Showing posts with label Hallelujah. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hallelujah. Show all posts

Friday, 17 July 2009

Leonard Cohen Asks for Brief Halt to New Covers of “Hallelujah”



Lenny's rightly calling for a moratorium on covers of his majestic “Hallelujah” !

About f*cking time too! The song's been mercilessly murdered by what seems millions of monstrous, moronic, mushy, muzak merchants the world over!!

The next moronic muzak merchant caught abusing and defiling this beautiful piece of art should immediately be sent for a long vacation in Guantanomo Bay or some other sick CIA torture ... sorry holiday ... camp!!

These muzak mongering defilers are real terrorists!





from rollingstone.com/rockdaily

Rock & Roll Hall of Fame singer-songwriter Leonard Cohen has asked for a brief respite from new versions of his classic “Hallelujah,” arguing the large number of artists covering the song and its frequent appearance on soundtracks amounts to overkill. “I was reading a review of a movie called Watchmen that uses it, and the reviewer said, ‘Can we please have a moratorium on ‘Hallelujah’ in movies and television shows?’ and I kind of feel the same way,” Cohen told the “I think it’s a good song, but too many . “I think it’s a good song, but too many people sing it.”

Incidentally, the gratuitous sex scene in Watchmen that used “Hallelujah” actually employed Cohen’s own version of the song, one of the few times Cohen’s original has been unearthed in recent years. Since Jeff Buckley covered the song on his 1994 album Grace — using John Cale’s 1992 version of the song as his guide — “Hallelujah” has taken on hit status, thanks to renditions by the U.K.’s X Factor winner Alexandra Burke and American Idol Season Seven finalist Jason Castro. Kate Voegele, k.d. lang and Rufus Wainwright have also covered the song in the years since its original 1984 release, with Wainwright’s version featuring in 2001’s Shrek.

Despite the over-saturation of “Hallelujah,” the song’s recent chart-topping success on both sides of the ocean has given Cohen some sweet revenge. “There were certain ironic and amusing sidebars, because the record that it came from which was called Various Positions — a record Sony wouldn’t put out,” Cohen told the Guardian. “They didn’t think it was good enough… So there was a mild sense of revenge that arose in my heart.”

Cohen can’t complain about the extra royalties either, especially considering he was forced to tour after a lengthy hiatus because his former manager made off with most of his assets. Meanwhile, we’re still surprised that Leonard Cohen is sitting around reading reviews of the superhero flick Watchmen.







Wednesday, 31 December 2008

Hallelujah hits number one and two slots in Christmas charts



A rather surreal development in the history of the masterpiece Hallelujah, a song we've written about on numerous occasions before.

That Burke chick looks ok (we'd hit that for sure!) but her cover version - at once bland and overblown - is atrociously bad! Like a mixture of Celine Dion and Whitney Houston and a zombie choir. Ewwwwww!!

We're really happy though that the Cohen coffers are being filled, and however indirectly, the great man is in the public spotlight again!


Some versions of this classic (many of em rather bad!)

Kermit the frog | Mark Viduka tribute | Chris Moyles' lamb bhuna | My Halloumia | Jeff Buckley | Bob Dylan | k.d. lang | Sheryl Crowe | Rufus Wainwright | U2 | Bon Jovi | John Cale | Imogen Heap | JLS | Alexandra Burke






Hallelujah hits number one and two slots in Christmas charts

entertainment.timesonline.co.uk



The X Factor winner, Alexandra Burke, and the late Jeff Buckley scooped the Christmas No 1 and 2 slots yesterday with their covers of Leonard Cohen’s Hallelujah, the first time in more than 40 years that one title has secured the top two places in the charts. Cohen himself came in at No 36.

Burke, who said she was “gutted” when first told that she would have to sing Hallelujah, notched up 576,000 sales, making her version the fastest-selling single by a female solo artist, beating the record set by Leona Lewis after she won The X Factor two years ago. Burke also smashed the online record, with 289,000 downloads, almost twice as many as Lewis in 2006.




Martin Talbot, managing director of the Official Charts Company, which compiles the figures, said: “It is a particularly amazing week for Alexandra Burke, who has broken a string of records to announce her arrival in spectacular style.” In addition, Mr Talbot said, chart placings at 1, 2 and 36 “are remarkable for a 25-year-old song which has never previously reached the Top 40”.
Times Archive, 1985: Leonard Cohen live at Hammersmith

The mournful Hallelujah may seem an unlikely choice for a Christmas single and Burke admitted yesterday: “It just didn’t do anything for me.”

What she called her “Whitney Houston spin”, with gospel choir, angered fans of the Cohen and Buckley versions. A campaign to promote Buckley’s 1994 version – released three years before he died aged 30 – saw it finish 496,000 sales behind Burke.

