A thousand years ago I lived at this Hotel in NYC. I was a frequent rider of the elevator on this Hotel. I will continuously leave my room and come back. I was an expert on the buttons of that elevator. One of the few technologies I really ever mastered. The door opened. I walked in. Put my finger right on the button. No hesitation. Great sense of mastery in those days. Late in the morning, early in the evening. I noticed a young woman in that elevator. She was riding it with as much delight as I was. Even though she commanded huge audiences, riding that elevator was the only thing she really knew how to do. My lung gathered my courage. I said to her “Are you looking for someone?” She said “Yes, I’m looking for Kris Kristofferson “I said “Little Lady, you’re in luck, I am Kris Kristofferson.” Those were generous times. Even though she knew that I was someone shorter than Kris Kristofferson, she never led on. Great generosity prevailed in those doom decades. Anyhow I wrote this song for Janis Joplin at the Chelsea Hotel.
"I need you; I don't need you" is the push and pull of head and heart. Ultimately you make the decision which will win. I know this, if you let your head win your heart will never be the same. Wounds heal yes, but they leave scars forever tougher.
I ran away from my small town in Ireland to see Leonard live in Dublin at age 14. My big sister was sent after me. There was graffiti on an overpass: " Get out your razorblades, LC is in town!" Years later I saw him in Carnegie Hall and rushed the stage to give him a bouquet of flowers as he began this song. Next evening I was recognized in the East Village as "that girl". Hahaha I wrote Jennifer Warnes, backup singer, a note when Leonard passed and she took the time to contact me back. Canadians...so nice
Oh man, flipping cool experience!!! Sounds like something I would have done🫂🫂💐💐💐💐💐💐 Hung out in the village jamming with the musicians 🎵🎶🎼🎹 I met Melanie... beautiful spirit she lite up that night still does.....thks for sharing your story 🗽🗽🎤☮️☮️
One of the great things about Cohen is that he can sing his old songs with such intensity after doing them for so many years. Really, this performance just burns....
@@MSD1301 You act like you care about her but you can’t even spell Janis’s name right. Cohen already had “clout and fame” and would not have even been looking for that. As usual, he was telling a story, a story he later regretted for identifying with Janis. “He called it the ‘sole indiscretion in [his] professional life’ “. And if you knew anything about Janis, you’d know that she probably wouldn’t have cared at all. When I think about it, they probably had a great time together, birds of a feather. Other famous people should be lucky, “while the limousines wait in the street.”
Leonard Cohen was my late fathers favorite singer❤️. I lost him this July. He loved music and he thaught me all about it. Thank you dad and rest easy❤️
I remember three of us going to see Janis Joplin in concert at Hunter College in 1967. At the time I lived on 26th Street and often walked past the Chelsea Hotel. You'd see limos waiting outside. For years walking past the hotel always brought this song to mind. We now live in Tucson, AZ. I went to the bathroom at a party of a friend of my husbands and there was a huge picture of Janis on the wall. I go out and say to my husband they sure like Janis Joplin mentioning the picture. My husband says, they should the host is her younger brother. Love them both. RIP Janis, RIP Leonard.
I'm bawling like a baby... If there was any single artist that shaped me, it was you, from your novels, to your poems, to your music. One of my first college friends, my first "grown up" friend was formed because of a mutual liking for you... .I learned about Lorca and Duende from you.. In my younger, handsomer days, I dressed like you....My dark optimism was learned from you...I learned how to seduce women from you...I learned to appreciate, honor and respect women from you... This can't be true... you couldn't have left us today... you shaped so much of me when I was young...Bless you Leonard... Thank you for your words.... Rest well old teacher......but no... please no. (When I discovered Leonard in the 80's there were very few copies of his two novels, Beautiful Losers and The Favorite Game available. My college "Leonard friend" Tony Ferlito managed to find the first one, Beautiful Losers through interlibrary loan from god knows where. But the loan was like only for two weeks, and we knew that we wouldn't both be able to get through it in such a short time... so we torn... should we just steal it or what? This was Leonard's rare novel. We couldn't let it go... so instead we spent hours (and I really don't want to think about how much it cost at 4 cents a page) xeroxing ourselves each a copy, and painstaking laying out and gluing the sheets together into book form, then binding them together fittingly with cardboard and black tape. I remember having that book for years, re-reading it until it dissolved.... Luckily years later I found reprints... which now I no longer have.)
