Get The Newsletter
Big Chill House
Big Chill Bar
Big Chill Bristol
Big Chill Record Label
Big Chill Foruml


Leonard Cohen

March 13th, 2008 by

Leonard CohenLeonard Cohen will perform at The Big Chill festival 2008 A-Z line up | Ticket info

Recently inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, Leonard Cohen is been one of the most important and influential songwriters of the last four decades.

Touring for the first time in 15 years, his appearance at TThe Big Chill is an honour for the festival, and a once-in-a-lifetime treat for Big Chillers.

www.leonardcohen.com

Leonard Cohen Biography

For four decades, Leonard Cohen has been one of the most important and influential songwriters of our time, a figure whose body of work achieves greater depths of mystery and meaning as time goes on. His songs have set a virtually unmatched standard in their seriousness and range. Sex, spirituality, religion, power – he has relentlessly examined the largest issues in human lives, always with a full appreciation of how elusive answers can be to the vexing questions he raises. But those questions, and the journey he has traveled in seeking to address them, are the ever-shifting substance of his work, as well as the reasons why his songs never lose their overwhelming emotional force.

His first album, Songs of Leonard Cohen (1967), announced him as an undeniable major talent. It includes such songs as "Suzanne," "Sisters of Mercy," "So Long, Marianne" and "Hey, That’s No Way to Say Good," all now longstanding classics. If Cohen had never recorded another album, his daunting reputation would have been assured by this one alone.

However, the two extraordinary albums that followed, Songs From a Room (1969), which includes his classic song, "Bird on the Wire," and Songs of Love and Hate (1971), provided whatever proof anyone may have required that that the greatness of his debut was not a fluke. (All three albums are reissued in April, 2007.)

Part of the reason why Cohen’s early work revealed such a high degree of achievement is that he was an accomplished literary figure before he ever began to record. His collections of poetry, including Let Us Compare Mythologies (1956) and Flowers for Hitler (1964), and his novels, including Beautiful Losers (1966), had already brought him considerable recognition in his native Canada. His dual careers in music and literature have continued feeding each other over the decades – his songs revealing a literary quality rare in the world of popular music, and his poetry and prose informed by a rich musicality.

One of the most revered figures of the singer-songwriter movement of the late Sixties and early Seventies, Cohen soon developed a desire to move beyond the folk trappings of that genre. By temperament and approach, he had always been closer to the European art song – he once termed his work the "European blues." Add to that a fondness for country music; an ear for R&B-styled female background vocals; a sly appreciation for cabaret jazz, and a regard for rhythm not often encountered in singer-songwriters, and the extent of Cohen’s musical palette becomes clear. Each of Cohen’s albums reflects not simply the issues that are on his mind as a writer, but the sonic landscape he wishes to explore as well. The through-lines in his work, of course, his voice and lyrics, as distinctive as any in the world of music.

Cohen’s 1974 album, New Skin for the Old Ceremony, which includes "Chelsea Hotel #2," a candid memoir of his early years in New York City, found him making bolder use of orchestration, a contrast to the more stripped-down sound he hard earlier preferred. Death of a Ladies’ Man, his 1977 collaboration with Phil Spector, constitutes his most extreme experiment. Spector’s Wagnerian Wall of Sound proved an uncomfortable setting for Cohen’s typically elliptical and almost painfully intimate lyrics (terms that, admittedly, would not apply to "Don’t Go Home With Your Hard-On," on which Bob Dylan and Allen Ginsberg provide backing vocals). Over the years, Cohen has bitterly complained about Spector’s high-handed – and gun-wielding – ways, while occasionally expressing a kind of grudging affection for the album’s uncharacteristic excesses.

Recent Songs (1979) and Various Positions (1984) returned Cohen to more recognizable sonic terrain, though the latter album, in a perhaps misguided nod to the trend at the time of its release, prominently incorporated synthesizers. Though not initially released in the U.S., Various Positions includes "Hallelujah," which has since become one of Cohen’s best-known, best-loved and most frequently covered songs. (Versions by Jeff Buckley and John Cale are especially notable.)

As the Eighties and their garishness began to wane, Cohen’s star began to rise once again. The listeners that had grown up with him had reached an age at which they wanted to re-examine the music of their past, and a new generation of artists and fans discovered him, attracted by the dignity, ambition and sheer quality of his songs.

Cohen rose to the opportunity this audience represented by releasing two consecutive albums, I’m Your Man (1988) and The Future (1992), that not only rank among the finest of his career, but that perfectly capture the texture of particularly complicated times. Cohen had long documented the high rate of casualties in the love wars, so the profound anxieties generated by the AIDS crisis were no news to him. Songs like "Ain’t No Cure for Love," the wryly titled "I’m Your Man" and, most explicitly, "Everybody Knows" ("Everybody knows that the Plague is coming/Everybody knows that it’s moving fast/Everybody knows that the naked man and woman – just a shining artifact of the past") depict Cohen surveying the contemporary erotic battleground and reporting on it with characteristic perspective, insight and wisdom.

Similarly, in the title track of The Future, Cohen ironically describes himself as "the little Jew who wrote the Bible," and his immersion in Jewish culture, obsession with Christian imagery, and deep commitment to Buddhist detachment rendered him an ideal commentator on the approaching millennium and the apocalyptic fears it generated. Along with the album’s title track, "Waiting for the Miracle," "Closing Time," "Anthem" and "Democracy" limned a cultural landscape rippling with dread, but yearning for hope. "There is a crack in everything," Cohen sings in "Anthem," "That’s how the light gets in." Our human imperfections, he seems to be saying, are finally what will bring us whatever transcendence we can attain.

