Spine tingling! LEONARD COHEN - You want it darker REACTION - First time hearing.

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  • Опубликовано: 17 окт 2024

Комментарии • 164

  • @sherryheim5504
    @sherryheim5504 2 года назад +131

    Cohen knows he is aware that he is dying by the time he started writing and recording this album. I miss this man so much, I was addicted to his poetry and music since I was a teen. This song gives me chills. When Cohen was asked if he feared death he chuckled and said "Fear? No, death is not what I fear, it's the preliminaries." Thank you for your reaction.

    • @imadomyrdin
      @imadomyrdin Год назад

      yes you are right ruclips.net/video/ugh8Xe6hX7U/видео.html that was a good interview.

  • @davidbentley145
    @davidbentley145 2 года назад +79

    You are brave brother to play this...much respect to you...Leonard had a very hypnotic voice as he grew older...he was a champion of the common man...most of his songs portrayed the human condition with compassion and illustrated all the strengths and weaknesses of us all and used this lense equally on himself...

    • @erco9167
      @erco9167 6 месяцев назад

      Leonard Cohen was a prophet of God, literally. He saw the future, and it is murder.

  • @gs8191
    @gs8191 2 года назад +87

    This was Leonard's last album when he was in his early 80's and near death. He literally had to will himself to get out of what would soon be his deathbed and finish this album. This song is about preparing to die and reaching out to God, even though he always questioned His plan and why He allowed such evil into the world.

    • @TheKCBBQ
      @TheKCBBQ 2 года назад +4

      He uses the Hebrew word Hineni "Here I am!"

    • @alizacherish4595
      @alizacherish4595 Год назад +1

      @TheKCBBQ it means....whom shall i send, who will go? Here I AM ,Lord, send me! ...Isaiah 6:8 prophecy of JESUS COMING ..

    • @qwertygjfeykbstikudeukfsvncwyv
      @qwertygjfeykbstikudeukfsvncwyv Год назад +2

      @@alizacherish4595that explains "a million candles burning for the love that never came"

    • @toddstevens13
      @toddstevens13 Год назад +9

      @@qwertygjfeykbstikudeukfsvncwyv A Millions of candles that were lighted in Church hoping for "His Help", only to be totally let down, over and over again, yet believing the propaganda or organized religion.

  • @hazelmaylebrun6243
    @hazelmaylebrun6243 2 года назад +51

    Leonard is a rabbit hole you may never come out of. LOL.

    • @Stevie1966mar
      @Stevie1966mar Год назад

      Kinda get where it's going... but the man always had an agenda... RIP, you're sorely missed.

    • @normano3573
      @normano3573 Год назад

      Perfectly put. From the rabbit hole...

  • @mariannshake4396
    @mariannshake4396 Год назад +20

    Leonard Cohen has been my man for 50 years. He just got better and deeper over the years.
    He was dying when this album was made. His son Adam set up the recording session and Leonard bought a medical-grade easy chair to support his spine as it was deteriorating. He died soon after, the day before Trump was elected. I figured he knew nothing good was going to happen, so made a statement.
    The Shaar Hashomayim
    choir, from a Montreal synagogue is the backup.

    • @Kat-gx3se
      @Kat-gx3se 3 месяца назад +1

      I recall thinking the same thing. Trump won and Leonard decided it was time to go.

  • @solitarybee3714
    @solitarybee3714 2 года назад +26

    I am in my 70s now and have been a die-hard Leonard Cohen devotee for well over thirty years. He has so many great songs, I will not recommend just one as my favorite. But I will say that before you pass judgement on this one, please listen to others recorded when he was a younger man than this. He is truly in a class by himself and is one of the greatest of all time. Love your reactions, thank you!

  • @melissakhalar1842
    @melissakhalar1842 2 года назад +23

    Rest in Peace Mr. Leonard Cohen. I love you and miss you. ❤

  • @lexie9466
    @lexie9466 Год назад +9

    At the time this album came out, hearing him sing "I'm ready my lord" and then he died.. still gives me the absolute chills even after listening it million times and the time that passed since he left us 🥲🥰

  • @FantasticBabblings
    @FantasticBabblings Год назад +16

    This album was released 17 days before Leonard died. He sings the Hebrew word hineni, which means “here am I” followed in English by “I’m ready my lord”. He was ready to meet his maker.