The last time one song held the top two spots is believed to be February 1965, when You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feeling was No 1 for the Righteous Brothers and No 2 for Cilla Black.

Take That have topped the album charts with The Circus, which sold 382,000 copies last week to take it to a million sales in 18 days, the second fastest album sales in history, after Be Here Now by Oasis in 1997.










Hallelujah: Why your version is the best





Another piece on Lenny's sublime Hallelujah, which surreally, thanks to the effects of dilution (the process started with the saccharine Jeff Buckley version on the Grace LP and has never let up, as the song has become - and still becomes - ever more and more diluted!) and having a slew of awful reality show contestants and other muzak mongers recently abuse the song, scooped the Christmas No 1 and 2 slots in UK via X Factor winner, Alexandra Burke, and the late Jeff Buckley.

We're not sure we see any logic in the argument being espoused in the article below though. On numerous occasions, we've first heard a song via a cover-version and have in most cases, having later sought out the original, found that to be even better.

As for the rather ridiculous matter of "best version" of Hallelujah, any real music fan will know that the two original versions by Lenny are clearly best!

There's also a vid here for a 1995 version from Lord Bono, which the article writer hates, but we find interesting and kinda like - well, it's far better than most of Bono's output and far better than 90% of the awful covers of this masterpiece.




Alexandra_burke_2Hallelujah: Why your version is the best

from timesonline.typepad.com

Whose version of Leonard Cohen's Hallelujah is the best? I think there is a political dimension to this question.

Jeff Buckley? Sheryl Crow? Alexandra Burke? Rufus Wainwright? Leonard Cohen? Each has their own interpretation and each their partisan. So let me put forward a theory about why people prefer a particular artist.

They heard that artist sing the song first. (This isn't true of absolutely every single person and every song, but true of most people and most songs).

When people hear a song they like and become attached to it, they will never enjoy a cover quite as much. The reason is that they anchor to the original. All other versions are departures from the version they fell in love with.

If I compare Rufus Wainwright to Jeff Buckley, I start with the Wainwright. Buckley seems underpowered. But for those who start with the Buckley version, the Wainwright may seem arch.

As Dan Ariely explains at the beginning of Predictably Irrational, we make choices by making comparisons. To do this we need to establish an anchor point.

The political dimension? Well, why does Gordon Brown appear to be soaring when he is in fact behind in the polls? And why are the Tories being asked where they would cut spending when in fact they plan increases? The answer is the same in both cases, it is that the position is compared to the anchor points - the 20 point Tory lead and the Government's spending plans.

So that's how you select your favourite Hallelujah version. That, and the fact that it isn't this truly terrible version by Bono.












Monday, 29 December 2008

A Collection Of 46 Hallelujahs !






A Collection Of 46 Hallelujahs !


This is a song about the broken.

- L.Cohen


On the subject of the sublime and the slew of versions proliferating lately, here's a collection of some of the versions proliferating lately, which we see on this blog!

Capt. Kurtz said "I've seen horrors... horrors that you've seen....." when he heard some of these!

Some of em are OK though! They'd be mostly the Cohen, Cale and Dylan versions!




Image



Tracks

01 - Alexandra Burke
02 - Leonard Cohen
03 - John Cale
04 - Jeff Buckley
05 - Bob Dylan
06 - Leonard Cohen (Live)
07 - Katherine Jenkins
08 - Leonard Cohen (Live)
09 - John Cale (Live)
10 - Kathryn Williams
11 - Rufus Wainwright
12 - Allison Crowe
13 - Sheryl Crow
14 - Damien Rice
15 - K.D. Lang
16 - Regina Spektor
17 - Aroof Aftab
18 - David Bazan
19 - Eric Beverly
20 - Erik Flaa
21 - Gordon Downie
22 - I Am Lost At Sea
23 - Imogen Heap
24 - John Jerome
25 - Late Tuesday
26 - Susanna And The Magical Orchestra
27 - The Junebugs
28 - Tony Lucca
29 - Gavin Degraw
30 - Chris Botti
31 - Kate Noson
32 - Lucky Jim
33 - Euan Morton & Denise Summerford
34 - Keren Ann
35 - Jack Lukeman
36 - Clare Bowditch
37 - Ari Hest
38 - Beirut
39 - Elisa
40 - K's Choice
41 - Dresden Dolls
42 - Street To Nowhere
43 - Naomi Hates Humans
44 - Noam Pelled
45 - Macbrolan
46 - Damien Rice







NOTE:

We do not host any files here. If this post contains a link to content hosted elsewhere, this is content found by a simple search on the worldwide freedom web. However, if for some valid reason, you object to a said content, or any content here, please let us know and we will remove the content in question.

Any content linked to here is only meant as a taster for the original work itself and is posted on the strict understanding that anyone who downloads the taster, deletes said content within 24 hours. We would assume that these fans will then buy the original work and we greatly encourage them to do so.