I'm the only person I know who has read Beautiful Losers, Flowers for Hitler, etc. I'm trying to find Leonard's death as uplifting as I found Songs from a Room but I am as sad as I can be - what a week.
Michael Copado; I first remember hearing Leonard Cohen while I was serving in the Navy, watching a movie for which he did the sound track.... " Mccabe and Mrs Miller", is a timeless movie , well worth tracking down. I would be shocked if you said you haven't seen the movie. The songs so well interlaced with the mesmerizing script and the archaic setting in the 1800s in a mining town in Oregon, or washington State. Prostitutes, card sharks, drunks and cowboys. Even the preacher caught a bullet before this wonderful story ended. I am so glad Leonard only got laid a lot, and lived to be a wonderful old musician. No bullets... he was only ever Love Struck.
Wow. A great regret in my life is not having seen Mr. Cohen live. His music is truly on another level entirely. A true original if there ever was one..
He had the ability to make venues that sat 15000 seem intimate, his fanbase was across all ages and walks of life. This and So Long Marianne are my favourites.
"I don't mean to suggest that I loved you the best I can't keep track of each fallen robin. I remember you well in the Chelsea Hotel. That's all. I don't even think of you that often." One of my all time favorites.
This breaks my heart. Poor Janice just wanted to be loved, something that most individuals on earth cal relate to. And even she wasn’t “loved the best” or “thought of that often”.
@@katiejon17 he did, he loved her. "I don't think of you that often" is him still trying to cope with her loss, refusing to admit how much it affected him
LYRICS! I remember you well in the Chelsea Hotel You were talking so brave and so sweet Giving me head on the unmade bed While the limousines wait in the street Those were the reasons and that was New York We were running for the money and the flesh And that was called love for the workers in song Probably still is for those of them left Ah, but you got away, didn't you babe? You just turned your back on the crowd You got away, I never once heard you say I need you, I don't need you I need you, I don't need you And all of that jiving around I remember you well in the Chelsea Hotel You were famous, your heart was a legend You told me again you preferred handsome men But for me you would make an exception And clenching your fist for the ones like us Who are oppressed by the figures of beauty You fixed yourself, you said, "well, never mind We are ugly but we have the music" And then you got away, didn't you baby? You just turned your back on the crowd You got away, I never once heard you say I need you, I don't need you I need you, I don't need you And all of that jiving around I don't mean to suggest that I loved you the best I can't keep track of each fallen robin I remember you well in the Chelsea Hotel That's all, I don't even think of you that often
I discovered "Flowers for Hitler" by chance in a glass case in the Toronto University Library in the summer of 1966, but never read it, as I spent only one day in Toronto. In the fall of 1967 in the University of Rochester bookstore, I found his first album and bought it immediately - it was the only time I ever spontaneously bought an album of music that wasn't classical without having heard a single note of it beforehand. I immediately fell in love with the music and thought this was something very esoteric for a tiny circle intellectuals - never did it occur to me that Leonard Cohen would soon become one of the few artists who actually deserve to be a worldwide idol!
this song (and his little precursive explanation) makes me cry and i never cry. it gives me that weird happiness/sadness feeling that i simultaneously hate with a fire as hot and unwavering as the sun but continue to indulge myself with
One big regret I have, is not really paying attention, the first time I heard this good man. Because when I came around to having a song of his pop up in my feed, end of summer 2019, I so swiftly and sadly, learned, what I'd what I had missed. Dance Me To The End of Time. 🎵 Ever since, it would move me, and soothe me, just when I really needed it. Thank you, YT, for the pop up ! Thank you Leonard Cohen, for helping me carry my heavy heart ! 🙏 Man, I needed that help, that music, those songs. Right then. I'd imagine, that's what most artists, would like for their fans, to feel that, have that, comfort from their music, ease the pain, carry the spirit lost, till you feel it again. Thank you Leonard Cohen, and, all associates. Rest in Peace 🕊️ Leonard Cohen 🙏 Much Love 💙
He's a real poet and a true musician! Great music I can hear over and over and every single time seems like the first. I feel alive with Leonard. It makes laugh, makes me sad, makes cry, makes me dream. Thank you!
