Humour Of Cohen's Lyrics

General discussion about Leonard Cohen's songs and albums
User avatar
linmag
Posts: 892
Joined: Fri Jun 28, 2002 10:10 pm
Location: Gloucester, UK
Contact:

Post by linmag »

"I can't forget, but I don't remember who", and "I'll be there today with a big bouquet of cactus".
Linda

1972: Leeds, 2008: Manchester, Lyon, London O2, 2009: Wet Weybridge, 2012: Hop Farm/Wembley Arena
Aavalanche
Posts: 27
Joined: Fri Apr 04, 2003 4:48 pm
Location: beneath the golden hill

Post by Aavalanche »

Most of Songs of Love and Hate is suffused with black humour. A brilliant album. One of his best.
Unlike the postings of partisan which are nasty obsession. :twisted:

Shouldering your loneliness like a gun you will not learn to aim.
Aavalanche
User avatar
tom.d.stiller
Posts: 1213
Joined: Fri Mar 07, 2003 8:18 am
Location: ... between the lines ...
Contact:

Post by tom.d.stiller »

Aavalanche -

You will know from other threads that I share your views about the nasty nature of many (not all) of partisan's posts. But I think we should not let ourselves be contaminated by their spirit, and fall prey to the same style we rightly criticize in them. Your side blow, unfortunately, came close to it.

Tom
Last edited by tom.d.stiller on Sat Jun 21, 2003 9:03 am, edited 1 time in total.
Nazio
Posts: 1
Joined: Sat Jun 21, 2003 12:43 am
Location: Bilbao, Spain

Post by Nazio »

Going back to the subject...

Apart from some other songs mentioned before, I have always found the following lines from "Chelsea Hotel" funny enough:

"You told me again you preferred handsome men
but for me you would make an exception. "

The delivery in the live version with the perfectly-timed chuckle helps a lot.

It reminds me a joke by a cousin of mine who used to say that ugly men are all the rage now, and that gives us a huge advantage! (I pity the other poor guys, BTW...)
User avatar
Jo
Posts: 293
Joined: Wed Aug 28, 2002 10:07 pm
Location: Cape Town, South Africa

Post by Jo »

I've always loved Leonard's black humour - but my personal favourite is:

everybody knows you've been discreet
there were so many people you just had to meet
without your clothes

:lol:
Jo
"... to make a pale imitation of reality with twenty-six juggled letters"
"... all words are lies because they can only represent one of many levels of being"
Sober noises of morning in a marginal land.
User avatar
witty_owl
Posts: 408
Joined: Thu Apr 10, 2003 6:07 am

Post by witty_owl »

What a splendid opening for a song!
I lit a thin green candle, to make you jealous of me.
But the room just filled up with mosquitos, they heard that my body was free.
:lol: Witty Owl.
Shoe
Posts: 10
Joined: Mon Jun 16, 2003 11:05 pm
Location: Norwich, England

Post by Shoe »

Hi everybody! Thank you for all your suggestions, I might try to put them in some kind of order soon. Incidently I've just started to listen to DEATH OF A LADIES MAN much more. I've had it for ages but not gave it the attension it deserves untill recently. I think that DOALM could go in a FUNNY ALBUMS catagory.....
User avatar
Rhodes
Posts: 56
Joined: Wed Jul 02, 2003 5:08 pm
Location: Brampton, Ontario

Post by Rhodes »

I think that 'The Butcher' is full of humour. Is it just me?
User avatar
greta
Posts: 182
Joined: Tue Jul 01, 2003 12:19 pm
Location: Tallinn,Estonia

Post by greta »

"the monkey and the plywood violin..."
seems quite humourous to me...
magneticcry
Posts: 53
Joined: Thu Jul 24, 2003 11:52 am
Location: Estonia

Post by magneticcry »

hi greta and all the others!
you are so damn right...
there are jokes everywhere in his songs,lurking,just waiting for being discovered...not every listener gets the point of those humorous parts ;)
a tear is like a magnet- it always makes another tear to follow :(
Cia
Posts: 255
Joined: Sat Dec 07, 2002 4:03 am
Location: Denmark

Post by Cia »

the bed is kind of narrow, but my arms are open wide

Who would care about a narrow bed then 8)

Cia
User avatar
lizzytysh
Posts: 25531
Joined: Thu Jun 27, 2002 8:57 pm
Location: Florida, U.S.A.