Leonard Cohen - The Fourth, The Fifth, The Minor Fall





The Fourth, The Fifth, The Minor Fall

BBC Radio 2
Saturday 01 November
Mp3 / 114Mb



from your lips she drew the Hallelujah



We've written before about one of the greatest songs of all time, 's majestic which will surely soon be the most covered song ever - thanks to a slew of awful saccharine versions proliferating lately!

We've written about this masterpiece several times before

The popularity now of this great track, when for years the original and best versions (the very different versions from Various Positions and Cohen Live, respectively) were all but ignored, has everything to do with dilution of art and the consequent effect of making art palatable to the masses!


Said process started with the saccharine Jeff Buckley version on the Grace LP and has never let up, as the song has become - and still becomes - ever more and more diluted!

It really grates when morons say that, for example, Buckley's or Wainwright's or, Heaven forbid, Bon Jovi's version is the best! Listen to Lenny's two original released versions assholes! Just because Lenny's voice isn't exactly angelic doesn't mean the maestro is clueless as to how one of his masterpieces should be properly delivered!

Lenny - and only Lenny - delivers this great song perfectly!

Lately Hallelujah has bizarrely become a standard for idiotic acts in dross muzak shows such as American Idol and some crap UK show called X Factor!

Something's wrong! Hallelujah's not exactly Macca's mawkish Yesterday (the most covered track of all time, officially)! Or one of those vile Mariah Carey type songs the morons on these shows are always squealing out! Hallelujah is a complex, multi-layered song of beautiful and powerful poetry, above a perfectly sublime and deceptively simple melody.

On the other hand, perhaps, unbeknown to us, the taste of the masses has increased at an infinite rate recently!!!





by tulzdavampslayer




Anyway, here's an interesting recent BBC Radio show devoted to this great song and hosted by Guy Garvey from Brit Indie darlings Elbow!


Here's the Beeb blurb;

A Mercury Prize-winner hasn't got the guts to cover it; Bob Dylan and Bono are two of the many who've attempted it; Jeff Buckley's version is in Rolling Stone's top 500 greatest songs ever. The song in question? Leonard Cohen's transcendental Hallelujah.

"I like to imagine Hallelujah as a rather stately creature," says presenter Guy Garvey (Elbow frontman and said Mercury winner) "It's a mark of its power and guile that artists who didn't even write it, feel protective of it."

The ever eloquent and always genial Garvey does a bewitching job of explaining the nuances and dramatically different interpretations of this magical song, helped by some of the artists and producers who've worked on the 120 covers.

Praise be.



Here she be:

http://lix.in/-3b7c93
http://lix.in/-3d0334
114Mb








Here's a collection of just ten very "varied" covers of this classic! Can you spot the one good version?!



10 YouTube Hallelujah Performances










Big thanks to SonicTrooper and DigitalReporter




NOTE:

We do not host any files here. If this post contains a link to content hosted elsewhere, this is content found by a simple search on the worldwide freedom web. However, if for some valid reason, you object to a said content, or any content here, please let us know and we will remove the content in question.

Any content linked to here is only meant as a taster for the original work itself and is posted on the strict understanding that anyone who downloads the taster, deletes said content within 24 hours. We would assume that these fans will then buy the original work and we greatly encourage them to do so.



Saturday, 6 December 2008

Leonard Cohen's sublime Hallelujah - More Yada Yada





We've just posted a piece about apparently the most covered songs of recent times.

In a few years, Lenny's sublime Hallelujah will surely be the most covered song, thanks to a slew of awful saccharine versions proliferating lately!

The popularity now of this great track, when for years the original and best versions (the very different versions from Various Positions and Cohen Live, respectively) were all but ignored, has everything to do with dilution of art and the consequent effect of making art palatable to the masses!

Said process started with the saccharine Jeff Buckley version on the Grace LP and has never let up, as the song has become - and still becomes - ever more and more diluted!

It really grates when morons say that, for example, Buckley's or Wainwright's or, Heaven forbid, Bon Jovi's version is the best! Listen to Lenny's two original released versions assholes! Just because Lenny's voice isn't exactly angelic doesn't mean the maestro is clueless as to how one of his masterpieces should be properly delivered!

Lenny - and only Lenny - delivers this great song perfectly!

Lately Hallelujah has bizarrely become a standard for idiotic acts in dross muzak shows such as American Idol and some crap UK show called X Factor!

Something's wrong! Hallelujah's not exactly Macca's mawkish Yesterday (the most covered track of all time, officially)! Or one of those vile Mariah Carey type songs the morons on these shows are always squealing out! Hallelujah is a complex, multi-layered song of beautiful and powerful poetry, above a perfectly sublime and deceptively simple melody.