MARIAN KEOGH }}} They haven't "Passed On"...they're just "Passin thru"... Maestros like JJ & LC never really pass on,......they just shift their genius to another dimension.!!!....I bet they're still giving it Hell in Heaven.!!!
you will be greatly missed..... such a hard week.... I saw you perform in 1975 in a small bar in Denver and loved you from that moment on..... a great story goes with that too....
I guess a lot of us are going to be re-visiting some of LC's live performances. This is a good one. What a song, what a dignity in the dude. Always thought he was more humane than Dylan, somehow more akin to Joni in the sense that he could just articulate that stupid impotent rage, and sadness, that we all get time from time. Those comparisons seem redundant anyway - I already miss him. My first time listening to him was on the Boxing Day of the tsunami in Thailand, up north in England where it was snowy and full of hills. LC... fewer fans than the other greats who died this year, but someone so lacking in affection - for all of his droll humour - and so full of love. Thanks for the memories, maybe we'll see you again x
I think you are unfair to Dylan. Listen to "North Country Blues" or "You're a Big Girl Now". Different temperaments. Dylan is a true Gemini, air sign, mercurial, fast, quick. Cohen's a Virgo, a more giving earth sign and very detail oriented. Thus many of his songs are like exquisite Bonsai trees, miniatures. Cohen did get very Dylan like political in later years; Everybody Knows, Closing Time, Democracy is Coming.
I stayed at the Hotel Chelsea once, and I took the stairs to and from my room every time because I wanted to soak in a bit more of the history and atmosphere. Now Leonard's story about the elevator is making me wish I'd climbed into that rickety thing at least once.
I did not think that I would live to see this world without Leonard Cohen. I was stricken by his death in the reality of the lack of his dignified, wise and always classy presentations. Humble is a word he used many times over in different phrases and I was humble in the presence of his voice ~ his words because I was ~ I have been gazing into his soul since between the age of twelve to fifteen . I have since been compelled, mesmerized and breathless by his beauty in many imaginable ways. This man, this mortal like me man has touched my own soul over and over with his prophetic words. As we know what parts the lips to speak with our tongue comes from the heart of every human, I did not have to examine his heart or soul I did not have to question the validity his words I knew them as ' the truth '. Leonard had valor and street smarts, he was a gentleman and could throw down on a party I smile at the time he decided not to play, walked off stage and dropped some acid as only a Cohen moment ! My tears have been shed to say I will sorely miss him is a great understatement, I will miss loving him as a person and an artist. Good nite Leonard, my Leonard ... and although many loved you I am the only one who can love you the way I do. Are you smiling at me from the Celestial realm beautiful Angel? You're a shooting star now baby. Rest well away from this toiling burdensome world dear friend you live on ever in my heart until I am no more as you are now. " Sleep baby sleep " I love you.
I missed him too. Only just barely. Discovered him too late. Kept watching for another tour but one day there was a picture of empty chairs they said he used to sit in, in the sunshine outside his home.
Leonards version is hypnotic....and Rufus Wainwright's cover, or more ode to rather, is equally as stunning in a much different way. they compliment each other brilliantly. im excited for baby Viva to get her voice, with her genes she could hold the world in her palm!
Yeah, he was at the top of his game and didn't know it. So that he ended by drinking up to three bottles of red wine before a concert. How silly we all humans are! Then we look back and say: Well, I wasn't that bad, was I?
Thank you god. If there are such things as angels Leonard Cohen was one. I thank heaven for his existence. As hard as life may be I will always have Leonard Cohen. Glory be.
My God such an incredible artist. He draws from a very deep well like very few others. one of my favorite songwriters. The only one I would put in Dylan's league.
It's such a gift we live in a time when such amazing recordings exist with such advanced technology. I love the video recording of Like a Rolling Stone in England 1966 ("Judas") You're right there.
That's the irony. He wrote a whole song about a small affair he had and then the very last thing he says is "I don't even think of you that often." If that was true, then why would he write an entire song about it?
che williams........I believe you are right, I think he did think of Janis Joplin but seems a man of privacy. It is not what he says in situations like this,but what he does not say.............
Julia Which he probably did after his passing. Although somehow I believe his hands would have been full after he met Marianne Jensen again and I doubt he’d spend time with J. Joplin there. He said it in the song it was a little relationship, so nothing that compares with what he felt for Marianne in my opinion. But I guess we will never know.