  • @bamagirl218
    @bamagirl218 2 года назад +35

    You’ve just gotten started Harri! He’s the best! Wonderful storyteller. He wrote the beautiful song Hallelujah. Do more of him please

  • @shelaghkeen7960
    @shelaghkeen7960 Год назад +3

    I was fortunate enough to see him live on many occasions. I bought his first album "the songs of Leonard Cohen" not long after it was released in the late 60's I have every album after that. He was a great entertainer and performer. RIP Leonard

  • @davidbentley145
    @davidbentley145 2 года назад +30

    If you want something a little lighter but just as profound from Leonard try "If it be your will" with the Webb sisters from his Live in London concert...absolutely beautiful...very uplifting

  • @ednoponen2943
    @ednoponen2943 2 года назад +16

    Pure genius! I don't think I've ever heard a Leonard Cohen song that didn't grab my brain and heart and not want to let go. Nothing else to say. Great reaction, Harri !

  • @pauldover1403
    @pauldover1403 2 года назад +44

    It's difficult to talk briefly about this masterpiece. As many people have said, it's Cohen's death song, made in contemplation of his last days and no doubt heavily influenced by the death of Marianne. He himself died a short while after recording this and followed behind Marianne, holding her hand.
    Cohen claimed that he wasn't religious, but he was. His whole work, poetry, novels and songs are imbued with religion and in his last days he celebrated his Jewish heritage with the use of the Synagogue choir and Cantor as well as the centrepiece of the song, "Hineni," which means "here I am." But even here Leonard's fascination with Jesus is apparent.
    It's about a man before his maker too. The first verse is a comparison between the glory of God and the inadequacy of man and it has the first use of "you want it darker" which is the result of the killing of the pleas for help made in the lighting of candles. As far as the use of "the help that never came" in the case of God this is reminiscent of the words quoted by Jesus on the cross, "My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me," in the case of humanity it might be an allusion to the depravity of mankind.
    The third verse is probably the most religious as it looks at the paradox of a loving God who allows evil to flourish amongst His people. Cohen asserts that the love of God is true because "It's written in the Scriptures," yet still we end with the flame being extinguished.
    The fourth verse is about a Holocaust, not THE Holocaust and looks at the evil and hatred in the world. It pictures guards lining up prisoners to execute them, but at the same time, the evil is banal (commonplace) and omnipresent. Like the demons themselves, evil is middle class and tame, not just barbaric and savage, and people are given permission by God to "murder and maim" and they use it.
    In the final two verses the song swings around again to the beginning.
    It appears to me that Cohen is acknowledging both the perfection of God and that He allows the world to become worse and worse until the crisis of the Judgment. But still, amidst all of the evil, Cohen says to Him, "Here I am Lord."
    That's my interpretation but there are many better ones.
    It's worth mentioning that you need to listen to Cohen intoning his words, as with his other songs he doesn't just utter them, he plays with them. The rhythms he uses to do this are very interesting in themselves.
    The song was produced by his son, Adam Cohen.

    • @NathanVeenstra
      @NathanVeenstra 2 года назад +6

      I don’t think you could call Cohen religious if he said himself that he wasn’t. You _could_ however, call him spiritual, because then it’s not tied to any religion. 😊

    • @c8Lorraine1
      @c8Lorraine1 2 года назад +3

      Wow
      Thank you for sharing this information with us.

    • @edprzydatek8398
      @edprzydatek8398 2 года назад

      @@NathanVeenstra Good point.

    • @edprzydatek8398
      @edprzydatek8398 2 года назад +3

      Are you saying that he held Marianne's hand when she was dying? Did not know that. But, yes, he did die a few months later. You have some interesting interpretations of this song. In any case, I'm 74 and this song scares the hell out of me. I mean, is God not all loving and forgiving? And the music is not so much religious or choir-like but more like a foreboding chant. Really a dark song but I hope Leonard Cohen is resting in peace.