On the other hand, perhaps, unbeknown to us, the taste of the masses has increased at an infinite rate recently!!!


Here's an article below about the great Hallelujah, which seems basically a distillation of what we wrote about the track HERE very recently - replete with the Dylan angles! ..... Grrrrrrrrr!!!







www.independent.co.uk

The X Factor winner's single will be a cover of Leonard Cohen's glorious spiritual hymn, following versions by Dylan, Jeff Buckley and many others. Purists may wince, but this great song has taken on a life of its own.

Friday, 5 December 2008

Of all the incarnations of Leonard Cohen's song "Hallelujah" – and there have been many – the X Factor winner's version will raise the most eyebrows. One of the greatest songs of all time, it has a long and varied history dating back to 1984 – long before any of the talent show's remaining finalists were even born.

It had a difficult beginning. The story goes that Cohen took two years to pen the song, writing at least 80 verses that were eventually distilled into the six that make up his original. He said: "I filled two notebooks and I remember being in the Royalton Hotel [New York], on the carpet in my underwear, banging my head on the floor and saying, 'I can't finish this song.'" Thankfully, he did.

Cohen has often recalled meeting Bob Dylan in the Eighties. Dylan performed "Hallelujah" in concert at the Montreal Forum in 1988 and he asked Cohen how long it had taken him to write it. Cohen said two years, although it actually took slightly longer ("I lied because I was ashamed to tell him how long it really took"). When Cohen turned the question back on Dylan, asking him how long "I and I" had taken him to write, Dylan replied: "About 15 minutes."

Though Cohen discarded many verses as he went along, legend goes that 36 verses out of 80 remained. There were two versions of Cohen's song, the heavily spiritual first version on his 1984 album Various Positions, and the second, more obviously erotic version, recorded at a live show in 1988 and appearing on his 1994 album Cohen Live.

The later version omitted the biblical references of the original, focusing on the chorus and final lines. The first was filled with Old Testament references, beginning with King David's harp-playing to soothe King Saul (the "chord that David played") and his later seduction by Bathsheba. The title itself is the Hebrew word meaning "glory to the Lord". In its six verses it wraps up all the themes pertinent to human existence: love, sex, desire, death, loneliness, weakness, religion, failure, forgiveness, redemption, mercy – and, of course, the act of songwriting itself.

Cohen said of the song: "The song explains that many kinds of hallelujahs do exist, and all the perfect and broken hallelujahs have an equal value. It's a desire to affirm my life, not in some formal religious way but with enthusiasm; with emotion. I know that there is an eye watching all of us. There is a judgement that weighs everything we do."

But the song that became widely accepted as one of the best of all time did not become so via Cohen's understated original. When Dylan heard Various Positions, he commented that Cohen's songs were becoming more like prayers. The Canadian songwriter had started as a poet and novelist and his original ballad is half-spoken in his deep voice.

But it was a later version by John Cale, a former member of The Velvet Underground, that set the modern template. Cale had heard Cohen's new "Hallelujah" in 1988 and asked him to send him all the verses. Cohen faxed over just 15. Cale took Cohen's sparse gospel-tinged ballad, reordered the verses and arranged the song for piano. For years, Cale sang his version live before making a studio version for the 1991 tribute album I'm Your Fan, which then appeared on his live album Fragments of a Rainy Season a year later and would become Jeff Buckley's arrangement.

It was Buckley's version on his 1994 album Grace that took the song into the canon. It was arguably the highlight of the album. Injecting the emotion of his trembling multi-octave vocals, the build-up to the line "Love is not a victory march/ It's a cold and it's a broken hallelujah" is devastating. Buckley's death by drowning at the age of 30 would immortalise a now wholly poignant song, and it was Buckley's "Hallelujah" that was ranked as one of Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time, not Cohen's. And like the best cover versions of other great songs, with the fame Buckley brought "Hallelujah" you'd almost be forgiven for thinking he was the writer. Buckley omits two of Cohen's redemptive verses; he called his version an ode to "the hallelujah of an orgasm", even saying: "I hope Leonard doesn't hear it." He needn't have worried. Cohen has allegedly acknowledged it to be his favourite version.

"Hallelujah" is not Cohen's most covered song; that honour goes to "Suzanne". But it has been covered by more than 100 artists in various languages, many of which have made it on to record. It is also his most famous song thanks to Buckley's rendition. That Cohen himself penned two versions of it and had a surplus collection of verses left the song open to interpretation, resulting in the numerous covers that followed. Rufus Wainwright's rendition, which emulated the emotive delivery of Buckley's, though less subtle, and in which he substituted "holy dark" for "holy dove", brought the song back to the mainstream – and to a new, younger audience – when it featured, believe or not, in the film Shrek. Wainwright said: "It's an easy song to sing. The music never pummels the words. The melody is almost liturgical and conjures up religious feelings."

kd lang recorded it on Hymns of the 49th Parallel and still performs it live, while it has become a signature set-closer for Brandi Carlile. These join Jon Bon Jovi, Kathryn Williams, Allison Crowe, Damien Rice and Willie Nelson. Bono's bizarre ambient breakbeat version was recorded for Tower of Song, an all-star tribute to Cohen in 1995 (featuring covers by Tori Amos, Sting, Suzanne Vega and Willie Nelson). The classical singer Katherine Jenkins includes a version on her album Sacred Arias.