@@ingefranz2013 Except it can't be true. Kristofferson didn't enter the scene until about '69, didn't meet Janis until '70, and Cohen always said his encounter with Joplin was in '67. Cohen began telling that story as metaphor - he said she was looking for Kristofferson, he was looking for Brigitte Bardot, i.e., they were both dreaming of far more beautiful people than they were. As he embellished the story over the years, it seems to have morphed into "she actually said that."
I reckon this was recorded on a vintage (now) Akai 4000 D reel to reel tape deck - anyone else recognise the good frequency response but lots of flutter ( on the guitar)
A thousand years ago I lived at this Hotel in NYC. I was a frequent rider of the elevator on this Hotel. I will continuously leave my room and come back. I was an expert on the buttons of that elevator. One of the few technologies I really ever mastered. The door opened. I walked in. Put my finger right on the button. No hesitation. Great sense of mastery in those days. Late in the morning, early in the evening. I noticed a young woman in that elevator. She was riding it with as much delight as I was. Even though she commanded huge audiences, riding that elevator was the only thing she really knew how to do. My lung gathered my courage. I said to her “Are you looking for someone?” She said “Yes, I’m looking for Kris Kristofferson “I said “Little Lady, you’re in luck, I am Kris Kristofferson.” Those were generous times. Even though she knew that I was someone shorter than Kris Kristofferson, she never led on. Great generosity prevailed in those doom decades. Anyhow I wrote this song for Janis Joplin at the Chelsea Hotel.
What, you too?
How many guys have pressed it's elevator buttons? UGH!
Now, go wash your hands, creep!
Thanks
😢❤🎉😊
“I need you; I don’t need you” we’ve all said that at some point. This song gets me every time. A beautiful memory
👍
"I need you; I don't need you" is the push and pull of head and heart. Ultimately you make the decision which will win. I know this, if you let your head win your heart will never be the same. Wounds heal yes, but they leave scars forever tougher.
I'm at this age now....where I finally get that part too.... never did really.
I ran away from my small town in Ireland to see Leonard live in Dublin at age 14. My big sister was sent after me.
There was graffiti on an overpass: " Get out your razorblades, LC is in town!"
Years later I saw him in Carnegie Hall and rushed the stage to give him a bouquet of flowers as he began this song. Next evening I was recognized in the East Village as "that girl". Hahaha
I wrote Jennifer Warnes, backup singer, a note when Leonard passed and she took the time to contact me back.
Canadians...so nice
What a prescious story, thank you for sharing
Oh man, flipping cool experience!!! Sounds like something I would have done🫂🫂💐💐💐💐💐💐
Hung out in the village jamming with the musicians 🎵🎶🎼🎹 I met Melanie... beautiful spirit she lite up that night still does.....thks for sharing your story 🗽🗽🎤☮️☮️
One of the great things about Cohen is that he can sing his old songs with such intensity after doing them for so many years. Really, this performance just burns....
How is he able to pack all the stages of grief into a single song? Pure genius.
One of the greatest poets of XXth century. No doubt about it.
He knows how to tell a story. He´s a real poet.
His speech when he received the Premio Príncipe de Asturias a few years back was so moving. He was an incredible story teller.
@@MSD1301
You act like you care about her but you can’t even spell Janis’s name right. Cohen already had “clout and fame” and would not have even been looking for that. As usual, he was telling a story, a story he later regretted for identifying with Janis. “He called it the ‘sole indiscretion in [his] professional life’ “. And if you knew anything about Janis, you’d know that she probably wouldn’t have cared at all. When I think about it, they probably had a great time together, birds of a feather. Other famous people should be lucky, “while the limousines wait in the street.”
Leonard Cohen was my late fathers favorite singer❤️. I lost him this July. He loved music and he thaught me all about it. Thank you dad and rest easy❤️
Rest in peace 🕊️
❤️❤️
I don't usually like this kind of music but this song can bring me to tears in seconds. It's so beautiful, his voice is so unique and chilling.
Mr. Cohen is wonderful.
His lyrics to every song he ever wrote are pure genius Natasha...listen to some more; I'm sure there will be more tears to fall...
I remember three of us going to see Janis Joplin in concert at Hunter College in 1967. At the time I lived on 26th Street and often walked past the Chelsea Hotel. You'd see limos waiting outside. For years walking past the hotel always brought this song to mind. We now live in Tucson, AZ. I went to the bathroom at a party of a friend of my husbands and there was a huge picture of Janis on the wall. I go out and say to my husband they sure like Janis Joplin mentioning the picture. My husband says, they should the host is her younger brother. Love them both. RIP Janis, RIP Leonard.
