Top Ten Thursdays: Top 10 Leonard Cohen Songs

It's the tour those of us younger Leonard Cohen fans -- the ones who discovered his music through the Natural Born Killers soundtrack, covers of "Hallelujah," or when we walked into a tiny used CD store in Gainesville and heard "Take This Waltz" playing -- never thought would happen.After gaining...
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It’s the tour those of us younger Leonard Cohen fans — the ones who discovered his music through the Natural Born Killers soundtrack, covers of “Hallelujah,” or when we walked into a tiny used CD store in Gainesville and heard “Take This Waltz” playing — never thought would happen.

After gaining fame and respect in the literary world, Cohen began his singing career in the late 1960s, issuing the most brilliantly erudite, sad-sack folk stuff ever penned. Then, with 1988’s I’m Your Man album, he introduced humor to his work — while still exploring sex and spirituality better than any of his peers. Cohen’s masterful 1992 album The Future teemed with darkness but, again, cynical smiles and wonderful romanticism are there as well. Having released about a dozen, mostly acclaimed, studio records and a couple terrific live albums, Cohen called it quits — to live as a monk. But, then, like in a bad movie twist, a former business manager stole his money, forcing Cohen back on the road. Sounds like a perfect situation for the angry artist to drag his ass through the motions just to bank some much needed retirement cash. Judging by the CD/DVD Live in London, though, culled from a show last year, Cohen’s craggy croon sounds delightfully expressive, as does his illustrious band and sultry backup singers.

It has been said before but it’s worth repeating, Cohen’s loss has become the world’s gain. In honor of popular music’s supreme poet performing Saturday in Sunrise, here’s a highly subjective list of his finest songs.

Leonard Cohen, Saturday, October 17. BankAtlantic Center, One Panther Pkwy, Sunrise. Show starts at 8 p.m., tickets cost $19.50 – $252.75 via Ticketmaster.com.

1. “Tower of Song”

As only Cohen can, he appraises his advancing age and, with utmost

modesty, his place in the pantheon of great singer-songwriters. The

opening lines are smile-inducing gems: “Well my friends are gone and my

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hair is grey / I ache in the places where I used to play.” First

appeared as the closer of I’m Your Man. This gorgeous performance —

audio only — is from Live in London.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uumLQCEglpM

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2. “Famous Blue Raincoat”

Cohen “reads” us a letter he has written to the man who had an affair

with his woman “Jane.” He addresses the man as “my killer, my

brother.”  It’s a marvelously detailed account of a savage love

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triangle –and terribly depressing. But it’s that beautiful despair that

pulls you back again and again. Here’s the original recording, found on

Cohen 1971 album Songs of Love and Hate.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9

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9. “Waiting for the Miracle”

The singer at his spooky best. Cohen’s desperate, he’s assured, he’s

“waiting fro the miracle to come.” It’s a song about love gone wrong —

and so much more. Originally from The Future.

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10. “Suzanne”

“Suzanne had a room on a waterfront in the port of Montreal,” Cohen

recalls in the liner notes to The Best Of. “Everything happened just as

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it was put down. She was the wife of a man I knew. Her hospitality was

immaculate.” The first cut on The Songs of Leonard Cohen, this

magnificent clip is from Live in London.

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