BBC Radio 2 recently marked the 25th anniversary of the first recording of the song. Presenter Jeremy Vine said: "It is one of those classic songs that is sung better by the people who didn't write it, because it's so open to interpretation. For me, I'd take the Kathryn Williams version over Jeff Buckley's by a shade. Best line, 'Like how to shoot somebody who outdrew ya' – and worst probably, 'The fourth, the fifth/ The minor fall, the major lift' because that is so self-consciously a muso referencing his own craft. We played all the different versions on my show a couple of years back and it took off with the listeners in a big, big way, because the whole scope of the song is awesome: it is in a category of one."

Cohen's publicist still gets sent new versions (the latest in Welsh and Afrikaans) by musicians hoping to see them passed on to Cohen for approval. It really is a song of universal appeal.

It's this ability to tap into the emotions that has led it to become a song to accompany sad moments on television shows. On the teen soap The OC it featured three times, including the moment when the beautiful Marissa (Mischa Barton) dies in Ryan's arms. Cale's version is on the soundtrack of Scrubs and features in the 1996 film Basquiat. Many fans of the song will have discovered it via The West Wing.

As for an X Factor special, it sounds about as appropriate as the fans who swayed in a "Sweet Caroline"-esque singalong at Glastonbury. It's a song that represents timelessness, and if it means that Buckley's version, or even Cohen's original, make their way back up the charts, that can't be a bad thing.








Tuesday, 25 November 2008

When Genius Collides - Leonard Cohen's majestic "Hallelujah" and Bob Dylan




This is a song about the broken.

- L.Cohen





I wanted to push the Hallelujah deep into the secular world, into the ordinary world.

- L.Cohen


A sublime moment this! Two of the giants of modern culture collide when his Bobness performs a fine cover of Leonard Cohen's sublime "Hallelujah", one of the finest songs of recent times! See vid below at the end of this post.

Lenny and Dylan are probably the greatest two artists of the modern music era, in terms of the quality of their work and their artistic longevity. A propos nothing, both, too, are coincidentally, yet interestingly, Jewish.

The work of these two masters will live on forever.




Lenny talks in a French interview in 85 about meeting Bob in Paris and introducing him to the song;
"It's a rather joyous song . I like very much the last verse. I remember singin' it to Bob Dylan after his last concert in Paris. The morning after, I was having coffee with him and we traded lyrics. Dylan especially liked this last verse "And even though it all went wrong , I stand before the Lord of song With nothing on my lips but Hallelujah"

- Leonard Cohen (from an interview in Paroles et Musiques, 1985)

We don't know any details about where and when this Dylan boot comes from though. We think it could be from Bob's 1988 tour.



by endraum



"Hallelujah" is an expertly crafted, beautiful and complex song where Cohen's sculpted poetry juxtaposes secular and religious desire and ecstasy.

The sublime lyric sits astride a sumptuous melody regarding which, Rufus Wainwright - who often includes the song in his live repertoire and who did a decent version of the song on the Leonard Cohen I'm Your Man movie from 2006 - has commented that;
"It's an easy song to sing. The music never pummels the words. The melody is almost liturgical and conjures up religious feelings. It's purifying."

Interestingly regarding the melody, in the section where the lyrics go "the fourth, the fifth, the minor fall, the major lift", the chords move as described in the lyrics as follows: F ("the fourth"), G ("the fifth"), Am ("the minor fall"), F ("the major lift").





"Hallelujah" was originally written and composed over the course of a year, and is said to have been a frustrating and difficult process for Lenny.

Cohen says he wrote at least eighty verses, discarding most of them in the process of crafting the song. Cohen is quoted as saying:
“ I filled two notebooks and I remember being in the Royalton Hotel, on the carpet in my underwear, banging my head on the floor and saying, 'I can't finish this song.' ”

Cohen first recorded the song at Quadrasonic Sound, New York in June 1984, working with producer John Lissauer. The next recording of this song by Leonard Cohen was captured live in Austin, Texas on October 31, 1988 with production by Leanne Ungar and Bob Metzger.





The original incarnation of Hallelujah was as track 5 on Lenny's Various Positions LP in 1984, which clocked in at 4:34. Here the lyric is much less secular than what it would later become.

