Article

Deep inside the Song: "Hallelujah" by Leonard Cohen (and Jeff Buckley, etc.)

Great writing as always.  I'd love to see all 80 verses somewhere as I'm sure music historians would.  Same with the extra verses to Coal Miner's Daughter, but I think I read somewhere that they were lost.

So far I find the quality of the writing has been maintained since the changeover.

I've seen  Mr. Cohen,  Mr. Buckley and Ms. Lang perform this live.  Kind of weird now that I think about it.  Mainly because all three versions, while quite different, were quite satisfying. They quenched a thirst the audience had. Whether we knew it or not. Every audience seemed to pause, just slightly,  before applause broke out. The silence of fulfillment? A great song can do that. But there is a reverence that the song elicites simply by being announced, or hearing the first few bars.

Which is why I'm quite glad I've never heard any of the cheesy "Idol" versions.
 

A few years ago I read an interview with John Cale where he was telling the story  how he came up with the edited version of Cohen's song which pretty much forms the basis of all the subsequent covers.  He said he'd heard Cohen perform it and asked him for the lyrics, a ton of which duly arrived.  Cale said he dumped all the religious stuff and was left with just so many verses. He recorded his version for a Cohen tribute album, I'm Your Fan, in 1991.  I read somewhere it's also on the Shrek soundtrack.

I'm still meditating on Kim's amazing article.  Like the song, I may be deciphering her own 'challenge' for some time.  But for now I'll recommend Rufus Wainwright's version.  (Son of Loudon III and Kate McGarrigle for the uninitiated)  The 'emotive melody' that draws so many singers to perform it is gone here - the singing pared back to its basics.  Wainwright's take could never be mistaken for a hymn.  He restores the verse left out by so many, despite Buckley using it. The mystery of sexualy intimacy as part of the spiritual journey: "when I moved in you."  Something about Rufus using that verse refutes the 'castrated' used lately.  I recommend this his interpretation highly.

I don't think we'd have this conversation without the great John Cale's cover (the missing link between Cohen and Buckley).

 

I am a fortunate man. I have only heard four folks perform the song -- at least knowingly. First was Lenny's own on "Various Positions" that I picked up in Paris because his American label considered him box office poison and would not release it. After getting an early copy of  "Grace"  I specifically recall my girlfriend disparaging it as Buckley was all too obviously imitating his father. She was, however, as many others later became, taken with the lone non-original. Then Cohen released a significantly more invigorating live recording, which became my go to version. Being a fan of both John Cale and Rufus Wainwright, theirs as well. (There is an advantage to not listening to radio (save for a bit of NPR and some indies) and not having television.) I do not know whether Cohen saw the possibilities in the song that Buckley did, but his intrepretation has made all the difference. Unfortunately, when songs become standards, we have to put up with godawful renditions. That does not dminish the song, only the singer. In great songs there are many stories. The more adept musicians and vocalists visualize them for us. I have often thought that Buckley's story is not so much about a woman, but rather an anthem to a father he never knew.

Great article, although I think you've missed a classic Cohen subtlety whereby the "hallelujah" changes from its literal meaning, in some of the verses and as discussed by the author, to allude to the sexual climax in others, eg "from your lips she drew the hallelujah", etc. Interested to know if others agree?