Leonard Cohen's perfect offering

http://www.salon.com/ent/music/feature/2009/04/17/cohen/index.html?source=newsletter

The great songwriter is old now. But as closing time approaches, his 
poetic fire burns brighter than ever.

By Gary Kamiya
April 17, 2009

For the people fortunate enough to see Leonard Cohen on his current 
national tour, as I did Monday night at Oakland, Calif.'s Paramount 
Theater, the world is a bigger, deeper, older, more bitter and 
radiant place. Every Cohen performance is an epic event. And in his 
three-hour-plus performance, part of his first tour in 15 years, the 
great songwriter, poet and novelist once again used his powerful body 
of work to create, for one night, a theater of his life, a public 
confession so intimate, complex, combative and profound that it felt 
as much like prayer as performance. At the end of the evening, as the 
audience floated out, still transported to whatever unknown inner 
place his words and music had carried them, you could almost feel a 
palpable sense of collective gratitude that such artistry still 
exists in a weary world -- that Leonard Cohen is still around.

Forty years. Like many members of the graying but impressively 
age-varied audience, that's how long I've been listening to Cohen. 
That fact in itself gave the evening a sense of momentousness, even 
fatality. It was a shock when Cohen strolled out onto the stage, 
still hip, still the epitome of a certain kind of sexy 
Euro-Canadian-Buddhist intellectual style, but now an old man. What 
happened to that handsome young blade who blasted onto the scene with 
the ice-cold "The Stranger Song" and the miraculously gentle "Sisters 
of Mercy"? The golden boy whose romantic life was captured in 
envy-producing photos in the first songbook I ever bought, the 
Leonard Cohen Songbook, hanging out with a mysterious blond woman on 
a Greek island and being quoted as asking, at a post-performance 
party at the Berkeley Marriott, "Hey, this is California -- where are 
the 13-year-old girls?" He got old, and we got old with him. If 
Leonard Cohen, the slashing youth who threw down the gauntlet to 
himself and us with the terrifying album "Songs of Love and Hate," 
who wrote the brilliantly audacious novel "Beautiful Losers," whose 
obsession with love and sex and betrayal and forgiveness and God and 
women, always women, served as a disquieting soundtrack for so many 
of our romantic lives, can be 74 years old, then it's no use denying 
it -- we must all be on that same one-way train. You can't watch 
somebody you've been following for that long without seeing yourself. 
The window is also a mirror.

For those of us still hiding from the revenges planned by the 
whirligig of time, it can be hard to look. This is the fourth or 
fifth time I've seen Cohen perform. The first time was sometime in 
the 1970s -- it's been so long I don't remember exactly. The last was 
on his mid-'90s tour, during the remarkable career renaissance 
spurred by his superb 1988 album, "I'm Your Man." In a stock line he 
uses in every show, but which surely brings down the house every 
time, Cohen noted that the last time he performed was 14 or 15 years 
ago, then deadpanned, "I was 60 years old. Just a crazy kid with a 
dream." In those 14 years, Cohen went from being a brilliantly 
sardonic middle-aged man ("Now my friends are gone and my hair is 
gray/ I ache in the places where I used to play") to a brilliantly 
sardonic old man. In his black suit and fedora, he looks like a cross 
between an aging hipster and a retired Jewish haberdasher, with a 
little John Updike thrown in. It's a cool look, and Cohen is trim and 
spry (in a delightful touch, he skipped off the stage at end of each 
set), but there's no hiding the fact that the golden boy is gone and 
won't come back.

But, of course, Cohen knows this, and talks about it, and plays with 
it, and interrogates it. At one point in his second set, he said that 
he'd been working out, and slyly opened his suit jacket to reveal his 
(flat) stomach. "But it's too late," he said. And then, after a beat: 
"It's always been too late." Old age, like everything else for Cohen, 
is a curiosity to be investigated. It's inescapable, and yet in a 
certain sense it can be overcome. During his memorable version of 
"I'm Your Man," which like all of his unabashed love songs falls like 
a redemptive rain after the caustic romantic pessimism of much of his 
other work, he made one of his characteristic, intriguing tweaks to 
his lyrics: following the line, "If you want another kind of lover," 
he changed the original "I'll wear a mask for you" to "I'll wear an 
old man's mask for you." Cohen's point seemed to be that his old age 
is real, but it is also a mask, and that beneath it, the same 
youthful fire of passion and devotion burns. In fact, maybe it burns 
higher and hotter, as he gets closer to what he calls "closing time." 
It certainly felt like that Monday night.

