The album's cover |
Leonard Cohen has been enjoying
a well-deserved rest from his labours in 2014. After long periods of almost-constant
touring between May, 2008 and December, 2013 (except for a nineteen-month hiatus
in 2011-2012), he finally put the tour bus into the garage. But he hasn't been
completely unproductive. Timed to coincide with his 80th birthday - well, two
days later - Cohen released a new album, Popular
Problems, on September 23rd.
Because of the resurgence of
Cohen's career - thanks to the World Tours, and the huge success of his
previous album - Popular Problems was
an instant success. It hit #1 in the album charts immediately in Canada, New
Zealand, and much of Europe. Here in Canada it sold 20,000 copies in its first
week - quickly on its way to gold status.
Popular
Problems is Leonard Cohen's 13th. studio album. It arrives almost
three years after his previous release - the superb Old Ideas. In style and approach Popular Problems can be considered a sequel to its predecessor - as
their titles might suggest. Cohen's key collaborator on this album, Patrick
Leonard - who programmed, performed, and produced the work, as well as writing
and arranging the music for most of the songs - was also a main contributor to
the previous album (he played the same role on four tracks from Old Ideas).
Canada's great troubadour to the World |
It's a brief album -
clocking in at 36 minutes - consisting of nine mostly-new songs: "A
Street" and "Nevermind" were published as poems in Cohen's 2006
collection Book of Longing; "My Oh My" and "Born in Chains"
emerged on stage in 2006, although an earlier version of the latter - differing
radically in its arrangement and singing style (the earlier lyrics were matched
with a different tune) - dates all the way back to 1985.
The producer and co-creator
of Popular Problems is Patrick
Leonard - an American keyboard player, songwriter and music producer. He is
perhaps best-known for his work as songwriter, tour director, and producer with
Madonna - featuring on half-a-dozen or so of her albums. He's worked with many
other prominent figures in the music scene. Patrick Leonard met Leonard Cohen
in 2011. Patrick had worked previously with Cohen's son Adam. He got together with
Cohen at the latter's house - Cohen had a small recording studio set up above
the garage in his back yard. Using a computer audio software program called Pro
Tools, they collaborated on four songs - which were eventually released on Old Ideas in 2012.
Popular
Problems is based on the same modus
operandi the pair used on the previous album. Patrick Leonard wrote most of
the music, arranging and programming it on Pro Tools. For the by-now-familiar
"singing-angels" used as backing vocals, they employed primarily the multi-tracked
Charlean Carmon, but also used Dana Glover and Donna Delory on a couple of
tracks. Patrick Leonard also used a small band on four of the songs: Joe Ayoub
on bass, Brian Macleod on drums, James Harrah on guitar, and Alexandru
Bublitchi on violin. For the rest of the music - bassline, keyboards, bongo
drums, slide guitar, horns, and trumpet - the producer got the sounds of those
instruments via the Pro Tools software.
I'm not fond of the
synthesized and inert sound of programmed music. It does get monotonous after a
while. On Old Ideas Leonard's
tracks were interspersed effectively amongst tracks featuring actual musicians
who are plucking, hitting and blowing into real instruments. The human element
creates syncopated music that swings. And music created by an interacting group
playing live just seems to breathe more. I wish there was more of that here.
But with Leonard Cohen, of
course - ever the articulate sage, and the careful craftsman of surprising
images and delightful bon mots - what
counts most are the songs. And the collection on this new album does not
disappoint. Cohen is a poet; his lyrics are full of clever turns of phrase that
suggest meanings, but never in a direct or definitive way. The context and
theme for a song seem certain - but the attitude and the point-of-view are more
elusive. That's what makes repeated listens so interesting; you parse the
words; ponder each verse; and juggle your own personal connections to the lyric
with your often-tentative sense of its apparent meaning. We respond
individually as reader/listener to the artful musings of the poet/lyricist. The
masterful Cohen serves as our koan-master.
A key theme of Old Ideas was mortality. Cohen -
approaching 80 years of age - mused about death and dying. "Going
Home", the opening track set the theme:
"Going
home without my burden;
Going home
behind the curtain;
Going home without the costume
that I wore."
The album was full of a
sense of looking back - reflecting on the past and considering the reality of a
foreshortened future. But the mood was one of honest acceptance and
compassionate engagement - Cohen thinking about his own situation, but also
considering his relationship to others.