Since that time, Cohen has released Ten New Songs (2001) and Dear Heather (2004), as well as Blue Alert (2006), a collaboration on which Cohen produced and co-wrote songs with his former background singer Anjani Thomas, who provides the vocals. All three albums have only solidified his place in the pantheon of contemporary songwriters. At 72, Cohen continues to produce compelling work, while enjoying the honors that deservedly come to artists who have achieved his legendary status. Documentaries, awards, tribute albums and the ongoing march of artists eager to record his songs all acknowledge the peerless contribution Cohen has made to what one of his titles aptly calls "The Tower of Song."

Leonard Cohen will perform at The Big Chill festival 2008 A-Z line up | Ticket info

FLU SEASON CREATES CALL FOR SHOTS; VACCINATIONS RECOMMENDED.(NEWS)

Daily News (Los Angeles, CA) October 18, 1997 Byline: Kevin F. Sherry Daily News Staff Writer Ventura County’s yearly attack on the flu has begun.

During the next several weeks, various hospitals and clinics across the county will offer free or reduced-cost vaccine shots.

A free drive-through program in Simi Valley today already has taken reservations for 2,000 people, although organizers expect that with no-shows and an additional 400 shots ordered, they should have no problem accommodating everyone.

“Reservations are full, but there’s a limited amount of flu vaccine (still) available,” said Alicia Gonzalez, a media relations representative with Simi Valley Hospital.

Medical professionals are trying to make the shots convenient to make sure as many at-risk people as possible get vaccinated.

In addition to the Simi Valley drive-through site, shots will be available for $10 at The Oaks shopping center in Thousand Oaks. The shots are free to Medicare patients, but Medicare HMO patients must pay $10.

Next week, sites in Thousand Oaks will inoculate people free of charge against the Bayern, Wuhan and Beijing flu strains, said nurse Lee Abramo, the director of education for Columbia/Los Robles Medical Center. this web site los robles hospital

“We’re expecting just a bigger flu season this year,” Abramo said.

The vaccinations are meant for anyone over age 60, as well as people of any age who suffer from chronic medical problems that could be seriously complicated by the flu.

“The goal, of course, is to prevent a mass epidemic of flu,” Abramo said. “We want to make sure that we have the target groups taken care of first.” People not in the target group should contact their doctors to see if a flu vaccination is a good idea for them.

Influenza and pneumonia remain among the top 10 killers of Americans.

“The flu can still be very deadly and it does kill thousands of people every year,” Gonzalez said.

Today’s Simi Valley drive-through site is free, but organizers are asking that patients bring a canned-food donation to benefit Care and Share. Patients sign a form, get a shot and get some cookies, Gonzalez said. They can be in and out in just a few minutes.

“They’ll never have to leave their car, which is convenient,” she said.

While some people may experience flu-like symptoms as their immune systems charge up in response to the vaccine’s antibodies, “in no way does this cause the flu,” Abramo said.

The serum used in the vaccine is grown in an egg-based culture, so people who are allergic to eggs should not receive the shot, she said.

The sites typically have long lines at the beginning of the day and clear up after a few hours, officials said.

El Nino has its fingers in this issue, too. Flu vaccinations could be especially important for at-risk people this year if the winter weather is as bad as expected.

“Sometimes their resistance is lowered during inclement weather,” Abramo said.

People also tend to spend more time indoors, which increases the amount of exposure they have to stagnant air and to others who may be infected, she said.

Flu season is here and health officials recommend annual vaccinations for healthy people 60 and older and adults and children who have chronic medical problems that can be complicated by influenza.

Flu vaccine clinics:

Today: Simi Valley Hospital will sponsor a free drive-through clinic 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the parking lot of Farmers Insurance Group Regional Office, 3041 Cochran St., in Simi Valley. Call (805) 583-8971.

Today and Sunday: The Oaks shopping center will sponsor a clinic for a $10 cost. Times are during mall hours, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. today and 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday. The Oaks, 222 Hillcrest Drive. Call (805) 497-4636.

Wednesday: St. John’s Regional Medical Center will conduct a clinic for a $7 cost 9 a.m. to noon at the Camarillo Community Center, 1605 Burnley St., in Camarillo. Call (800) 781-4449. go to web site los robles hospital

Oct. 25: Columbia/Los Robles Hospital will conduct a free clinic 9 a.m. to noon at the hospital, 215 Janss Road, in Thousand Oaks. Call (805) 379-5420.

Nov. 1: Columbia/Los Robles Hospital will conduct a free clinic 9 a.m. to noon at the hospital, 215 Janss Road, in Thousand Oaks. Call (805) 379-5420.

Nov. 3: St. John’s Regional Medical Center will conduct a clinic for a $7 cost 1 to 3 p.m. at St. Mary Magdalen Church, 2532 Ventura Blvd., in Camarillo. Call (800) 781-4449.

Ventura County Public Health Centers: Flu shots are available at the county’s health centers in Oxnard, Santa Paula, Simi Valley and Ventura for a $7 cost Monday through Friday. For times and locations, call (800) 781-4449.

CAPTION(S):

Photo Photo: (color) Mary McNeal of Camarillo reacts to getting a flu shot Friday form nurse Megan Devers in Thousand Oaks.

John Lazar/Special to the Daily News

Leave a Reply