Cohen undertook this tour for financial reasons after his former 
manager allegedly swindled $10 million from him, leaving him almost 
nothing. (Cohen was awarded $9 million by a Canadian court in a civil 
suit.) But he held nothing back, throwing himself wholeheartedly into 
his music. In his generosity and dignity, Cohen reminded me of 
another old man who lost everything, and who earned the nation's 
respect by going on a grueling around-the-world lecture tour to pay 
off his debts -- Mark Twain.

Cohen's shows on this tour seem to be almost identical, from the set 
lists down to his jokes and his introductions of the musicians. (Most 
of the material on his excellent new album, "Leonard Cohen Live in 
London," including his stage patter, is virtually identical to the 
Paramount show.) But that doesn't really matter. It's a flawless, 
beautifully conceived and realized show, and it doesn't require 
performative spontaneity. You're getting Leonard Cohen, still at the 
height of his powers (OK, I miss the five or six notes he lost on the 
top end of his baritone range two decades ago), and if he doesn't 
want to show the audience any more of himself than he has already 
revealed in some of the most naked songs ever written, that's his 
prerogative. He may say the same things at every show, but his words 
possess such gravitas and sincerity that they're like a simple suit 
of clothes. Why change them?

Besides, Cohen somehow manages to create the sense every time he 
performs that he is engaged in a life-or-death struggle. He famously 
once told an interviewer that he approaches a performance like a 
matador entering the ring, and has enigmatically called himself a 
"soldier" (his touring band was once called "the Army"). And that 
sense of inner struggle -- with the angel, the devil, or just himself 
-- was the skeleton beneath the skin of Monday's sold-out show.

Accompanied by his superb 10-piece band, Cohen opened with the 
haunting 1984 ballad "Dance Me to the End of Love," which he said was 
inspired by knowing that in certain death camps, the Germans forced a 
string quartet to play while their fellow prisoners were being killed 
and burned. Cohen has explored the theme of love as an all-consuming 
flame, both destructive and creative, from the outset of his career 
-- a painting of St. Bernadette in flames appears on the back cover 
of his first album -- and that tortured ambiguity flickered 
throughout the evening. "If he was fire, then she must be wood," 
Cohen sang in "Joan of Arc," but the old ladies' man himself has 
always been dry wood, burning up, consumed by the same flame, dying 
endlessly. Cohen is a battered philosopher of eros, and the beauty 
and horror of much of his poetry derives from his alternately 
exhausted and triumphant response to the demigod of sex.

But Cohen has turned outward more in recent decades. His second 
offering of the night was "The Future," perhaps his bleakest 
political song, with its Yeatsian vision of a dystopian world in 
which "things are going to slide in all directions ... I've seen the 
future, baby, it is murder." Then came the unabashed, 
down-on-his-knees love song "There Ain't No Cure for Love" from "I'm 
Your Man," followed by the classic "Bird on a Wire" from his second 
album, "Songs From a Room." As is his wont, Cohen made a small but 
key change to one of the lyrics. The original line goes "If I have 
been untrue/ I hope you know it was never to you." He changed it to 
"I thought a lover had to be some kind of liar," relentlessly erasing 
the sentimentality from his earlier work.

That implacable self-questioning was manifest in Cohen's intense 
onstage demeanor. As he sang, he would sometimes stand still, holding 
the microphone close, with eyes closed and a tortured expression, 
seeming to be searching for the meanings behind his own words, the 
lies behind the truth. Frequently he dropped to his knees, as if to 
implore his muse or honor his fellow musicians. Once or twice a wild 
surmise seemed to shoot through his eyes as he looked up over the 
crowd into the darkness, a look of nameless wonder.