The original recording is noted for containing a substantial amount of biblical references in the lyrics, alluding to David's harp-playing used to soothe King Saul (I Sam 16:23), and his later affair with Bathsheba after watching her bathe from his roof (2 Sam 11:2).

The line "she broke your throne and she cut your hair" is obviously a reference to the source of Samson's strength from the Book of Judges chapter 16 and to how his hair was cut by Delilah. The third verse refers to "the name" (Tetragrammaton).


An extended and significantly different version of "Hallelujah" was recorded for the Cohen Live LP in 1994, the performance being from an Austin gig in October 1988. This clocked in at a substantially longer 6:54.

The lyrics are very different in this version and in fact only the final verse from the original recording is retained.

In this version, the lyrics have become far more sexual and ambiguous, while the song's structure has also been slightly reworked.

On stage in Antwerp in April 1988, Cohen describes this version as the the "secular" Hallelujah and speaks about the background to the song's metamorphosis;
You know, I wrote this song .... it seems like yesterday but I guess it was five or six years ago and it had a chorus called Hallelujah. And it was a song that had references to the Bible in it, although these references became more and more remote as the song went from beginning to the end. And finally I understood that it was not necessary to refer to the Bible anymore.

And I rewrote this song; this is the "secular" Hallelujah.




by tulzdavampslayer


In the years after his original studio album version, live performances by Cohen were almost invariably of the second version of the song.

Between Lenny's two released versions of "Hallelujah", former Velvet, John Cale recorded a very notable cover version, which appeared on the great 1991 Leonard Cohen tribute album I'm Your Fan and, again, on Cale's beautiful 1992 live album Fragments of a Rainy Season.

See a great "Hallelujah" performance from John Cale below from BBC TV back in '92.

Cale's version featured vocals with simple piano accompaniment. Importantly the lyrics are quite different from those on Lenny's Various Positions. In a 2001 interview with The Observer, John Cale said:
After I saw [Cohen] perform at the Beacon I asked if I could have the lyrics to "Hallelujah". When I got home one night there were fax paper rolls everywhere because Leonard had insisted on supplying all 15 verses."

John says he "went through and just picked out the cheeky verses"!

John Cale's version was far closer to the secular version of "Hallelujah" Lenny had been performing on his tours, the version Cale had heard him perform.

John Cale's fine version would later feature in the 1996 film, Basquiat, as well as, rather surreally, in the 2001 animated film, Shrek. Strangely, for the latter movie, Rufus Wainwright covered the song as well, and his version appears on the Shrek soundtrack album rather than Cale's - whose version is far better in our view!



Single released from the "I'm Your Fan" tribute album


Cale's version would prove very influential since Lenny would not for some time release his updated version of of "Hallelujah".

Although Cale's version did not reach a mass audience, it became well known among music cognoscenti. Jeff Buckley would, soon after, begin performing "Hallelujah" at his live shows, in a version heavily influenced by Cale's. We were lucky enough to catch a couple of his shows from around this time in small clubs such as Whelan's in Dublin

Buckley later recorded "Hallelujah" for his only completed studio album, 1994 's Grace in a version that would reach a much wider audience than the original Cohen song or Cale's cover, particularly so after Jeff's horribly early demise in 1997.

Buckley's version relied quite heavily on studio technology. Not wholly satisfied with any one take, Buckley recorded the song more than twenty times. Studio engineer Andy Wallace then took three of these recordings to create a single track. The result was a quite commercial sounding version which was more accessible to the music masses than Lenny's.

Buckley's is the version that inspired a thousand insipid cover versions by muzak merchants the likes of Bon Jovi (oh, the horror!) et al!! In fact there are countless morons out there who believe Buckley actually wrote the song!

Bizarrely, in March, 2008, Buckley’s version of “Hallelujah”, went to No. 1 on the iTunes chart, selling 178,000 downloads for the week, after being performed by some joker named Jason Castro on the seventh season of the vile television series American Idol. The song debuted at #1 that week on Billboard's Hot Digital Songs chart, giving Buckley his first #1 on any Billboard chart!





As alluded to above, a slew of other cover versions of "Hallelujah" have been attempted, very variable in quality, to say the least, and most not very good!

Many such cover artists mix lyrics from both Lenny versions, and occasionally make direct lyric changes such as Rufus Wainwright singing "holy dark" and Allison Crowe singing "Holy Ghost" rather than "holy dove".





"Hallelujah" is a very difficult song to cover well. Bob Dylan, typically, does a great job in the boot recording here though.

It's up there with John Cale's fine version.

No, we're not big fans of the rather saccharine Jeff Buckley version. Nor, surprisingly, the version that cnut did on America Idol this year!!





