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bmp_2009

Leonard Cohen at the Wang Theatre

No way to say goodbye
By DANIEL BROCKMAN  |  June 1, 2009

09052_cohen2_main2
JAZZ UNPOLICED The man was serene, but the band took the Cohen songbook — often a thing of minimalist beauty — and trampled it.

Photos: Leonard Cohen at the Wang Theatre. By Eric Antoniou.
The anticipatory mania burst last Friday night when the man himself finally strode gingerly across the stage. A dapper and sophisticated 74-year-old in a tailored double-breasted suit and Sinatra-y fedora, Leonard Cohen grabbed his microphone as his band slipped into the slow jig of "Dance Me to the End of Love." He crouched down, almost but not quite on bended knees, as his low craggy voice serenaded the heavens, cutting a pugilistic figure halfway between a rock singer machine-gunning lyrics at his audience and an old man crouching to place flowers on a woman's grave.

If your exposure to the music of Leonard Cohen consists mainly of listening to the sparse arrangements and quivering nasalities of his late '60s/early '70s albums, this show might have been a shock. First, Cohen's voice is, at his age, not the voice of that younger man. Whether he is singing or speaking between songs, it is a constant low grumble, both intimate and mysterious. Of course, in the world of pop music, Cohen was never a young man (he was 34 when his first album, 1967's Songs of Leonard Cohen, came out), and he was never really a singer in the conventional sense. He has emerged four decades later as a world treasure, known for his lyrical mastery and his deft mix of melancholy and wit. On Friday, after a passionate run through 1992's sinister "The Future," he quipped "The last time I was here in Boston I was 60 years old — just a kid with a crazy dream."

The second shock would have been the arrangements of Cohen classics by his current backing band. At first, the feel was tasteful, reverent. The band kept things at a simmer, putting Cohen's gravelly boom front and center. But by the third tune, "Ain't No Cure for Love," a switch seemed to have flipped in saxophonist/multi-instrumentalist Dino Soldo, who proceeded to splatter the song with painful David Sanborn-isms that were jarring and bizarre. Unfortunately, this foray into smooth jazz hell was no brief detour. Over the course of a three-and-a-half-hour set, the band proceeded to take the Cohen songbook — often a thing of minimalist beauty, naked save for guitar and voice — and overwork it until you felt trapped in an endless elevator with an '80s iteration of the Saturday Night Live band.

The audience didn't seem to mind hearing their hero's music pulverized into a Dylan at Budokan horror show. In a sense, it was enough just to be in Cohen's serene presence. There is something otherworldly about a Cohen show, unlikely and unrepeatable, and it had this crowd under its spell. This, I suppose, explains the rapturous applause given every squall of the Kenny G wedding band, as they took somber material like "Who By Fire" and tacked on mood-shattering blues licks and other distractions, finally hitting a nadir two-thirds through the show with "Boogie Street," a painful sub-Sade atrocity led vocally by back-up singer and frequent Cohen collaborator Sharon Robinson.

But the set, like so much of Cohen's work, also contained moments of redemption. "Hallelujah" was as uplifting as a rendition by its maker could be, and as Cohen gets older, his delivery just grows more and more profound. Near the end of the set proper (there would be a whopping three encore sets!), Cohen declared, "You came to me this morning and you handled me like meat." The ensuing read-through of song-poem "A Thousand Kisses Deep," a bare, spoken meditation on the frailty of love and memory, was elegant, poetic, and mercifully free of sax punctuation. ^