You are so lucky to have seen Janis. I was too young to see her before she passed.
I'm bawling like a baby... If there was any single artist that shaped
me, it was you, from your novels, to your poems, to your music. One of
my first college friends, my first "grown up" friend was formed because
of a mutual liking for you... .I learned about Lorca and Duende from
you.. In my younger, handsomer days, I dressed like you....My dark
optimism was learned from you...I learned how to seduce
women from you...I learned to appreciate, honor and respect women from
you... This can't be true... you couldn't have left us today... you
shaped so much of me when I was young...Bless you Leonard... Thank you
for your words.... Rest well old teacher......but no... please no.
(When I discovered Leonard in the 80's there were very few copies of
his two novels, Beautiful Losers and The Favorite Game available. My
college "Leonard friend" Tony Ferlito managed to find the first one,
Beautiful Losers through interlibrary loan from god knows where. But
the loan was like only for two weeks, and we knew that we wouldn't both
be able to get through it in such a short time... so we torn... should
we just steal it or what? This was Leonard's rare novel. We couldn't let
it go... so instead we spent hours (and I really don't want to think
about how much it cost at 4 cents a page) xeroxing ourselves each a
copy, and painstaking laying out and gluing the sheets together into
book form, then binding them together fittingly with cardboard and black
tape. I remember having that book for years, re-reading it until it
dissolved.... Luckily years later I found reprints... which now I no
longer have.)
I'm the only person I know who has read Beautiful Losers, Flowers for Hitler, etc. I'm trying to find Leonard's death as uplifting as I found Songs from a Room but I am as sad as I can be - what a week.
His death nearly killed me. His life was certainly an inspiration though as he did what he loved until he simply couldn't anymore.
Michael Copado; I first remember hearing Leonard Cohen while I was serving in the Navy, watching a movie for which he did the sound track.... " Mccabe and Mrs Miller", is a timeless movie , well worth tracking down. I would be shocked if you said you haven't seen the movie. The songs so well interlaced with the mesmerizing script and the archaic setting in the 1800s in a mining town in Oregon, or washington State. Prostitutes, card sharks, drunks and cowboys. Even the preacher caught a bullet before this wonderful story ended. I am so glad Leonard only got laid a lot, and lived to be a wonderful old musician. No bullets... he was only ever Love Struck.
I thought this was the lyrics
Thhat is hilarious...kudos to the two of you...Beautiful Losers= awesome leonard writing!
such a great storyteller. i'm gonna miss him so much. sad day.
we are ugly but we have the music.. drinking alone tonight.. new years eve... i have you to keep me company tonight MR. LC thank you for all the music
You are not alone my friend.... I am here...every night. Thinking of you......
the song starts at 0:01
I seriously think this is one of the best songs of all time. Leonard was truly a legend. May his memory be a blessing.
How we can leave without him without his songs. Without love in this world. How.
Wow. A great regret in my life is not having seen Mr. Cohen live. His music is truly on another level entirely. A true original if there ever was one..
Better late than never...
He had the ability to make venues that sat 15000 seem intimate, his fanbase was across all ages and walks of life. This and So Long Marianne are my favourites.
"I don't mean to suggest that I loved you the best
I can't keep track of each fallen robin.
I remember you well in the Chelsea Hotel.
That's all. I don't even think of you that often."
One of my all time favorites.
Rufus Wainright cover of this track is awesome too ..👌🏼
This breaks my heart. Poor Janice just wanted to be loved, something that most individuals on earth cal relate to. And even she wasn’t “loved the best” or “thought of that often”.
@@katiejon17 he did, he loved her. "I don't think of you that often" is him still trying to cope with her loss, refusing to admit how much it affected him
LYRICS!
I remember you well in the Chelsea Hotel
You were talking so brave and so sweet
Giving me head on the unmade bed
While the limousines wait in the street
Those were the reasons and that was New York
We were running for the money and the flesh
And that was called love for the workers in song
Probably still is for those of them left
Ah, but you got away, didn't you babe?
