Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Leonard Cohen has some new Old Ideas Hallelujah

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) -

Leonard Cohen

sole off his strain rights some years back, so he apparently doesn't collect royalties for a many hilariously over-covered strain in "

American Idol

" history. That's bad for him, yet good for us, given being cash-poor stirred a 70-something thespian to come out of semi-retirement and lapse to a highway in a late 2000s -- which, in turn, eventually spurred a recording of "Old Ideas," his initial studio manuscript in 8 years.

As

Jeff Buckley

,

Jason Castro

,

Lee DeWyze

,

Rufus Wainwright

, Bon Jovi, and about a million other singers would all say: Hallelujah.

You could forever discuss either a customary by that name depends as an tangible spiritual. (Very few gospel songwriters before Cohen ever suspicion to rhyme "hallelujah" with "what's it to ya.") That tradition continues in a large approach on "Old Ideas," where some-more of a songs than not have vaguely eremite overtones.

He's articulate "old" as in Old Testament-type concerns -- a kind of spiritual-throwback things that never fails to perplex and pleasure fans, entrance as it does from a world's many clean-cut Buddhist.

The unequivocally initial song, "Going Home," brilliantly establishes his zealous irreverence. The choruses are pristine gospel, really, with Cohen deliberation his mankind and singing about "going home yet my burden. yet a dress that we wore."

Maybe he felt these death-themed thoughts were too aspiring to put out there on their own, though. Because a verses are pristine comedy, narrated by God himself, who arrogantly boasts that he dictates all his element to a untimely channeler "Leonard . a idle illegitimate vital in a suit." Put them together, and we competence have a many relocating and funniest strain Cohen ever wrote in one rare package.

Nothing on a rest of a manuscript is utterly so beautifully weird as that opener, yet there are serve spirituals . of a sort, one always hastens to add. The teaser lane expelled late final year, "Show Me a Place," gorgeously reunites him with aged outspoken partner Jennifer Warnes, in a kind of theological reprise of their classical "If It Be Your Will." Even some-more overwhelming is "Come Healing," a strain that Christians and atheists comparison competence wish to supplement to their hymnals.

So where's a sex, we ask - given Cohen never incited full-on priest notwithstanding his time during that Buddhist monastery? It's here, despite with some old-age wrinkles (so to speak). "You wish to change a approach we make love/I wish to leave it alone," he complains in "Different Sides," a album's one argumentative ballad, and a cousin of sorts to U2's "One."

"Crazy to Love You" facilities Cohen alone, accompanied customarily by his acoustic guitar - a lapse to signature form that'll terrify fans who've been accustomed to a former folkie's synthesizer jones over a final several decades. In this many confessional of confessional numbers, Cohen skilfully sketches a proxy stupidity of regretful obsession, afterwards suggests that a fading of sensuality in advancing years competence be a godsend.

"I'm sleepy of selecting desire/Been saved by a honeyed fatigue," he sings, candidly. "The gates of joining unwired/And nobody perplexing to leave."

The 77-year-old fable isn't about to contest in any "Idol"-style singing contests himself, as his ever-more-baritonish vocals here dress a excellent line between vocalizing and spoken-word. The womanlike backup singers he's been creation use of as Greek choruses for 3 decades customarily uncover adult by mid-song to give we a improved thought of how a melodies indeed go, and it's a bit of a service on "Come Healing" when a women indeed start off a tune, permitting we to soak in a brilliance from a start.

That said, Cohen's voice stays a abounding instrument in a possess right, even if a sonorousness is a small bit some-more percussive during this indicate than it is follow-the-bouncing-ball mellifluous. If there's an canon coming, his is a balmy voice you'd wish to hear murmur we toward it.

For all a intimations of mankind on a album, "Old Ideas" is distant from a downer, between Cohen's devious approach with difference and a regard fundamental in a arrangements.

The good news is that he's mostly dumped a synth mindfulness that infrequently astonished fans on his many new albums. Working with

Patrick Leonard

(of Madonna "Like a Prayer" fame) and a handful of other producers, he's come behind to essentially acoustic orchestration that creates a manuscript distant friendlier and reduction like German musical music. There's even a blues-styled number, "Darkness," yet it's a lightest, airiest blues you've ever heard, so as not to drown out Cohen's inside ruminations on a salary and contagions of sin.

After a churned reactions to his final manuscript (2004's underwhelming "Dear Heather"), "Old Ideas" resolutely reestablishes Cohen as one-third of a holy threesome of weathered North American producer laureates, along with Dylan and Waits. It couldn't occur to a improved physical hymnodist.

(Editing by Chris Michaud)

(news.yahoo.com)