Related: Slideshow: Leonard Cohen at the Wang Theatre, Westward ho!, The Big Hurt: Cohen back on stage, Dee back in Heaven, Kelly back on the market, More more >
  Topics: Live Reviews , David Sanborn, Kenny G, Leonard Cohen,  More more >
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Comments
Re: Leonard Cohen at the Wang Theatre
This review seems to be based on only a cursory listening to Cohen's music over the past 25 years.  There was nothing jarring about it if you actually know Cohen's work.
By pdg1075 on 06/02/2009 at 9:43:32
Re: Leonard Cohen at the Wang Theatre
This review begs to be different from the hundreds of rave reviews from the Leonard Cohen World Tour. Wrong reviewer to a tremendous show.
By bost182 on 06/02/2009 at 10:54:05
Re: Leonard Cohen at the Wang Theatre
Only Daniel Gewertz of the Boston Herald caught the "klezmer-like merging of tragedy and merriment" that was so often at the heart of this beautiful show. What a shame to think that someone who could have appreciated that could have been sitting in Mr. Brockman's seat.
By Tinknocker on 06/02/2009 at 12:56:37
Re: Leonard Cohen at the Wang Theatre
I am glad I didn't waste money going to this. It sounds like adult contemporary hell for people with more money than taste.
By Cornelius Nasty Traps III on 06/02/2009 at 2:42:19
Re: Leonard Cohen at the Wang Theatre
 I agree w/ some of the points made by the reviewer. I had some additional issues w/ the musicianship that I won't get into here, but my main concern was the length of the show. 3.5 hours is just too long to sit and listen to music.
By jake z vrackies on 06/02/2009 at 2:51:19
Re: Leonard Cohen at the Wang Theatre
 Worst show I've ever seen. I will never get those three hours back (yes, I finally left with a half hour to stay). I wanted out after about three songs, but was there with someone who wanted to stay. Schlock like that outside of Vegas or a late-night show's house band is so jarring and such a waste of the beautiful interior of the Wang (I spent a lot of time scrutinizing the ceiling, too horrified to watch the hat tipping and sax-thrusting fiasco). The keyboardist hit an giant klunker in the middle of his spotlighted solo and the crowd cheered. Have you ears?? To assume that someone who found the show tacky and musically cringe-worthy is the "wrong reviewer," is likewise to assume that a musical legend doesn't deserve the same scrutiny as any performer.
By favouritedress on 06/02/2009 at 9:47:31
Re: Leonard Cohen at the Wang Theatre
 Worst show I've ever seen. I will never get those three hours back (Yes, I finally left with a half hour to go--I wanted out after about three songs, but was there with someone who wanted to stay.) Schlock like that outside of Vegas or a late-night show's house band is so jarring and such a waste of the beautiful interior of the Wang (I spent a lot of time scrutinizing the ceiling, too horrified to watch the hat tipping and sax-thrusting fiasco). The keyboardist hit an giant klunker in the middle of his spotlighted solo and the crowd cheered. Have you ears?? To assume that someone who found the show tacky and musically cringe-worthy is the "wrong reviewer," is likewise to assume that a musical legend doesn't deserve the same scrutiny as any performer.
By favouritedress on 06/02/2009 at 9:48:43
Re: Leonard Cohen at the Wang Theatre
I agree with the reviewer wholeheartedly.  I should have known before I ponied up 150 bucks plus service charges to see this show that it would be a total letdown.  Sacrilege, right?  not really.  I have been following Cohens carrer and work for the wrong side of 35 years.  This show was instrumental ear rape.  That's right.  the sax player should be arrested.  After viewing clips of recent LC shows, I thought there was something a bit off, but his voice was still wonderful and the band sounded, well, tight.  To see these cruise ship hotel house band rejects hack up and retool Cohen's already brilliant arrangements was just such a horrorshow.  I have seen LC on four continents and seven (or eight) different countries.  He has aged well.  His voice was still powerful and moving  Unfortunately his audience of Johnny come latelys and his Berkelee sideshow monkeys really ruined what shoiuld have (and always has been) a near religious experience for me.  It was pathetic to witness a legend and a pioneer try to reinvent himself with results that were just plain silly.  Luckily Cohen has the goods to make even this adult contemporary fluffing appear genuine, but alas I will not be fooled again.  I still have my memories of Cohen's greatest years in my brain and it was just a total shame to see him slumming with this band of bozos playing music for people who clearly do not get it.  Also what kind of dope beings electronic drums on tour.  I mean really, this isn't your practice space you idiot.  It is a near acoustically perfect theater and you have the audacity to hump a bunch of rubber pads and a laptop into the venue like that's "cutting edge" or something?  Why would you think anyone wants to hear that tin sounding midi crap?  Still the bleating and warbling sax guy was the joke here.  Maybe the punchline too.  It was just so unnatural sounding and disingenuous. 
By baboons on 06/02/2009 at 11:51:09
Re: Leonard Cohen at the Wang Theatre
I agree with the reviewer wholeheartedly.  I should have known before I ponied up 150 bucks plus service charges to see this show that it would be a total letdown.  Sacrilege, right?  not really.  I have been following Cohens carrer and work for the wrong side of 35 years.  This show was instrumental ear rape.  That's right.  the sax player should be arrested.  After viewing clips of recent LC shows, I thought there was something a bit off, but his voice was still wonderful and the band sounded, well, tight.  To see these cruise ship hotel house band rejects hack up and retool Cohen's already brilliant arrangements was just such a horrorshow.  I have seen LC on four continents and seven (or eight) different countries.  He has aged well.  His voice was still powerful and moving  Unfortunately his audience of Johnny come latelys and his Berkelee sideshow monkeys really ruined what shoiuld have (and always has been) a near religious experience for me.  It was pathetic to witness a legend and a pioneer try to reinvent himself with results that were just plain silly.  Luckily Cohen has the goods to make even this adult contemporary fluffing appear genuine, but alas I will not be fooled again.  I still have my memories of Cohen's greatest years in my brain and it was just a total shame to see him slumming with this band of bozos playing music for people who clearly do not get it.  Also what kind of dope beings electronic drums on tour?  I mean really, this isn't your practice space you idiot.  It is a near acoustically perfect theater and you have the audacity to hump a bunch of rubber pads and a laptop into the venue like that's "cutting edge" or something?  Why would you think anyone wants to hear that tin sounding midi crap?  Still, the bleating and warbling sax guy was the joke here.  Maybe the punchline too.  It was just so unnatural sounding and disingenuous. 
By baboons on 06/02/2009 at 11:52:52
Re: Leonard Cohen at the Wang Theatre
This reviewer is an absolute dipshit and must have been a different show the one as was at, which was in a word: flawless.
By wnoons on 06/05/2009 at 6:02:53
Leonard Cohen at the Wang Theatre
This reviewer is obviously a dipshit and must have been at show other that the one I attended, which was in a word: flawless.
By wnoons on 06/05/2009 at 6:06:12
Leonard Cohen at the Wang Theatre
This reviewer is obviously a dipshit and must have been at show other that the one I attended, which was, in a word: flawless.
By wnoons on 06/05/2009 at 6:06:32

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