You just turned your back on the crowd
You got away, I never once heard you say
I need you, I don't need you
I need you, I don't need you
And all of that jiving around
I remember you well in the Chelsea Hotel
You were famous, your heart was a legend
You told me again you preferred handsome men
But for me you would make an exception
And clenching your fist for the ones like us
Who are oppressed by the figures of beauty
You fixed yourself, you said, "well, never mind
We are ugly but we have the music"
And then you got away, didn't you baby?
You just turned your back on the crowd
You got away, I never once heard you say
I need you, I don't need you
I need you, I don't need you
And all of that jiving around
I don't mean to suggest that I loved you the best
I can't keep track of each fallen robin
I remember you well in the Chelsea Hotel
That's all, I don't even think of you that often
.....we are ugly but we have the music......
The introduction to the song - I could listen to it again and again ana again...
I have..
Goose-bumps, what a performance, what a guy.
RIP, now, you can sing this song in front Janis :'(
yes, and she will give you head again
why not...
Satanella Jourgensen Yes
A fantasy, a nice fantasy but a fantasy nonetheless
Amen together and toasting to the Hotel days🌹🌹💕
I discovered "Flowers for Hitler" by chance in a glass case in the Toronto University Library in the summer of 1966, but never read it, as I spent only one day in Toronto. In the fall of 1967 in the University of Rochester bookstore, I found his first album and bought it immediately - it was the only time I ever spontaneously bought an album of music that wasn't classical without having heard a single note of it beforehand. I immediately fell in love with the music and thought this was something very esoteric for a tiny circle intellectuals - never did it occur to me that Leonard Cohen would soon become one of the few artists who actually deserve to be a worldwide idol!
Not every boy grows up knowing what a real man and a gentleman looks like. Thank you Leonard, for teaching me thru the power of your example.
this song (and his little precursive explanation) makes me cry and i never cry. it gives me that weird happiness/sadness feeling that i simultaneously hate with a fire as hot and unwavering as the sun but continue to indulge myself with
One big regret I have, is not really paying attention, the first time I heard this good man. Because when I came around to having a song of his pop up in my feed, end of summer 2019, I so swiftly and sadly, learned, what I'd what I had missed.
Dance Me To The End of Time. 🎵
Ever since, it would move me, and soothe me, just when I really needed it. Thank you, YT, for the pop up ! Thank you Leonard Cohen, for helping me carry my heavy heart ! 🙏 Man, I needed that help, that music, those songs. Right then. I'd imagine, that's what most artists, would like for their fans, to feel that, have that, comfort from their music, ease the pain, carry the spirit lost, till you feel it again. Thank you Leonard Cohen, and, all associates. Rest in Peace 🕊️ Leonard Cohen 🙏
Much Love 💙
He's a real poet and a true musician! Great music I can hear over and over and every single time seems like the first. I feel alive with Leonard. It makes laugh, makes me sad, makes cry, makes me dream. Thank you!
I have been staring at this for an hour until my sole screamed to write Thank-You Leonard Cohen.
It's about time for Janis and Leonard to get it on again
Too soon? Haha jk Leonard would've laughed at this comment
tourbillon........difficult now as both have passed on......maybe in heaven though,,,,,,,,,,,,
MARIAN KEOGH }}} They haven't "Passed On"...they're just "Passin thru"... Maestros like JJ & LC never really pass on,......they just shift their genius to another dimension.!!!....I bet they're still giving it Hell in Heaven.!!!
you will be greatly missed..... such a hard week.... I saw you perform in 1975 in a small bar in Denver and loved you from that moment on..... a great story goes with that too....
In a small bar?! How lucky. In Europe he drew crowds and approaching him wasn't that easy.
Have you ever told the story, .I wish you would xx
This man actually have a great sense of humor. 😊
Every time you listen one of his songs -- it's as if it's the first time. Every time.
EVERY TIME I SEE AND HEAR THIS. WHICH HAS PROBABLY A THOUSAND IT BRINGS A TEAR TO MY EYE!
I guess a lot of us are going to be re-visiting some of LC's live performances. This is a good one. What a song, what a dignity in the dude. Always thought he was more humane than Dylan, somehow more akin to Joni in the sense that he could just articulate that stupid impotent rage, and sadness, that we all get time from time. Those comparisons seem redundant anyway - I already miss him. My first time listening to him was on the Boxing Day of the tsunami in Thailand, up north in England where it was snowy and full of hills. LC... fewer fans than the other greats who died this year, but someone so lacking in affection - for all of his droll humour - and so full of love. Thanks for the memories, maybe we'll see you again x
kingprune Very eloquently stated message
I think you are unfair to Dylan. Listen to "North Country Blues" or "You're a Big Girl Now". Different temperaments. Dylan is a true Gemini, air sign, mercurial, fast, quick. Cohen's a Virgo, a more giving earth sign and very detail oriented. Thus many of his songs are like exquisite Bonsai trees, miniatures. Cohen did get very Dylan like political in later years; Everybody Knows, Closing Time, Democracy is Coming.