    • @pauldover1403
      @pauldover1403 2 года назад +2

      @@edprzydatek8398
      Hi Ed,
      No, he wasn't there at her death, I was just making an allusion to the first paragraphs of his letter to her.
      “Well Marianne, it’s come to this time when we are really so old and our bodies are falling apart and I think I will follow you very soon. Know that I am so close behind you that if you stretch out your hand, I think you can reach mine."
      I'm not scared of death, I had a life-threatening condition a few years back and I realised then that although I don't welcome pain and I wanted to see my young children grow I wasn't scared of dying, but maybe that's because of my faith. But I can see what you mean about the song, it does sound very dark and seems to talk about a God who either doesn't care or has no power to care. But I think that the clue is in the word, "Hineni." Cohen may see a world where it seems to him there is little hope, but his recurrent commitment is, "Here I am, I'm ready, My Lord."

  • @bazza5699
    @bazza5699 2 года назад +9

    Lenny is a legend.. I've loved his music since the early 1990's when a friend of mine introduced me to his music by playing me i'm your man.. incredible poet

  • @27thangel23
    @27thangel23 2 года назад +6

    Utterly sublime. From Canada... Leonard Cohen, Peace, love and bellbottoms.

  • @Cynthia...
    @Cynthia... 2 года назад +35

    Leonard has to have some of the best lyrics ever.🇨🇦

    • @s4dreamland671
      @s4dreamland671 2 года назад

      Very true Marcia..

    • @Cynthia...
      @Cynthia... 2 года назад

      @@s4dreamland671 You mean I look like Marcia in the photo I take it.

    • @davelister2961
      @davelister2961 2 года назад +1

      He does.

    • @johnharkness7114
      @johnharkness7114 2 года назад +2

      He was a poet first and only went into singing to spread his poetry further

    • @jimcarlson6157
      @jimcarlson6157 Год назад

      ​@@Cynthia... "Marcia, Marcia, Marcia".........

  • @MrSpork13
    @MrSpork13 Год назад +10

    Cohen aged like a fine wine. It's a shame he didn't live for 100 years.

  • @Gabeconstantinemusic
    @Gabeconstantinemusic 2 года назад +15

    This was his last album and he died shortly after recording it. This song is powerful as fuck because it’s essentially his last will and testament as an artist and a musician. And as a man who knows his days are numbered. Powerful. His other stuff is great too. And if you like this kind of music, I’d highly recommend you listen/react to some Tom Waits songs.

  • @slaveriotgaming1814
    @slaveriotgaming1814 Год назад +9

    Leonard Cohen is the best songwriter in my opinion. I'm a metal head through and through but Mr Cohen is a legend

  • @MrDalebenberger
    @MrDalebenberger 2 года назад +3

    This is just another example of Leonard’s genius. When he was younger, his lady had to convince him to sing. I am glad he listened. His gravelly deep voice was so unique and powerful. Truly a Canadian legend. Thanks for this one, Harri

  • @EchoesDaBear
    @EchoesDaBear 2 года назад +9

    Have listened to Leonard Cohen since the early 90's (thanks to a movie called Pump Up The Volume, where his track Everybody Knows is used quite regularly - and is a definite must to check!) Then a high school teacher introduced me to his album, The Future - eyes were officially opened to his brilliance! Had to dig deeper.
    When this track hit - I was rapt, but I also had this feeling that he knew his end was near. Sure enough - he passed 17 days after the album was released! RIP Mr. Cohen - Canadian songwriting legend! You were ready for the Lord...let's hope they were ready for you! Peace.

  • @AndImsomelady-fq6cw
    @AndImsomelady-fq6cw Год назад +3

    This song has everything a great L cohen song has. It’s a conversation with death, a look at our world and the misery we spread. The thousand candles looking for help that never came always make me think of Aleppo.

  • @davidbentley145
    @davidbentley145 2 года назад +9

    Hats off to Leonard...he always called it the way he saw it

  • @alankinkle5207
    @alankinkle5207 2 года назад +13

    Kudos to you for reacting to Leonard Cohen. A true poet.
    Next you should listen to some of his early work like Suzanne, Goodbye Marianne and Sisters of Mercy before moving on to his most popular song, Hallelujah.

