I was planning to write about something else for today’s #SaturdaySongs post, but the terribly sad news of Leonard Cohen’s death has changed my mind.
I have loved Leonard’s music ever since his first album, The Songs Of Leonard Cohen. To my thinking, he is first and foremost a poet, who transformed his beautiful words into songs, and would I think have been a more deserving winner of the Nobel Prize for literature, as much as I like Bob Dylan. Maybe they can award him a posthumous prize to recognise the vast body of amazing literature that he produced in his lifetime.
My musical memory of this song isn’t initially picking it up as being on his album, though. Back in the late 60s the record company Columbia – or CBS as it was to those of us outside the USA – began a series of ‘sampler’ albums, priced at roughly half the rate of a regular album. These were collections of tracks from artists in their catalogue, largely American acts but with some notable additions from elsewhere, such as the Zombies from here in the UK and Leonard Cohen, who was Canadian. The first of these albums was called The Rock Machine Turns You On, and my song for today was featured on it.
Initially, the sampler albums were intended to encourage us to explore – and buy! – the music that we liked, and this is how I came to Leonard Cohen’s remarkable lyricism, some time in 1968. I was 14 at the time, such an impressionable age, and this mysterious man, with his unusual, deadpan delivery, was so very different from most of the music that we listened to at that time. I probably wore that old vinyl album out! I now have every album he ever released, and these have been receiving a lot of attention in the past day or so. Today’s song is one of his most famous: Sisters of Mercy. This has been interpreted as being about nuns, and even prostitutes, but the inspiration for it is best explained by the author himself:
In the April 1993 issue of Song Talk magazine he explained: “That’s the only song I wrote in one sitting. The melody I had worked on for some time. I didn’t really know what the song was. I remember that my mother had liked it. Then I was in Edmonton, which is one of our largest northern cities, and there was a snowstorm and I found myself in a vestibule with two young hitchhiking women who didn’t have a place to stay. I invited them back to my little hotel room and there was a big double bed and they went to sleep in it immediately. They were exhausted by the storm and cold. And I sat in this stuffed chair inside the window beside the Saskatchewan River. And while they were sleeping I wrote the lyrics. And that never happened to me before. And I think it must be wonderful to be that kind of writer. It must be wonderful, because I just wrote the lines with a few revisions and when they awakened I sang it to them. And it has never happened to me like that before. Or since.” (Information from songfacts.com).
That is a great story, and such a wonderful basis for a song. The song itself is beautiful and, as befitting the rest of the original album, was played and sung very simply. The version I’m sharing comes from one of his recent tours, after he had to go back on the road to make up for the money his business manager had swindled from him, and gives the song new depth, in a lovely performance:
Hearing this again has taken me back to those days when, as a teenager, I used to ‘borrow’ Mum and Dad’s record player and take it up to my bedroom, to play the music I wanted to listen to without unwelcome comments!
And just in case you remain to be convinced of Leonard Cohen’s poetic spirit, a final story: another of his famous early songs, again from that first album, is So Long, Marianne. Recently, Marianne Ihlen, the lady who was the inspiration for the song, passed away and Leonard wrote her a memorial letter in which he told her ‘Our bodies are falling apart and I think I will follow you very soon.’ He has his wish, and I’m left to write this through my tears.
If you have the chance check out my original album I have just uploaded…if you have the time that is!! https://juniorchills.wordpress.com/2017/02/17/on-the-lonesome-road-original-album/
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What a wonderful tribute Clive!
I love hearing about these older musicians and listening to these songs I’ve never heard before!
Thank you.
jodie
http://www.jtouchofstyle.com
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Your heartfelt post is a great tribute to a supremely talented poet first and musician second.
He will be missed. Unfortunately this last year has seen so many of the musicians that were instrumental in forming my love of music have left us.
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Thanks Michael. It really has been a very bad year, but I guess as we get older so do our musical heroes. Doesn’t make it any easier to bear, though.
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No it doesn’t.
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Clive, I thought the same thing- he would have been a wonderful choice for the Nobel Prize. I remember this song well as I had Mercy Nuns in school, and I appreciate your relating the true story behind the lyrics.
My favorite lines of his are:
“There is a crack in everything. It’s how the light gets in.”
It was a very comforting thought for those of us who admittedly were not perfect.
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Thanks Clare. I think the Nobel committee got it wrong, but it’s a subjective judgement. I had always believed the ladies of the night interpretation till that interview. It really is a beautiful song, isn’t it – and anyone who thinks they are perfect is delusional!
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It is a comforting sentiment for all of us, Clive.
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Thank you for the beautiful tribute. I have listened to Leonard (and loved his songs) for decades. I will miss him!
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Thank you Diane. Same here!
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Thank you for the lovely tribute to Leonard Cohen.
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Thank you, I’m glad you liked it 😊
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Thank you for writing this lovely tribute to the man who I’ve kept by my side since my early teens. Of couse he was a poet, one of the great in my entirely invalid opinion. I loved this piece – I just don’t have the heart to write one. So thank you.
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Thank you, as always, for your very kind words. I hope Leonard’s music brings you solace as we mourn his departure.
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His music, his poetry, his novels. We are spoiled with such a legacy.
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Although, I do not know much of his music this is a beautiful tribute Clive.
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Thank you Brigid, it was the least I could do for his memory and all the pleasure I’ve had from listening to his music.
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Great tribute, Clive. I must admit I usually find Leonard Cohen’s songs a tad on the depressing side, but he did have a lovely gravelly voice.
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Thanks Stevie. His lyrics have a wonderfully dry wit about them, you need to listen to more of them! 😊
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I like anything with a dry wit, so perhaps I should.
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I can recommend him 😊
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Clive, you have written a very heartfelt salute to Leonard Cohen.
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Thank you Bernadette. I felt that I needed to, hence the late change of plan.
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