Leonard Cohen Music:

Dear Heather



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Leonard Cohen Music:
Dear Heather



Music
Dear Heather
by Leonard Cohen

Dear Heather
List Price: $8.99Label: Sony

Salesrank: 10844

Released: October 26, 2004
Our Price: $6.00
Used Price: $6.53
Media: Audio CD

Dear Heather Track Listing:
1. Go No More A-Roving
2. Because Of
3. The Letters
4. Undertow
5. Morning Glory
6. On That Day
7. Villanelle For Our Time
8. There For You
9. Dear Heather
10. Nightingale
11. To A Teacher
12. The Faith
13. Tennessee Waltz- Live

Editorial Review:
Japanese pressing of the acclaimed singer/songwriter's 2004 album, includes the exclusive live version of 'Tennessee Waltz'. Sony.

Description of Dear Heather:
Leonard Cohen must be the envy of countless singer-songwriters. Who else has been cozily buffered from the ravages of pop music than this eminent but never particularly prominent Canadian wordsmith? Nearing four decades as a recording artist, Cohen has never left his original label, despite failing to ever register anything resembling a commercial hit. Long ago shed of the "new Dylan" trappings that greeted his first recordings, Cohen now cushions his carefully wrought lyrics in smooth keyboard-and-vocal-heavy arrangements that owe far more to MOR pop and cabaret then folk-rock. His words and delivery have become more nuanced and playful as he's grayed. Listen to the sexy self-deprecation of "Because of" ("Because of a few songs/ Wherein I spoke of their mystery/ Women have been/ Exceptionally kind in my old age") or the weary resolve of his 9-11 statement, "On That Day" ("Did you go crazy or did you report/ On that day…they wounded New York?"). Dear Heather, likes its creator, is at once new and old, familiar and fresh. --Steven Stolder

Dear Heather Reviews:
Beguiling album, one that grows on you over time... 5 Star Review
2009-05-04 - Many have written that this album is minor Leonard Cohen, but the more I listen to it, the more it grows in depth, sadness, poetry, and beauty. I find myself breaking it out a lot more than some of his other, better known works.

There are many pleasures in this thirteen song set. The songs are much shorter than the previous albums, but it works well here. The opener, Go No More A-Roving, is a wonderful way to start off the album. Cohen puts a Lord Bryon poem to music! Then it just gets better. The beauty of the song "Because Of" is quite beguiling and tender. I love the song Villanelle For Out Time. It started out a capella, but goes into a beautiful arrangement. Nightingale is adorable, with a beautiful musical arrangement with a Jew's harp (and wonderfully sad, moving lyrics), and the song The Faith (based on a Quebec folk song) is deeply moving and majestic. The extra live track, an arrangement of Tennessee Waltz, is enthusiastically performed. This isn't the first time Cohen has covered a standard. His version of Irving Berlin's Always off The Future is wonderful, too.

All Cohen fans should pick this one up, but don't expect to be blown away by it. It will grow on you very gradually, but you'll adore it.

Dear Heather 5 Star Review
2008-09-25 - Dear Heather being Cohens 2004 recording is a splendid record. Cohen was 70 at the time and his vocal skills have certainly not suffered. He sings with the same strength and vigor as he did in days of yore. The lyrics are as good as ever. The book-let is a really strange one. There are numerous drawings that make no sense whatsoever but I guess I am not that smart that I can figure out what they mean. Sharon Robinson and Cohen have once again collaborated on some of the songs, The Letters, There for you and Go No More A-roving. Cohen is definitely not on a decline as many other reviewers have written. Cohen is as good as he ever was!


Ah- the old days... 2 Star Review
2008-07-25 - From a tragic LC fan- just saw LC live in London and he was awesome- brought the wisdom and power of age to the old and even older lyrics! But this album lacks any sort of spark at all and is inconsistent in style. He CAN still sing as he showed in London- but doesn't even try in this album.
But then to expect continued creativity at 70+ is maybe too much!
Reading poetry in an album just pisses me off. And actually, that was the one moment when he didn't get rapturous applause at the gig- when he recited poetry for a few minutes.
Still I'll get it out now and then probably...it's not awful, not kinda average. His worst I think.

Intriguing, But Certainly Not Classic 3 Star Review
2007-04-04 - Leonard Cohen's dense, sometimes morbid work can be an acquired taste, whether you're reading his two novels, perusing his several books of poetry, or listening to his albums of mournful, hyper-literate songs. Until now, however, any excursion into Cohen's shadowy world has always been worth the ride. Cohen is too meticulous a craftsman ever to release a truly mediocre album, but "Dear Heather" suffers from a distinct absence of heft. Although they are undeniably well-made, the songs and poems presented here seem to lack importance; none force you, as listener, to live more vividly in the world; none enrich your experience, in the way that early songs such as "Suzanne" and "Famous Blue Raincoat" did. Which is not to say that this album is bad, by any means. But I have been a Cohen fan for nearly thirty years, and this is the only Leonard Cohen record that I have ever found to be--quite frankly--somewhat forgetable. Neophytes would do better to begin with The Songs of Leonard Cohen, or with his bizzare-but-magnificent second novel, Beautiful Losers.

The Slow Demise of the Ladies' Man 3 Star Review
2007-01-26 - It took me quite a few listens to warm up to this CD. Cohen's voice, which has never been strong, seems to have faded to raspy whisper. The backup singers take on a much larger role than any other CD and seem to be required to carry the melody on some songs, while others are spoken word poems. The CD is filled the typical Cohen somberness, but this time delivered with a lack energy. The addition of the live version of "The Tennessee Waltz" with its steel guitars seems out of place compared to the subdued tone of the rest of the album. Highlights of the CD include "Go No More A-Roving," "Because Of," "The Letters," and "Villanelle For Our Time." All-in-all, a mildly disappointing effort from this cultural icon.

Those new to Cohen are better off starting with one of his first four albums-- the "Songs" trilogy and "New Skin for the Old Ceremony."










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