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Leonard Cohen Concert, Wellington New Zealand

Wed, 21 Jan 2009, 06:50 am
Greg Ross5 posts in thread

Time for some beauty and light. Although it won't interest everyone, Leonard Cohen performed the first of his New Zealand / Australian concerts in Wellington last night (Tuesday 20th January) and this is the first review, by Simon Sweetman from the Dominion Post. It augers well for those of us in Oz eagerly awaiting our turn to hear and watch the Master.

Cohen's concert the best gig ever

Leonard Cohen
TSB Arena
Tuesday 20 January

SIMON SWEETMAN - The Dominion Post | Wednesday, 21 January 2009

Canadian poet and singer/songwriter Leonard Cohen takes the stage with his nine-piece band. There is a huge ovation; many people get up out of their seats (for the first of several times).

The opening song is Dance Me To The End Of Love. From there it is to The Future, Ain't No Cure For Love and Bird On A Wire. A living legend places his lyrical legacy at the feet of an adoring audience and the songs - poems, mantras, scriptures even - continue to fall in to place: Everybody Knows with its wry, subversive humour, In My Secret Life (acknowledging the 2001 "comeback" album Ten New Songs).

Cohen takes up an acoustic guitar for some delicate plucking (Who By Fire and Chelsea Hotel # 2). The audience sits hushed as immortal paeans, prayers and odes float from the stage - Hey, That's No Way To Say Goodbye - and Cohen's band provides the musical colour with a brushed drum kit, saxophones, flutes, mandolin, guitars and three perfectly pitched backing vocalists to assist his below sea-level growl. The sound is stunning in a venue that is so often awful for concerts; this time the right band is playing correctly and the audience is no longer suffering for the location of the musician's art.
A short interval, after Ring The Bells - with its line "there is a crack in everything/that's how the light gets in" - and Cohen returns with Tower Of Song, telling people they are too kind for applauding his one-finger keyboard solo. From there it is to Suzanne from the debut album, the start of the reverence and reverie, then to The Gypsy Wife, The Partisan and Hallelujah.

A Thousand Kisses Deep is stunning as poetic recital; the bard still possesses beguiling grace. And then it is to Take This Waltz, band introductions and a series of encores including So Long Marianne, First We Take Manhattan, If It Be Your Will (Cohen recites the first verse and then his version of Kate and Anna McGarrigle, the Webb sisters, deliver the body of the tune) Famous Blue Raincoat and Democracy.  If you were at the concert and didn't like it then you had your information wrong.

It is hard work having to put this concert in to words so I'll just say something I have never said in a review before and will never say again: this was the best show I have ever seen.

Read more on Leonard Cohen's Wellington concert in tomorrow's edition of The Dominion Post.

 

And for the real fanatics, of which I freely admit to being one, I've pasted in the set list below.

All Good Things

Greg Ross

1. Dance Me to the End of Love
2. The Future
3. Ain't No Cure for Love
4. Bird on a Wire
5. Everybody Knows
6. In My Secret Life
7. Who By Fire
8. Chelsea Hotel
9. Hey, That's No Way To Say Goodbye
10. Ring the Bells
11. Tower of Song
12. Suzanne
13. The Gypsy Wife
14. The Partisan
15. Boogie Street
16. Hallelujah
17. Democracy
18. I'm Your Man
19. A Thousand Kisses Deep
20. Take This Waltz
21. So Long Marianne
22. First We Take Manhatten
23. Famous Blue Raincoat
24. Anthem
25. Democracy
26. I Tried to Leave You
27. Wither Thou Goest

 

 

 

Thread (5 posts)

Greg RossWed, 21 Jan 2009, 06:50 am

Time for some beauty and light. Although it won't interest everyone, Leonard Cohen performed the first of his New Zealand / Australian concerts in Wellington last night (Tuesday 20th January) and this is the first review, by Simon Sweetman from the Dominion Post. It augers well for those of us in Oz eagerly awaiting our turn to hear and watch the Master.

Cohen's concert the best gig ever

Leonard Cohen
TSB Arena
Tuesday 20 January

SIMON SWEETMAN - The Dominion Post | Wednesday, 21 January 2009

Canadian poet and singer/songwriter Leonard Cohen takes the stage with his nine-piece band. There is a huge ovation; many people get up out of their seats (for the first of several times).

The opening song is Dance Me To The End Of Love. From there it is to The Future, Ain't No Cure For Love and Bird On A Wire. A living legend places his lyrical legacy at the feet of an adoring audience and the songs - poems, mantras, scriptures even - continue to fall in to place: Everybody Knows with its wry, subversive humour, In My Secret Life (acknowledging the 2001 "comeback" album Ten New Songs).