Popular
Problems contains more of the same, but it also turns its
attention to contemporary themes of disaster, war and conflict. There has
always been an apocalyptic element to Cohen's political ruminations - and this
is emphasized by the use of religious and Biblical imagery. "Samson in New
Orleans", for example, is about righteous anger in the face of the
political debacle that followed Hurricane Katrina:
"So
gather up the killers;
Get everyone
in town;
Stand me by
those pillars;
Let me take
the temple down."
"A
Street" is a more abstruse comment on the 9/11 catastrophe, but still full
of precise images and clever aphorisms:
"You
left me with the dishes
And the baby
in the bath;
You're tight
with the militias
You wear
their camouflage ..."
And "Nevermind"
has a soldier as narrator - recalling past experiences in a Middle Eastern war.
80 yrs old, but still going strong! |
But
these parables of doom and disaster are offset by lighter and more optimistic
material. The album kicks off with "Slow", a rueful statement of
Cohen's basic approach to life and art. It's an amusing double entendre: he's
talking mostly about his creative and musical method ("I'm slowing down
the tune / I never liked it fast ..."); but he also gives the notion a
sexual connotation ("Let me catch my breath / I thought we had all night
..."). He undercuts some of the heavy thoughts with humorous
self-deprecation - Almost Like the Blues offers this example:
"There's
torture and there's killing;
There's all
my bad reviews;
The war, the
children missing;
Lord, it's
almost like the blues."
"My
Oh My" is a wistful reminiscence of a brief affair ("Held you for a
little while / My Oh My Oh My"); the way he delivers the title line suggests
so much. It's about love and loss; but it's expressed with a sense of gratitude.
"Did I Ever Love You", however, despite its similar ring of acceptance,
strikes a negative tone: ("Did I ever love you / Did I ever need you / Did
I ever fight you / Did I ever want you"). The fraught emotion is stressed
by Cohen's vocal - instead of his familiar basso profundo, he really reaches
here to extend his range. The disconcerting delivery in the verse is combined
with a bizarrely up-beat chorus - Dana Glover's multi-tracked soprano vocals
accompanying a loping, country-and-western rhythm. It's one of Patrick
Leonard's strangest arrangements.
"Born
in Chains" is given a gospel treatment - appropriate for a song that uses
the Exodus story (the Hebrews escaping Egyptian bondage) as its guiding
metaphor. And the album concludes with an affirmative nod to the hordes of
adoring fans who have attended the hundreds and hundreds of concerts he's put
on around the world since 2008:
"You've
got me singing,
Even tho' it
all looks grim;
You've got
me singing
The
Hallelujah hymn."
"You got me singing ..." |
Popular Problems may
be a rather brief collection of songs (36 minutes); but what it lacks in
length, it certainly makes up for in quality of lyric and variety of theme and
mood. As a poet, Cohen favours a direct and declarative style. He uses image
and metaphor to expand the possible connections the reader can bring to his
words - and his songwriting is built on similar strategies.
Leonard
Cohen has always looked for sympathetic and multi-talented people to help him
get his musical vision across. He needs a strong collaborator - someone who
offers more than a hands-off approach to the creation of a touring band, or the
production of an album. Patrick Leonard joins the list of notable successes: John
Lissauer, Henry Lewy, Roscoe Beck, Sharon Robinson, and Leanne Ungar, amongst
others.
Popular Problems,
like its immediate predecessor, comes with an attractively-designed booklet
that includes all of the lyrics. Unlike the Old
Ideas booklet, which featured drawings by Cohen, this one includes a set of
photographs of him which have been lightly solarized. In all of these shots,
Cohen is focused on polishing and shining of a pair of shoes. Moments of
Zen concentration, perhaps? Leonard absorbed in the task at hand. Getting ready
for a soft-shoe shuffle?
Polishing some lyrics? |
This
is an excellent album. Some of the reviews
I've read rate it more highly than Old
Ideas. I don't agree with that. The songs are, perhaps, more adventurous in
their scope and subject matter; but I don't find the music as varied and as satisfying.
Regardless, it's still Leonard Cohen at the top of his game - a must-buy for
the serious fan.
Thanks for this Clive. The whole album was on YouTube for a while and I listened non-stop. It's nice to read some of the back story of this mesmerizing album.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Lil. I've been listening a lot, too. You're right; it is mesmerizing.
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