  • @johnkochen7264
    @johnkochen7264 2 года назад +11

    Cohen is always pure poetry put to music. The man was a genius.
    Edit to add:
    Hineni Hineni
    I'm with you, my Lord

  • @charlesmccarley7164
    @charlesmccarley7164 2 года назад +10

    At the end of the chorus Cohen sings “Hineni, hineni; I'm ready, my lord.” Hineni is Hebrew for “here I am,” and is the response Abraham gives when God calls on him to sacrifice his son Isaac. It is also the name of a prayer of preparation and humility, addressed to God, chanted by the cantor on Rosh Hashanah.

  • @davidbentley145
    @davidbentley145 2 года назад +9

    You must remember that Leonard was rapidly comimg to the end of his life and these pieces are his commentary/observations on what he sees of this world

  • @melissafernandez79
    @melissafernandez79 2 года назад +3

    Thank you, Harri, for sharing this--I'd not heard it until now. His talent was magnificent. An interesting life and what an impressive body of music and poetry he left behind for us.

  • @Bloodgod40
    @Bloodgod40 2 года назад +3

    This song is off of Cohen's last album, and is the title track (the album is also called You Want It Darker). The album was written and recorded while he was terminally ill with leukemia. Almost every song on it is about some aspect of facing death.

  • @stardust164
    @stardust164 2 года назад +3

    peace and love from Canada

  • @brendaotoole4012
    @brendaotoole4012 2 года назад +9

    Such a storyteller. ‘Famous Blue Raincoat’ is my favorite of his. 🙂

    • @bazza5699
      @bazza5699 2 года назад +3

      my absolutely favourite Lenny song.. gets me every time he sings.. 'Well I see you there with the rose in your teeth, one more thin gypsy thief'

    • @joskogeler6421
      @joskogeler6421 2 года назад +1

      Did you hear Aurora's tribute to Cohen, singing Famous blue raincoat. You should

  • @patrician7445
    @patrician7445 2 года назад +5

    I really like his "Bird On A Wire."

  • @rochellesantos4618
    @rochellesantos4618 2 года назад +5

    "Magnified and sanctified" is the beginning of the prayer we say for the dead called the "kaddish", which means holiness. He was reciting his own kaddish for himself. He was feeling his death. "Heninee" can also mean I am here and ready to go to God.
    The soul is holy but human deeds can be an abomination of holiness.
    I agree with your interpretation.

  • @alloralou4722
    @alloralou4722 2 года назад +1

    Such a beautiful poet. He lead such a remarkable life and so much of it is in his music. It was so sad to see him go.
    Dance Me to the End of Love is one of my favorites.

  • @pamb.7753
    @pamb.7753 8 месяцев назад +2

    Saw Cohen in 2012. He passed in 2016. Thank God I saw him is all I can say.

  • @tomatoseed1443
    @tomatoseed1443 2 года назад +1

    Wow!!! So glad Leonard has been discovered by the reaction community!

  • @diannafindlay825
    @diannafindlay825 Год назад

    love the poet and the singer and have every CD of his work. One of my favs is "Bird on a Wire", however every song and poem is my fav!!! A gift from Montreal, Canada to the world.

  • @jbs454
    @jbs454 2 года назад +10

    Check out Lenard cohen song, Who by fire, it was used on an episode of criminal minds and is really good 👍

    • @hazelmaylebrun6243
      @hazelmaylebrun6243 2 года назад +2

      It was also written as the result of being in a war zone.

  • @ptrlxc
    @ptrlxc 2 года назад +8

    So cool and so smooooth. Hineni generally means “Here I am,” in Hebrew. Cohen was Jewish.

    • @Ozziecatsmom
      @Ozziecatsmom 2 года назад +4

      He seemed to be more than Jewish, that was his base and he went into many other beliefs too. He was a zen monk at one time. We lost an amazing talent.

  • @judymeeker2925
    @judymeeker2925 2 года назад

    Wonderful song with so many spiritual insights if one can hear. Lovely music too.

  • @amitraam1270
    @amitraam1270 Год назад +1

    The opening cuire is from his synagogue. Very unique song. Hineni is also a special word, "Here I am" and "I'm ready", first used by Issac as Abraham was getting ready to sacrifice him as God commanded him.