There's a nice piece about this majestic song on pagesperso-orange, with some great quotes from Lenny - in interviews or on stage - regarding the song, and also some changed lyrics live, as follows:


Warsaw 22/03/1985
Thank you very much friends. You know, since I’ve been here, many people have asked me what I have thought just about everything there is in this veil of tears. I don't know the answers to anything. I just come here to sing you these songs that have been inspired by something that I hope is deeper and bigger than myself. I have nothing to say about the way that Poland is governed. I have nothing to say about the resistance to the government. The relationship between a people and its government is an intimate thing. It is not for a stranger to comment. I know that there is an eye that watches all of us. There is a judgment that weighs everything we do. And before this great force which is greater than any government, I stand in awe and I kneel in respect. And it is to this great judgment, that I dedicate this next song: "Hallelujah".

Interview (magazine "Guitare et Claviers" 1985)
Hallelujah is a Hebrew word which means "Glory to the Lord." The song explains that many kinds of Hallelujahs do exist. I say : "All the perfect and broken Hallelujahs have an equal value." It's, as I say, a desire to affirm my faith in life, not in some formal religious way but with enthusiasm, with emotion.




Interview (Magazine "Paroles et Musiques" 1985)

Here there is an ironic and warm “feeling.” I wanted to get into this tradition of the composers who said “Hallelujah,” but with no precisely religious point of view. And then I realize there is a “Hallelujah” more general that we speak to the world, to life… It's a rather joyous song. I like very much the last verse. I remember singin' it to Bob Dylan after his last concert in Paris. The morning after, I was having coffee with him and we traded lyrics. Dylan especially liked this last verse, "And even though it all went wrong, I stand before the Lord of song with nothing on my lips but Hallelujah."

About the second verse, "Your faith was strong but you needed proof":

According to the Judaic tradition, David asked for ordeal. But the Rabbies said we should be reluctant to do so because ordeal there will sure be!

"David playing psalterion", Reichenau Movement, Tenth century



Interview (Magazine "Actuel" January 1985)

LC - I intended to say "Hallelujah". There is a religious Hallelujah, but there are many other ones. When one looks at the world and his proper life, there's only one thing to say, it's Hallelujah. That's the way it is....
Mag - It means "Thank You" ?

LC - The literal translation is "Pray God". It's not exactly some gratitude but the affirmation there is a will that we can't control. What can we do in front of it ?

Mag - A good will or a bad one ?

LC - An impenetrable one.

Mag - Mysterious ?

LC - Saying "Mysterious" is again making a description. This will is obvious from time to time, hidden at other times



Montreux 09/07/1985
This is a song about the broken.





München 12/04/1988
Verse Variation

Forgive me Lord if you're up there above, but all I ever learned from love ...

Antwerp 17/04/1988
You know, I wrote this song a couple of ... it seems like yesterday but I guess it was five or six years ago and it had a chorus called Hallelujah. And it was a song that had references to the Bible in it, although these references became more and more remote as the song went from beginning to the end. And finally I understood that it was not necessary to refer to the Bible anymore.

And I rewrote this song; this is the "secular" Hallelujah.

Nürnberg 10/05/1988 and Roskilde July 2, 1988
Modified verses

But it's not a cry that you hear tonight And it's not some gleeful laughter from somebody who says he has seen the light ...

alternate version (Roskilde July 2nd, 1988)

It's not some gleeful christian who has seen the light, it's a cold and it's a broken Hallelujah ...





Interview, Reijkavik, Iceland June 1988
Yeah another song came on top of that. So I'd already recorded that one. And I wanted to push the Hallelujah deep into the secular world, into the ordinary world. The Hallelujah, the David's Hallelujah was still a religious song. So I wanted to indicate that Hallelujah can come out of things that have nothing to do with religion.


Gothenburg 02/05/93
In solemn testimony of that unbroken faith, which binds a generation one to another, I hereby bestow upon you the ancient priestly benediction "May the Lord bless you and keep you, May the Lord shine His Light upon you, May the Lord be gracious unto you, and grant you the blessings of Peace".



Paris 13/05/93
verse variation

....Well I've seen your walls on the marble arch, but Love is not a victory march ...

Helsinki 1993
verse variation

....Well I've seen your fortress on the marble arch, but Love is not a victory march ...








by hakanphotography





Leonard Cohen - Hallelujah




Now I've heard there was a secret chord
That David played, and it pleased the Lord
But you don't really care for music, do you?
It goes like this
The fourth, the fifth
The minor fall, the major lift
The baffled king composing Hallelujah

Hallelujah
Hallelujah
Hallelujah
Hallelujah

Your faith was strong but you needed proof
You saw her bathing on the roof
Her beauty and the moonlight overthrew you
She tied you
To a kitchen chair
She broke your throne, and she cut your hair
And from your lips she drew the Hallelujah