Then came one of the evening's highlights, the gloriously mordant 
"Everybody Knows," with its perfect commingling of Cohen's political 
and sexual obsessions. ("Everybody knows the scene is dead, but 
there's gonna be a meter on your bed that will disclose what 
everybody knows.") On this tune, as throughout, the Barcelona-born 
string maestro Javier Mas, who plays 12-string guitar, oud and 
bandurria, stood out. One of the musical highlights was watching 
Cohen, playing his familiar fast arpeggios on guitar, intently 
leaning over and watching Mas take off on one of his virtuoso Middle 
Eastern-inflected runs.

Mention must also be made of the astonishingly fine trio of backing 
vocalists. Sharon Robinson, one of the three, is not really a 
"backing vocalist" -- she is a major and formidable talent in her own 
right who co-wrote the songs on Cohen's strong 2001 release "Ten New 
Songs" and produced the album. Her soulful, expressive voice was 
highlighted on her own "Boogie Street." The other two vocalists, 
Charlie and Hattie Webb, lived up to Cohen's description of them as 
"the sublime Webb sisters." Their voices are not only astonishingly 
pure in tone and true in pitch, but they blend perfectly. On "I Tried 
to Leave You," they sang a beautiful, complex two-part harmony unlike 
any I've ever heard before. Best of all, these three muses gave Cohen 
the opportunity to wander over to them and whisper, "Sing it, 
angels." A Leonard Cohen concert in which he does not speak that line 
to the beautiful women who invariably seem to be on stage with him is a fraud.

The long, rich show included some old standbys like his breakout song 
"Suzanne," with its transcendent vision of a disquieting Jesus who 
"sank beneath your wisdom like a stone," and "Chelsea Hotel," with 
its indelible image of Janis Joplin "giving me head on the unmade bed 
while the limousines wait in the street." But Cohen dipped more into 
his newer work, performing widely celebrated songs like "Hallelujah," 
"Tower of Song" and "Democracy." (It's funny to think of a 
20-year-old song like "Tower of Song" as being "newer," but that's 
what happens when your career lasts for four decades.) Standouts 
included a soaring version of Cohen's musical setting of the great 
Lorca poem "Take This Waltz," a triumphant version of "I'm Your Man" 
and a tune he's done forever, his goose-bump-raising version of the 
stirring French resistance song "The Partisan." He also did a 
wonderful spoken version of "A Thousand Kisses Deep."

Speaking of spoken words, there's the little matter of Cohen's voice. 
First, it was never as terrible as some of his critics said. No, he 
wasn't always on pitch, but he was coming from the European cabaret 
tradition, where expression and intelligence matter more than pipes. 
Who would want to hear Mariah Carey sing "Put the lather on your 
face, now you're Santa Claus/and you've got a gift for everyone who 
will give you their applause" from the savage "Dress Rehearsal Rag," 
a song in which Cohen berates himself for being too cowardly to kill 
himself? He could always sing just well enough to get by. His sudden 
drop into a strange, breathy basso profundo in "I'm Your Man" was 
somewhat disconcerting, and obviously diminished the melodic appeal 
of his voice, but he still got style points for delivery. Basically, 
the same thing held for his performance in Oakland. Actually, after 
the intermission, his voice had warmed up enough that he was hitting 
some of the higher baritone notes that he didn't even attempt in the first set.

A Cohen performance is exhilarating and moving, but it can also be 
exhausting. Part of this is simply because he is a real poet, not a 
pop imitation. He uses language precisely, extravagantly, 
experimentally. Listening to poetry is harder than listening to 
doggerel. But mostly, a Cohen show is exhausting because of his dark 
sensibility. One of Cohen's stock jokes on the tour is that he found 
himself drawn to religion (he was a practicing Buddhist monk for 
years at a monastery near Los Angeles) but "cheerfulness kept 
breaking out." However, cheerfulness is not the first thing you'd 
associate with Cohen. He gets to it eventually, but it's not a straight shot.

