CD: Leonard Cohen - Thanks for the Dance

The last waltz

share this article

That voice’s husky confiding wasn’t quite silenced. Working helped Leonard Cohen live a little longer, and old friends and family have gathered to complete these last bequests. “As for the fall it began long ago,” he sings, and more than a quarter of his rare, honed albums have now been released in the miraculous final arc since his financial theft-enforced, septuagenarian comeback in 2008.

Cohen’s son Adam continues his co-production from 2016’s seeming swansong You Want It Darker, and with Jennifer Warnes, Sharon Robinson, Javier Mas and Anjani Thomas among the other returning compadres, has further junked dad’s latter-day love of cheap synths for Cohen Senior’s own nylon-string guitar, taken up by Mas, and the acoustic palette old fans pined for.

“I was always working steady/But I never called it art” is Leonard’s final killer opening couplet. “I fought for something final/Not the right to disagree,” then carves a late line in the sand from popular music’s warrior-priest. “You were born to judge the world/Forgive me but I wasn’t,” is a still more telling apercu for pinched, divisive times, its mercy a frequent leavening of his apocalyptic prophecies (and among the latter, who can say we’re not living in 1992’s “The Future”, or don’t need the stubborn, guttering hope sheltered in its twin song that year, “Democracy”?).

“The Goal” is a heartbreaking, spare vignette, written from the vanishing vantage point of 82-year-old Leonard with his tour-shattered, excruciating spine, as “the neighbour returns my smile of defeat” and “accounts of the soul” are reckoned. Its haiku-like distillation of dying wisdom is jolted aside by the brute human horror of the Holocaust and war in “Puppets”.

The heart of the record, though, is the 20th century sensual, erotic romance of “The Night of Santiago”, where Leonard removes his necktie and pistol as his lover’s “nipples rose like bread”; and “Thanks for the Dance”, where Warnes joins him in a last wordless vocal waltz, and he envisions provisional yet profound union with irony and kindness, and intensely remembers youthful pleasure. “I’m sorry you’re tired,” he tells this final and perhaps first partner in life’s dance. “The evening has hardly begun.” Gracious, to the very last.

 

Add comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
Name that you would like to appear as the author of the comment
Leonard removes his necktie and pistol as his lover’s 'nipples rose like bread'

rating

4

share this article

Help secure the future of arts journalism

In this era of algorithmic recommendation, opaquely sponsored content and AI slop, theartsdesk’s mission to preserve real journalistic and critical values has never been more important.

If you like what you see here, please join us 
in this mission.

Subscribing to the site will help us in our coming 
redesign and expansion.


If you do this before the 31st August this will be at our guaranteed founder’s rate: 
your subs will never increase again.

Subscribe now for £5 per month. 
or yearly for just £40.

Or if you simply want to support us with a one-off donation, you can do so here.

more new music

Surrealism, social observation and more muscular sound from the Leeds quartet
A powerful personal outpouring of joy and pain - with a great beat
The London quartet have taken to playing large venues with ease, as this career-spanning set showed
The Philadelphia punk rockers continue to impress
A partial account of how Brit-punk absorbed an aspect of reggae
The Fez Festival Of World Sacred Music and the Fes Gathering bring the world together
Bristol band aren't happy but offer up the occasional sing-along
A new album is unveiled and old tunes are played for the last time
Decades of psychedelia and wonder packed into a puzzling construction