That was how it began. I wanted the songs to sound like everybody else’s songs.
You say you’ve always been fearful of everything. When did you give yourself permission to think of yourself as, and call yourself, a legitimate singer and musician?
LC: You cycle through these feelings of anxiety and confidence. If something goes well in one’s life, one feels the benefits of the success. When something doesn’t go well, one feels remorse. So those activities persist in one’s life right to this moment.
Have the women in your life been a source of your strength or weakness?
LC: Good question. It’s not a level playing ground for either of us, for either the man or the woman. This is the most challenging activity that humans get into, which is love. You know, where we have the sense that we can’t live without love. That life has very little meaning without love. So we’re invited into this arena which is a very dangerous arena, where the possibilities of humiliation and failure are ample. So there’s no fixed lesson that one can learn, because the heart is always opening and closing, it’s always softening and hardening. We’re always experiencing joy or sadness. But there are lots of people who’ve closed down. And there are times in one’s life when one has to close down just to regroup.
Are there times when you’ve lamented the power that women have had over you?
LC: I never looked at it that way. There’s times when I’ve lamented, there’s times when I’ve rejoiced, there’s times when I’ve been deeply indifferent. You run through the whole gamut of experience. And most people have a woman in their heart, most men have a woman in their heart and most women have a man in their heart. There are people that don’t. But most of us cherish some sort of dream of surrender. But these are dreams and sometimes they’re defeated and sometimes they’re manifested.
Do you think love is empowering?
LC: It’s a ferocious activity, where you experience defeat and you experience acceptance and you experience exultation. And the affixed idea about it will definitely cause you a great deal of suffering. If you have the feeling that it’s going to be an easy ride, you’re going to be disappointed. If you have a feeling that it’s going to be hell all the way, you may be surprised.
Do you regret not having a lifelong partner?
LC: Non, je ne regrette rien. I’m blessed with a certain amount of amnesia and I really don’t remember what went down. I don’t review my life that way.
Even in the face of a very successful record that you made in 1992, The Future, do you think dealing with depression was an important part of your creative process?
LC: Well, it was a part of every process. The central activity of my days and nights was dealing with a prevailing sense of anxiety, anguish, distress. A background of anguish that prevailed.
How important was writing to your survival?
LC: It had a number of benefits. One was economic. It was not a luxury for me to write – it was a necessity. These times are very difficult to write in because the slogans are really jamming the airwaves – it’s something that goes beyond what has been called political correctness. It’s a kind of tyranny of posture. Those ideas are swarming through the air like locusts. And it’s difficult for the writer to determine what he really thinks about things. So in my own case I have to write the verse, and then see if it’s a slogan or not and then toss it. But I can’t toss it until I’ve worked on it and seen what it really is.
What do you consider your darkest hour?
LC: Well I wouldn’t tell you about it if I knew. Even to talk about oneself in a time like this is a kind of unwholesome luxury. I don’t think I’ve had a darkest hour compared to the dark hours that so many people are involved in right now. Large numbers of people are dodging bombs, having their nails pulled out in dungeons, facing starvation, disease. I mean large numbers of people. So I think that we’ve really got to be circumspect about how seriously we take our own anxieties today.
How much do you reflect upon your own mortality?
LC: You get a sense of it, you know – the body sends a number of messages to you as you get older. So I don’t know if it’s a matter of reflection, I don’t know that implies a kind of peaceful recognition of the situation.
Is there a way to prepare for death?
LC: Like with anything else, there’s a certain degree of free will. You put in your best efforts to prepare for anything. There are whole religious and spiritual methodologies that invite you to prepare for death. And you can embark upon them and embrace them and give themselves to you. But I don’t think there’s any guarantee this could work, because nobody knows what’s going to happen in the next moment.
Are you fearful of death?
LC: Everyone has to have a certain amount of anxiety about the conditions of one’s death. The actual circumstances, the pain involved, the affect on your heirs. But there’s so little that you can do about it. It’s best to relegate those concerns to the appropriate compartments of the mind and not let them inform all your activities. We’ve got to live our lives as if they’re not going to end immediately. So we have to live under those – some people might call them illusions.
Let me ask you about Hallelujah, because it’s been an interesting year for Hallelujah – it took on a new energy. A song that you wrote in 1984, and it appeared at No 1 and No 2 on the UK charts, and your version was also in the top 40. What did you make of that?