Cohen takes up an acoustic guitar for some delicate plucking (Who By Fire and Chelsea Hotel # 2). The audience sits hushed as immortal paeans, prayers and odes float from the stage - Hey, That's No Way To Say Goodbye - and Cohen's band provides the musical colour with a brushed drum kit, saxophones, flutes, mandolin, guitars and three perfectly pitched backing vocalists to assist his below sea-level growl. The sound is stunning in a venue that is so often awful for concerts; this time the right band is playing correctly and the audience is no longer suffering for the location of the musician's art.
A short interval, after Ring The Bells - with its line "there is a crack in everything/that's how the light gets in" - and Cohen returns with Tower Of Song, telling people they are too kind for applauding his one-finger keyboard solo. From there it is to Suzanne from the debut album, the start of the reverence and reverie, then to The Gypsy Wife, The Partisan and Hallelujah.

A Thousand Kisses Deep is stunning as poetic recital; the bard still possesses beguiling grace. And then it is to Take This Waltz, band introductions and a series of encores including So Long Marianne, First We Take Manhattan, If It Be Your Will (Cohen recites the first verse and then his version of Kate and Anna McGarrigle, the Webb sisters, deliver the body of the tune) Famous Blue Raincoat and Democracy.  If you were at the concert and didn't like it then you had your information wrong.

It is hard work having to put this concert in to words so I'll just say something I have never said in a review before and will never say again: this was the best show I have ever seen.

Read more on Leonard Cohen's Wellington concert in tomorrow's edition of The Dominion Post.

 

And for the real fanatics, of which I freely admit to being one, I've pasted in the set list below.

All Good Things

Greg Ross

1. Dance Me to the End of Love
2. The Future
3. Ain't No Cure for Love
4. Bird on a Wire
5. Everybody Knows
6. In My Secret Life
7. Who By Fire
8. Chelsea Hotel
9. Hey, That's No Way To Say Goodbye
10. Ring the Bells
11. Tower of Song
12. Suzanne
13. The Gypsy Wife
14. The Partisan
15. Boogie Street
16. Hallelujah
17. Democracy
18. I'm Your Man
19. A Thousand Kisses Deep
20. Take This Waltz
21. So Long Marianne
22. First We Take Manhatten
23. Famous Blue Raincoat
24. Anthem
25. Democracy
26. I Tried to Leave You
27. Wither Thou Goest

 

 

 

jmuzzWed, 21 Jan 2009, 09:39 am

Wow!

27 songs in that set list including So Long Marianne (my intro the genius of Mr Cohen) and Everybody Knows. Looks like a great night out. Went to see Mr Nick Cave and band last night and was entertained to the gills by our very own poetic genius weaving his magic with his word-songs.
Lisa SkrypWed, 21 Jan 2009, 08:22 pm

ooooooohhhh, can't wait for Lennie!

sounds like bliss - hearing him perform will probably go along way to making up for missing Mr Cave...
Lisa SkrypSun, 8 Feb 2009, 04:49 pm

Cohen's concert was amazing

I also realise this is not a musical reviewing site as such, but Greg was right - the concert at Sandalford last night was absolutely magical. After good sets by Augie March and then the great Paul Kelly, Leonard Cohen's concert began with the audience giving him a a standing ovation just for turning up - which he more than repaid with a magnificant, emotional, uplifting performance. Beyond the pleasure in hearing all the classics perfomed live & in person by the divine Mr C & his exceptional band & backup performers (including longtime collaborator Sharon Robinson), I particularly enjoyed watching Cohen skip onstage at the start & after the intermission. I also loved what seemed to be his geniuine beaming grin as he'd doff his hat with a little bow at the end of each song. I hope he took as much pleasure in giving his performance as we took by receiving it.
Greg RossSun, 8 Feb 2009, 05:59 pm

Cohen at Sandalford

Thanks Lisa

Yes, it was a stunning concert - almost spiritual, anyhow, if you were there, you knew, what I really wanted to offer, is a photo or two to anyone who was there, or wished for one. I've never been able to work out how to post a photo here, so I won't try, however, if you're interested, there's an album of some 50 shots of the concert (Leonard Cohen Concert Album) on my blog site:  http://www.loconut.com.au/myplace/gregross/default.aspx

if you'd like something, please let me know, there is no charge, however they can;t be used for commercial purposes.

All Good Things

Greg

Greg Ross

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