Hallelujah, Hallelujah
Hallelujah, Hallelujah

You say I took the name in vain
I don't even know the name
But if I did, well really, what's it to you?
There's a blaze of light
In every word
It doesn't matter which you heard
The holy or the broken Hallelujah

Hallelujah, Hallelujah
Hallelujah, Hallelujah

I did my best, it wasn't much
I couldn't feel, so I tried to touch
I've told the truth, I didn't come to fool you
And even though
It all went wrong
I'll stand before the Lord of Song
With nothing on my tongue but Hallelujah

Hallelujah, Hallelujah
Hallelujah, Hallelujah
Hallelujah, Hallelujah
Hallelujah, Hallelujah
Hallelujah, Hallelujah
Hallelujah, Hallelujah
Hallelujah, Hallelujah
Hallelujah, Hallelujah
Hallelujah


(Original version from the Various Positions LP)










painting by L Cohen




Leonard Cohen - Hallelujah


Baby, I've been here before.
I know this room, I've walked this floor.
I used to live alone before I knew you.

Yeah I've seen your flag on the marble arch,
But listen, love is not some kind of victory march,
No it's a cold and it's a very broken Hallelujah.

Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah, (Hallelujah...)

There was a time you let me know
What's really going on below,
Ah but now you never show it to me, do you?

Yeah but I remember, yeah when I moved in you,
And the holy dove, she was moving too,
Yes every single breath that we drew was Hallelujah.

Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah.

Maybe there's a God above,
As for me, all I've ever seemed to learn from love
Is how to shoot at someone who outdrew you.

Yeah but it's not a complaint that you hear tonight,
It's not the laughter of someone who claims to have seen the light
No it's a cold and it's a very lonely Hallelujah.

Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah.

I did my best, it wasn't much.
I couldn't feel, so I learned to touch.
I've told the truth, I didn't come all this way to fool you.

Yeah even tough it all went wrong
I'll stand right here before the Lord of Song
With nothing on my lips but Hallelujah.

Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah.
Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah.



(Extended version from the Cohen Live LP)







Bob Dylan performs Leonard Cohen's majestic "Hallelujah"





From: thcarmine



John Cale performs Leonard Cohen's majestic "Hallelujah"

From the BBC TV show Later, back in 1992.




From: thecatkeaton





The maestro performs his own majestic "Hallelujah"!
(original Various Positions
version)

From German TV? A very, let's say, interesting set! Very eighties! Lenny looks quite bemused by it anyway!!




from Duncster





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Thursday, 3 July 2008

Leonard Cohen - "Hallelujah" - Glastonbury 2008






"Love is not a victory march, it's a lonely and a broken Hallelujah"


King Lenny and his great band perform the sublime "Hallelujah" to an army of hippies and crusties at the Glastonbury Festival last week!

Great arm waving work by the army of hippies and crusties!

This is how this classic ought to be sung motherfuckers! Not the insipid versions by Jeff Buckley and the throng of Buckley imitators! Even worse, by the talentless assholes (American Idol and elsewhere) who have recently, for some strange reason, been grabbing on to this masterpiece!

I'm not gonna warn you assholes again! I've got a new Uzi sub-machine-gun and I know how to use it!




From the Guardian UK;

http://music.guardian.co.uk/glastonbury2008/reviews/story/0,,2288152,00.html

A crowd-wooing selection of favourites from the master. He's your man

Read more Glasto 2008 live reviews

Laura Barton
Monday June 30, 2008
guardian.co.uk


Where and when: The Pyramid stage, Sunday, 8.10pm

Dress code: The whole band, including the backing singers, are slickly besuited. Meanwhile, Cohen's look, all baggy grey pinstripe and trilby, is poised somewhere between Humphrey Bogart and a Galapagos turtle.

Who's watching: Everyone from tired and emotional fiftysomething women (to my left) to exuberant teenagers in hotpants (to my right). And all of them know the words.

In a nutshell: For many, Cohen was set to be the absolute guaranteed highlight of Glastonbury 2008, the major reason to brave the muck and the drizzle. Marvellously, he does not disappoint, delivering a crowd-wooing selection of favourites, including Dance Me to the End of Love, Bird on a Wire, Suzanne and Tower of Song, all performed with a charming hat-tipping humility, and an enigmatic half-smile.

High point: Hallelujah - a real crowd-swelling, arm-waving moment of perfection. As Cohen staggers into the line "love is not a victory march - it's a lonely and a broken hallelujah," half the people in the vicinity start crying. Myself included.

Low point: Following the statuesque I'm Your Man with the blousy Closing Time led to a bit of a dip, and the distinct absence of Chelsea Hotel.

Mark out of 10: 9.99 (as Cohen himself would put it "Forget your perfect offering/ There is a crack, a crack in everything/That's how the light gets in")

What does it all mean, maan?: Leonard Cohen. He's your maan.








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