I really love when artists talk about their work! The Story the emotions, I love Sharing the emotions
What.
Marvelous performer.
Man, reminded of this song today and just knocked down by it's beauty, majesty and tragedy. Depressing but brilliant.
Bitter-sweet melancholic rather than depressing.
May Leonard rest in peace and may his memory be forever blessed.
I stayed at the Hotel Chelsea once, and I took the stairs to and from my room every time because I wanted to soak in a bit more of the history and atmosphere. Now Leonard's story about the elevator is making me wish I'd climbed into that rickety thing at least once.
I did not think that I would live to see this world without Leonard Cohen. I was stricken by his death in the reality of the lack of his dignified, wise and always classy presentations. Humble is a word he used many times over in different phrases and I was humble in the presence of his voice ~ his words because I was ~ I have been gazing into his soul since between the age of twelve to fifteen . I have since been compelled, mesmerized and breathless by his beauty in many imaginable ways. This man, this mortal like me man has touched my own soul over and over with his prophetic words. As we know what parts the lips to speak with our tongue comes from the heart of every human, I did not have to examine his heart or soul I did not have to question the validity his words I knew them as ' the truth '. Leonard had valor and street smarts, he was a gentleman and could throw down on a party I smile at the time he decided not to play, walked off stage and dropped some acid as only a Cohen moment ! My tears have been shed to say I will sorely miss him is a great understatement, I will miss loving him as a person and an artist. Good nite Leonard, my Leonard ... and although many loved you I am the only one who can love you the way I do. Are you smiling at me from the Celestial realm beautiful Angel? You're a shooting star now baby. Rest well away from this toiling burdensome world dear friend you live on ever in my heart until I am no more as you are now. " Sleep baby sleep " I love you.
Seeing him live would've been an honor. Rest in peace. Souls never leave ✨
I missed him too. Only just barely. Discovered him too late. Kept watching for another tour but one day there was a picture of empty chairs they said he used to sit in, in the sunshine outside his home.
I love how you can hear the raw emotion in his voice.
Deep soul ... deep poetic heart. Thank you for being on this earth ...
Leonards version is hypnotic....and Rufus Wainwright's cover, or more ode to rather, is equally as stunning in a much different way. they compliment each other brilliantly. im excited for baby Viva to get her voice, with her genes she could hold the world in her palm!
You told me again you preferred handsome man but for me you would make an exception :(... RIP to a legend
R.I.P Leonard.. they don't make em like you any more :(
He is so incredible. Real art right here.
you were talking so brave and so sweet...
"Give me a Leonard Cohen afterworld."
Rest in peace.
Where's this quote from? Did Joplin say this?
@@suryashekharbiswas7229 it's a quote from a nirvana song called "pennyroyal tea"
Yes!
So I can sigh eternally
I hope I get to go to that same afterworld myself.
He has a way with words. As powerful now as they ever were.
Oh lovely Leonard, I never tire of your music and song. Thanks to youtube it’s right there, slainte 💚💚💚🧡🧡
What a great singer / songwriter in these romantic years ! His hommage to Janis Joplin tuch all our hearts
Yeah, he was at the top of his game and didn't know it. So that he ended by drinking up to three bottles of red wine before a concert. How silly we all humans are! Then we look back and say: Well, I wasn't that bad, was I?
Idk that it is flattering to joplin
This song is so happy yet so sad at the same time. Timeless
Thank you god. If there are such things as angels Leonard Cohen was one. I thank heaven for his existence. As hard as life may be I will always have Leonard Cohen. Glory be.
Very nice remembrance. Glory be.
I grew up on his music, saw him once it blew my mind!
My God such an incredible artist. He draws from a very deep well like very few others. one of my favorite songwriters. The only one I would put in Dylan's league.
Floors me every time I hear it
Not every boy grows up knowing what a real man and a gentlemen looks like. Thank you Leonard, for teaching me thru the power of example.
