試す 金 - 無料
The Anti-Rock Star
The Atlantic
|October 2024
Leonard Cohen's battle against shameless male egoism
Leonard Cohen never liked touring. "It's like being dropped off in a desert," he once said. "You don't know where you live anymore." By the time he hit his late 50s, he hated it so much that, after supporting his 1992 record, The Future, he moved into a Zen monastery and all but retired from the music business. Even after he returned with More Best of Leonard Cohen (1997), a wonderful celebration of his mid-career prime, he refused to cash in with a fresh calendar of live shows. Then, in 2005, he discovered that his bank account had been nearly emptied by his business manager.
Cohen spent months in rehearsal with a band, fine-tuning his songs as he now wanted to play them more quietly, more elegantly than ever. In 2008, at 73, he went back out on the road. Other than at a book signing, he hadn't performed live in more than a decade. But something had happened in the interim.
His audience was larger-lines curving around blocks, scalpers demanding hundreds above face value.
More striking, though, was the depth of feeling. Leonard Cohen, master of a cool, ironic, deadpan remove, had come to signify something new that mystified the performers themselves. "I saw people in front of the stage shaking and crying," a backup singer noted after opening night. "You don't often see adults cry, and with such violence." The highlight of the tour came at the Glastonbury Festival, where Cohen played the main stage in front of listeners young and old. As the sun set and Cohen sang "Hallelujah," concertgoers "sang along, clutching each other's arms," an Australian journalist reported, "and many were openly weeping." Cohen hadn't been dropped off in a desert.
How to account for such emotion, felt across generational divides? Where does the widely perceived authenticity-hardly an untroubled term-of this music come from? And why has its power to move listeners sustained itself so forcefully, turning Cohen's afterlife into one long canonization?
このストーリーは、The Atlantic の October 2024 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、10,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
The Atlantic からのその他のストーリー
The Atlantic
How America Celebrated Its 100th Birthday
The Centennial Exhibition of 1876 promised a glorious industrial future. Outside its gates, the country seethed with violence and corruption.
12 mins
June 2026
The Atlantic
THE CLOWN SHOW
The Savannah Bananas are reviving one of the most entertaining—and controversial—teams in Negro Leagues history.
21 mins
June 2026
The Atlantic
The Diva
Denyce Graves is retiring from performing after a career as one of opera's leading women. But there's more work for her to do.
10 mins
June 2026
The Atlantic
Cat Heir
Did Karl Lagerfeld really leave millions to Choupette?
26 mins
June 2026
The Atlantic
The Secret of Elizabeth Strout's Appeal
How she writes best sellers that are also critical darlings
10 mins
June 2026
The Atlantic
THE VENTURE-CAPITAL POPULIST
How David Sacks and the new tech right went full MAGA and captured Washington
32 mins
June 2026
The Atlantic
Glory Days
Heartland rock was shot through with nostalgia— but nostalgia for what?
9 mins
June 2026
The Atlantic
Alien Nation
Why Americans want to believe that the government is hiding the truth about extraterrestrial life
11 mins
June 2026
The Atlantic
Dinah's Hat
On the day Dinah lost her hat, I was sitting on the top step of my just-right Scamp trailer doing a crossword.
24 mins
June 2026
The Atlantic
THE AMERICA I'VE KNOWN
In my 93rd year, it's become ever more clear that patriotism requires sacrifice and collective effort.
7 mins
June 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

