Re: Leonard Cohen: Hallelujah: A New Biography by Tim Footman
Posted: Tue Jan 19, 2010 8:02 am
MaryB wrote:Talk about timing, Footman's is perfect. Just in time to cash in on a name by producing a mediocre book.

http://www.leonardcohenforum.com/
MaryB wrote:Talk about timing, Footman's is perfect. Just in time to cash in on a name by producing a mediocre book.
After reading the Q&A cited above and disliking Footman's attitude, I was tempted to dismiss this article.DrHGuy wrote:Motivated in part by some of the comments in this sequence, I did a Q&A with Tim Footman that is posted at http://1heckofaguy.com/2010/01/11/exclu ... biography/
A compelling new Leonard Cohen Cohen biography
He may be 75-years-old, but Leonard Cohen shows no signs of slowing down, thanks in part to a two years and counting global tour to reacquaint himself with adoring audiences and concurrently iron out allegedly swindled finances. Though his name might not immediately jump off the page for younger readers, the poetic songwriter’s tunes have been covered by Jeff Buckley, Bono, The Pixies, Nick Cave, R.E.M., Don Henley and someone major from just about ever genre known the world over. He’s not a traditional hit maker per say, but Cohen’s legend comes in a remarkable ability to tell a story, coupled with a self-deprecating, sardonic persona that would rather embrace Buddhist meditation than fame or material possessions.
Such is the somewhat complex though instantly likeable personality presented by Tim Footman throughout Hallelujah: A New Biography (Chrome Dreams) in what might not be the longest or more insightful Cohen biography on the market, but certainly the most current as it puts the aging subject back on the radar of contemporary culture. Though it lacks the tawdry details of most rock star tell-alls, there are allusions to drug and alcohol use, plus the occasional romantic escapade (including Janis Joplin).
However, the actual assessments of songs and a cannon of albums subject to endless scrutiny are much more compelling, if only for the varying emotional framework in which they were composed. Cohen’s financial dramas are divulged but not dwelled upon, while second hand source quotes from the singer himself indicate a forgiving attitude. It’s in this realization, coupled with the legacy he’s carefully sculpted since the 1960s, that paint the subject as a true luminary, who’s admittedly an acquired taste, but one that truly gets sweeter with every exploration.
-Andy Argyrakis