Exactly
It would of been an honor to seen this live. ❤️ Mr. Cohen was a legend!
I had the honour and privilege 11 times...
It's such a gift we live in a time when such amazing recordings exist with such advanced technology. I love the video recording of Like a Rolling Stone in England 1966 ("Judas") You're right there.
"I don't even think of you that often" - really feels like he's lying.
Really means he does :)
That's the irony. He wrote a whole song about a small affair he had and then the very last thing he says is "I don't even think of you that often." If that was true, then why would he write an entire song about it?
I believe that's what he is trying to convey, actually still pining for her at looking @ The Chelsea Hotel
che williams........I believe you are right, I think he did think of Janis Joplin but seems a man of privacy. It is not what he says in situations like this,but what he does not say.............
Deffo...but respect as always!
Songs like this make you want to melt on a sofa. Fantastic
A perfect offering.....ty, Mr Cohen
Just wonderful !! Nothing to say more....
J' aime tant Léonard Cohen et sa voix si profondément touchante.....un côté ballade....
Gosh, I miss Leonard SO much xx
thank God for Mr Leonard Cohen.
I love his voice.... Such a lovely man
His music tells me who i am and that we all can drean despite daily struggles
So many wonderful songs...
Leonard , you are my fine memories , so many moments when I listened to you SO MANY GREAT MOMENTS.
That is a great great version of an amazing song.
Hope he meets her again
She died at 27
Julia Which he probably did after his passing. Although somehow I believe his hands would have been full after he met Marianne Jensen again and I doubt he’d spend time with J. Joplin there. He said it in the song it was a little relationship, so nothing that compares with what he felt for Marianne in my opinion. But I guess we will never know.
I clearly can hear Janis' voice saying: "I'm looking for Kris Kristofferson." :)
This IS really funny Element in Song.
@@ingefranz2013 Except it can't be true. Kristofferson didn't enter the scene until about '69, didn't meet Janis until '70, and Cohen always said his encounter with Joplin was in '67. Cohen began telling that story as metaphor - he said she was looking for Kristofferson, he was looking for Brigitte Bardot, i.e., they were both dreaming of far more beautiful people than they were. As he embellished the story over the years, it seems to have morphed into "she actually said that."
dear leonard cohen. you were a great singer and poet. may god enjoy your music in the midnight choir of angels. shalom!
My favorite song. I will miss this man so dearly.
Man has such a cool voice.
little lady you was realy in lucky...he was Leonard Cohen
+Massimiliano Pomarè The lucky lady was Janis Joplin
Peter Huisman I know...
LC was lucky...she was Janis! Last name unnecessary.
No mate. They were off their heads on heroin . He was a survivor but the majority were not. Do your research ffs.
God.. I saw him 60 years ago , iwas in love, it didn't last ..but his poetry brings back the experience and makes it pure
This and Sound of Silence are amongst the top poetic songs
rest in peace babe
so glad i saw Leonard play this song live
I have loved this song since the first time I heard it. But never knew it was about Janice until now.
Cudowny wykonawca,mogę To słuchać godzinami.
So Happy I got to get into the Chelsea Hotel back the days it was still open!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Feeling sad :( Rest well music man!
Such a beautiful song, thank you .
I LOVE THIS SONG SO MUCH! =((( RIP
Anthony Bourdain's real dad.
Seriously. I loved you Mr. Cohen. You are so missed...just knowing you were around made me feel better.
They look so simular!
Are you serious?
crying my eyes out.. :(
"I love to speak with Leonard
He’s a sportsman and a shepherd
He’s a lazy bastard
Living in a suit!"
My God. Thank you for existing ❤️
One the best poet Canada has ever produced and the goodness of rock ..
Fuck
I think of him to often . . . Thanks.
rest in peace and love
Rest in peace! Hallelujah!!
Absolutely beautiful song
I reckon this was recorded on a vintage (now) Akai 4000 D reel to reel tape deck - anyone else recognise the good frequency response but lots of flutter ( on the guitar)
Brilliant, what a genius.
it´s a very very sad day... RIP Leonard!
There are no words. ...
Only Leonards...
Miss you Leonard . You were real and authentic and not afraid of being human and vulnerable
Sublime Leonard♥️
Farewell, fare thee well Leonard a light to the world
I LOVE the way he says "fallen robin"