LC: I was happy that the song was being used, of course. There were certain ironic and amusing sidebars, because the record that it came from which was called Various Positions – [a] record Sony wouldn’t put out. They didn’t think it was good enough. It had songs like Dancing to the End of Love, Hallelujah, If It Be Your Will. So there was a mild sense of revenge that arose in my heart. But I was just reading a review of a movie called Watchmen that uses it, and the reviewer said “Can we please have a moratorium on Hallelujah in movies and television shows?” And I kind of feel the same way. I think it’s a good song, but I think too many people sing it.
• This is an edited transcript of an interview conducted for the Canadian broadcaster CBC. Leonard Cohen plays Mercedes Benz World in Weybridge, Surrey, tomorrow, and the Liverpool Arena on Tuesday. Leonard Cohen Live in London is out now on CD and DVD (Sony).





Phish
Nathan Moore
Nathan Moore
Nathan Moore by Anne Staveley
Nathan Moore
The feelbad factor
Light, uplifting comedy has had its day. Give me the bleak, miserable stuff – it suits my crisis better
‘They give birth astride of a grave,” says Pozzo in Waiting For Godot. “The light gleams an instant, then it’s night once more.” Close your eyes and picture yourself giving birth astride of a grave. You shiver and moan. Your baby, once you’ve squeezed it out, drops six feet onto the ground. Oh yes, your mother was right. You should have gone private.
Beckett’s magnificent line is an example of feelbad. Feelbad confronts you with the darkness, futility and awfulness of existence, but does it with such imagination, bravado, soul and wit that you find yourself exhilarated. Feelbad is The Smiths, feelgood The Smurfs. I rest my case.
Charlie Kaufman’s Synecdoche, New York is a feelbad classic. I’ve seen it twice and urge you to do the same. Both times it gave me a mid-life crisis. But that’s a recommendation. I’m 56. A mid-life crisis means I’ll live to 112. It’s a masterpiece of anti-formulaic, genre-busting, unmarketable feelbad art, one that deserves the most off-putting advertising strapline to convey its uncompromising, uningratiating vision. I offer up, in all humility: “Delay your suicide two hours to see this film.”
If you haven’t seen it, look away now, as I’m about to divulge the plot. Here goes: a guy dies. That’s it. And, as the film makes clear, that’s not just the story of the guy in the film, it’s the story of everyone. Everyone dies. That’s the only story there is. Thank you, Charlie Kaufman. Thank you, Sammy Beckett.
En route to the Big D, our hero, a depressed, self-obsessed director and hypochondriac, conceives an epic theatre piece on the subject of (wait for it, wait for it) the brutal awfulness of human life. But he never finishes his theatre piece. Of course he doesn’t. This is feelbad. He just can’t get to the end, what with constant interferences from life itself – which have to be included in the piece – and his own dissatisfaction and decline. Decades pass without his completing his work. The film’s a sort of writer’s blockbuster.
You may have heard that it’s relentlessly bleak. This is not true. Feelbad doesn’t preclude warmth or a sly and delicate humour. (That’s why the ladies love Leonard Cohen.) I’m a professional comedy writer, so feelbad humour is a subject very close to my heart, which, of course, is just a few inches away from my wallet. I make my living supplying amusing stuff for popular consumption. I started my career writing jokes for the Two Ronnies, at a time when likeable, unchallenging, diminutive chaps like Ronnie Corbett and Ernie Wise were the giants of BBC Light Entertainment. You were instructed, when writing comedy, to provide three laughs a page. You were instructed, when performing it, to go out there and make them laugh. In other words, your motivation was to make the audience feel good, with comedy of a kind your maiden aunt would enjoy.
But Light Entertainment has transmuted, over the last three decades, into Heavy Entertainment. Darker it’s got and darker. Basil Fawlty had rage but was still unmistakably farcical and funny. David Brent? There were times when his awfulness was so real you had to cover your eyes. And Brent was nothing compared with the gallery of grotesques in The League of Gentlemen, or the savagery in the collected works of Chris Morris, or the cruelty in Nighty Night. It is as if the smile has been wiped off comedy’s face, to be replaced with an expression that’s darker but somehow more truthful.
We’re supposed, in these difficult times, to be crying out for comfort, for blandness, for kindness, for the smiley love of our mummies. But it doesn’t quite look like that from where I’m sitting. For a start, nobody has a maiden aunt any more. She’s doing unspeakable unmaidenly things with your bi-curious bachelor uncle, in the very living room where the telly’s broadcasting Psychoville. “I’ve done a bad murder,” runs a typical line from this series, now running on BBC2 as part of Thursday’s comedy night. Logically, that means there are good ones.
Feelbad is here to stay. People want bleakness, darkness and depression. They crave unpalatable extremes. Where’s it going to end, you ask. We all know the answer. It’s going to end in death. Enjoy.