Post by lizzytysh »

Nice image, Cia :) .
Vonny
Posts: 10
Joined: Fri Jun 10, 2005 3:47 pm

Post by Vonny »

"you went right on loving
and i went on a fast
now i am too thin
and your love is too vast"

FANTASTIC AND VERY FUNNY - ALWAYS MAKES ME LAUGH OUT LOUD !!
User avatar
david birkett
Posts: 302
Joined: Tue Jul 13, 2004 12:05 am
Location: HITCHIN, ENGLAND
Contact:

Humour

Post by david birkett »

A stimulating discussion (is it a coincidence that many of the particpants are British?).

Almost all the songs are laced with mordant humour, and those knee-jerk 'listeners' who attach the label of depressing have foolishly equated the admittedly narrow range and lugubrious sound of Cohen's voice with a lack of wit and charm.

I get very boring on this, but the very rhymes used in perhaps his most profound song, "Hallelujah" are hilarious, and embody his tendency to combine the sacred and the profane.

Infact, I was tempted to say that all the songs are funny, but this is perhaps an extreme view ("Hey That's No Way" isn't, I think, and one would probably have to exclude the instrumental "Tacoma Trailer").

Thought you might enjoy this from Kurt Vonnegut:
Vonnegut: Well, of course, humor is an almost physiological response, to fears, as I understand it. What Freud said about humor was that it is a response to frustration -- one of several. A dog, he said, when he can't get out a gate, will scratch and start digging and making meaningless gestures -- perhaps growling or whatever to deal with frustration or surprise or fear. I saw the destruction of Dresden. I mean I saw it before and then came out of an air-raid shelter and saw it afterwards, and certainly one response is laughter. God knows, that's the soul seeking some relief. So yes, I suppose any subject is subject to laughter and I suppose there was laughter of a very ghastly kind by victims in Auschwitz.

Cargas: I've heard this laughter described as defiance to God, in the sense of Isaac's laughter. But then there would be a distinction between laughter and humor.

Vonnegut: Yes. A great deal of laughter is induced by fear. We were working on a funny television series years ago we were trying to put one together and we had as a basic principle that death had to be mentioned in every show. And this ingredient would make any laughter deeper without the audience's realizing how we were inducing belly laughs -- we hoped. We intended to do it with the mention of death. There is a superficial sort of laughter. I don't consider Bob Hope a humorist, really. He's a comedian. It's very thin stuff; nothing troubling is mentioned. I used to laugh my head off at Laurel and Hardy and could still do it now. And there's terrible tragedy there somehow, as these people are too sweet to survive in this world and they are in terrible danger all the time. They could be so easily killed.
Remember how the murderous monk in "The Name of the Rose" hated laughter?

All the best -

David
The Ogre does what ogres can,
Deeds quite impossible for Man,
But one prize is beyond his reach:
The Ogre cannot master speech.
User avatar
hydriot
Posts: 895
Joined: Sun May 21, 2006 3:07 am
Location: back in the UK

Post by hydriot »

It would probably be quicker to identify the songs completely without humour.

LC's humour varies from the obvious and jolly ("discreet/meet/without your clothes") to the dark and painfully true. In the latter category, I place the whole of Everybody Knows, which is certainly one of my all time favourites. It is so so real.

But gentle humour also underpins his most intense imagery. So real, so true of life, and yet so amusing are the lines:

"I saw a beggar leaning on his wooden crutch. He said to me 'You should not ask for so much'. And a pretty girl leaning in her darkened door, she cried to me 'Hey why not ask for more?'

Those lines remind me of Polly Garter in Under Milk Wood: "Isn't life terrible, thank God!"
“If you do have love it's a kind of wound, and if you don't have it it's worse.” - Leonard, July 1988
Post Reply

Return to “Leonard Cohen's music”