"Looks like freedom but it feels like death/ It's something in 
between, I guess," Cohen sings in "Closing Time." That knife edge, 
that balancing act between the intolerable and the redemptive, is 
where Cohen lives, both in his work and in his performances. He is a 
fearless explorer of darknesses of all kinds, mostly erotic and 
romantic, but also, and increasingly, political and spiritual. For 
Cohen, without darkness there is no light -- a credo summed up in his 
song "Anthem," with its exquisite chorus "Ring the bells that still 
can ring/ Forget your perfect offering/ There is a crack in 
everything/ That's how the light gets in." This unflinching 
dialectic, which is found in some forms of Buddhism and Judaism as 
well as in the "negative theology" of Christian mystics like Meister 
Eckhart, informs all of Cohen's work. In its rejection of facile 
optimism, it represents the diametrical opposite of the Dionysian 
self-assurance we associate with performers. Watching Cohen, you're 
sometimes haunted by a fear that he may fall and not be able to get back up.

This coiled tension makes his performances uniquely self-critical, 
almost self-canceling. You could almost say he performs against 
himself. Maybe that's where his matador image derives: He's both the 
bull and the swordsman. At times, as Cohen was listening intently to 
his own words being sung back at him by the chorus, you could imagine 
him shaking his head and saying, "Actually, none of that is true."

Cohen is a peculiar hybrid: a writer who is also a star, a natural 
questioner whose medium, the popular song, forces him toward answers. 
He's an anti-romantic romantic, an inveterate ladies' man who finds 
himself left alone in a place wrecked "by the winds of change and the 
weeds of sex." But in the end, no matter what, Cohen always pops back 
up, affirming something larger and nobler than himself. And the thing 
that buoys him is the idea of grace. Cohen does not necessarily 
believe that such a thing exists as an objective entity. But he does 
seem to believe you can create it -- in fact, that you have  to 
create it. As he writes in "Marianne," "I forget to pray for the 
angels, and then the angels forget to pray for us."

Cohen saved two of his most famous songs, "First We Take Manhattan" 
and "Famous Blue Raincoat," for the end. After his gravelly bass 
voice caressed the great opening line of "Manhattan" -- "They 
sentenced me to 20 years of boredom/ For trying to change the system 
from within" -- the band rocked the tune. "Famous Blue Raincoat" is 
probably the most beautiful melody Cohen ever wrote and one of his 
most haunting songs, with its enigmatic references to a friend's 
romantic betrayal and its heartbreakingly compassionate line "And 
thanks/ for the trouble you took from her eyes/ I thought it was 
there for good/ So I never tried." The mostly flawless band slightly 
overplayed behind Cohen on this classic, which deserves no 
instrumental adornment whatsoever, but it remained one of the 
evening's highlights.

As an old fan who still reserves a special place in his heart for the 
old songs, the number that really got to me was "Marianne." As Cohen 
and the backup singers broke into that famous chorus -- "Now so long, 
Marianne, it's time that we began/ to laugh and cry and cry and 
laugh/ about it all again" -- I found myself carried back 30 years. I 
remembered all the times I played that song and all those other great 
songs on the guitar. I remembered when Leonard Cohen was one of my 
idols, in the days when I was innocent enough to have idols. I 
remembered all the long-lost women I associated with that song. And 
remembering it all, hearing it here and knowing it was gone forever, 
something cracked open, and the tears came.

After Cohen's last encore, as the applause poured down upon him, he 
doffed his hat and bowed his head, and when he raised it again an 
incandescent smile, an expression of pure joy and appreciation, 
suffused his worn, sensual, intelligent face. As he smiled, the years 
seemed to fall away, not just for Cohen but for everyone whose life 
has been enriched by his artistic journey, whether they followed it 
for 40 years or one. Those of us who grew up with Leonard Cohen saw 
an old man on Monday night, and in his age we saw our own rapidly 
approaching fate. But we also saw something else. We saw an artist 
still alive and kicking, still asking troublesome questions of the 
world and telling beautiful stories about it. That was a fragment to 
be shored against our coming ruin.

"Thank for you for keeping my songs alive all these years," Cohen 
said at the end of the show. The fact that his songs still live on is 
inspiring. But it isn't just his artistic achievement that matters, 
but the humility, the discipline, and, yes, the grace that lies 
behind it. For what Cohen offered to us was not just his artistry, 
but his life -- a life played for keeps, an examined life, an 
artist's life. Not everyone can write "Famous Blue Raincoat," but 
every one of us can try to live a deeper life. Every one of us can 
ring the bells that still can ring.

.


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