Friday, July 29, 2016

CD Odyssey Disc 895: Leonard Cohen

Having had an unpleasant encounter with our medical system, I am now home to enjoy what remains of a day off.

My family doctor retired. This means when I have a routine medical question for a doctor I have to go sit in a clinic waiting room with a motley mix of sick people and hypochondriacs. Two hours into what I was told was a one hour wait, and two patients after I was told there was only one patient in front of me, my patience for being a patient (which is never high) had evaporated. I left. At least I had a good book to keep me company.

Disc 895 is….The Future
Artist: Leonard Cohen

Year of Release: 1992

What’s up with the Cover? I don’t mind the theme of this logo – I like hummingbirds, hearts and handcuffs as much as the next guy – but seeing it always makes me feel a little regret. I saw this tour back in the day and didn’t buy a t-shirt from the merch table, and seeing the album cover always makes me wish I had.

How I Came To Know It: I owned “I’m Your Man” and “Various Positions” on tape at this time and loved them both, so when a new Cohen album came out, I bought it immediately on the exciting new format of CD!

How It Stacks Up:  I have 12 of Cohen’s studio albums and 1 live record. Of the 12 studio albums “The Future” is way up at fourth best, which is some pretty rarified company.

Ratings: 4 stars

In 1992 the 58 year old Cohen was dating 33 year old movie star Rebecca de Mornay. Whatever vitality he managed to siphon out of rocking that cradle definitely makes it onto “The Future,” which is infused with large helpings of raw energy and restless romanticism.

This album has received a ton of playtime over the years: a combination of me really loving it, and only owning a handful of CDs at the time. I could probably quote the whole thing line for line as it played. Of course I don’t do that, as I am not a total douchebag.

I’ve probably given this album too much play, because all my intimate knowledge of it somewhat deadens the impact it used to have on me.

This is a damned shame, because this is a great record. It is hopeful and apocalyptic in equal measure, with a groovy jazz backbeat feeling that never falls into the muddy note-frenzy mania of true jazz. Cohen records often have bad production, but not “the Future” which is rich and deep like Cohen’s gravelly voice, but sparse enough so every word has room to sink in.

The opening (and title) track is Cohen’s commentary on the future. Cohen sees the lack of our traditional Western notions of right and wrong in the wake of the Cold War, and seems to simultaneously despair and revel in the results. It is a great opening salvo on a record that is exploring where we are going as a society, and how Cohen reflects that examination back on himself as a man.

The album’s radio single (or what passes for a radio single from a poet like Cohen) is “Closing Time.” This song is the perfect snapshot of the end of a night at the club, when the lights come with all that ramped up drunken, sexualized energy still lingering in the air. In 1992 I was single and doing a lot of clubbing and this song really captures the experience. Years later it is a pleasant reminder of what it all felt like: the booze-soaked carpet, the half-committed, half-dismissive smile of the woman across from you, and the bouncers, slowly herding the lot of you closer and closer to the door.

Mid-way through the album “Democracy” is the companion piece to the title track’s opening challenge, with Cohen expressing a complex mix of accusation, optimism and maybe just a little fatigue with the whole thing. Cohen is one of the world’s great poets, and I could quote the whole song, but for the sake of brevity here are a couple of my favourite selections. First Cohen’s romantic notion of American democracy:

“It’s coming to America first,
The cradle of the best and of the worst
It’s here they got the range
And the machinery for change
And it’s here they got the spiritual thirst.”

And a reminder that sometimes you just need to put the placard down and spend a quiet night in:

“I’m sentimental, if you know what I mean
I love the country but I can’t stand the scene
And I’m neither left or right
I’m just staying home tonight
Getting lost in that hopeless little screen.”

And the whole of it set to the beat of drums more at home during a military march than a pop song, reminding us that democracy has always been a struggle, and that’s what helps make it great.

Cohen even takes his turn at a couple of covers. He does “Be For Real,”a Frederick Knight song recorded by Marlena Shaw in 1976. Shaw’s version (which you can hear here) is pretty sweet, but at 58 Cohen still manages to out-sexy her. That “Be For Real” can hold up to the amazing poetry in other tracks on “The Future” is a testament to both its strength as a song and Cohen’s delivery.

Cohen also covers Irving Berlin’s “Always” and while it is OK, it drags on too long. At eight minutes, and full of background sounds of people drinking and mingling, it fails on the production side as well. If “Closing Time” is what a happening club sounds like at the end of the night, then “Always” is what that same club sounds like forty years later when the upholstery is all stained and only the local booze donkeys frequent the place.

The album ends with an instrumental, “Tacoma Trailer” and at his live shows Cohen will still plunk this thing out on a little stand up organ. It is a beautiful mood piece that showcases Cohen’s talents as a songwriter, even when he isn’t relying on his incredible talent as a poet.

Over the years the song that has always stuck with me the most is “Anthem,” a song about hope and hanging in there. Its chorus holds what I think is the album’s main message, and a great piece of advice that I’ll leave you with, since Cohen’s words will always fare better than my own:

“Ring the bells that still can ring
Forget your perfect offering
There is a crack, a crack in everything
That’s how the light gets in.”

Best tracks:  The Future, Be For Real, Closing Time, Anthem, Democracy

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