  • @larryfroot
    @larryfroot 2 года назад +3

    He is chiding God for allowing humanity our will. He is ready to leave to find the same God who has abandoned us. He knew his days were numbered when he wrote and recorded this.

  • @alanbrown8527
    @alanbrown8527 2 года назад +2

    Harri, I am really enjoying your reactions and thoughtful comments. I am a lover of the singer songwriters. On my Mount Olympus, Dylan is Zeus and right along side him are Leonard Cohen, John Prine and Tom Waits.
    There are a whole lot of other wonderful writers along with them, including Joni Mitchell, Neil Young and Bruce Springsteen.
    While we are on Cohen, please play Chelsea Hotel# 2. It’s a beautiful ballad about his brief romantic encounter with Janis Joplin. You will love it! Thank you.

  • @supasoulproductions
    @supasoulproductions 2 года назад +11

    Try his 'Tower of Song', and of course he has the original of 'Hallelujah'.

    • @Ozziecatsmom
      @Ozziecatsmom 2 года назад +2

      Tower of Song is one of my favourites.

    • @natlee8947
      @natlee8947 2 года назад +2

      Love Tower of Song .

    • @pauldover1403
      @pauldover1403 2 года назад +1

      Harri's already reviewed the version from "Live in London."

  • @agnetesorensenelbom5085
    @agnetesorensenelbom5085 2 года назад +2

    Really enjoyed your reaction. I know that Leonard Cohen lived as a munk for a while, always trying to get answers.

  • @donnamikola48
    @donnamikola48 2 года назад +3

    Harri, I think you would appreciate "A Thousand Kisses Deep" and "Dance Me to the End of Love" by Cohen. So well done.

  • @kimmaedke2763
    @kimmaedke2763 2 года назад

    Love this song. Love also the background vocals and organ. Really creates a mood

  • @davidwalsh7128
    @davidwalsh7128 2 года назад

    Thank you, H. This has been a favorite for quite a while...

  • @joyceharkin3641
    @joyceharkin3641 5 месяцев назад

    When it's Leonard Cohen asking if you want it darker, you're know you're going to a very dark place indeed. An incredibly moving and powerful song. Gives me chills when he says "I'm ready my lord."

  • @gerrardpieters5103
    @gerrardpieters5103 2 года назад +3

    Listen to Cohen's interpretation of "The Sound of Silence" (a tribute to Paul Simon) - very hauntingly!!

  • @ponfed
    @ponfed 2 года назад +1

    Leonard Cohen was a Jewish anglophone poet, in a protestant anglophone community, amongst a francophone community. He was a poet and scholar, that was everywhere amongst all those communities. Learning teaching sharing creating. He was with the poets, the painters, the sculptors, the lame and the weak, the downtrodden and the hopeful. The revolutionaries and people who were tired of this shit. Of all languages and faith.
    And... *then* he went into music.
    I'm a Québécois francophone. And I can tell you he is universally beloved here. In the 70s when he came back to Montréal from time to time, he'd give a 45min to 1hr interview to the French CBC, in french, just talking music and philosophy. To the end he was talking his shit and reflecting, pondering... you want it darker?
    A legend... he is missed..

  • @danielcarew8307
    @danielcarew8307 2 года назад +5

    I like your reaction, Harri. Leonard is a singer and story teller, thus the spoken word with the song. We know his voice is deep. I understand that Leonard is not making any judgement on what has happened but is letting his maker know here I am for your judgement. Many of his song are in spiritual was that question man's actions upon others. I'm looking forward to more of your reactions.

  • @davidbentley145
    @davidbentley145 2 года назад +1

    He was every man's brother...Ty Harri

  • @lukasnummer1
    @lukasnummer1 2 года назад +1

    I think one should be aware that this was written after Cohen had received his fatal cancer diagnosis; it was a goodbye song, much like Merle Haggard when he was in hospital writing his "Kern River Blues", with lyrics like "I'm leaving in the morning, get my breakfast in the sky", which was put on paper after he had been told that he wouldn't make it.

  • @robdan4528
    @robdan4528 Год назад +2

    In my opinion Leonard was a poet who became a musician vs Bob Dylan who was a musician who became somewhat of a poet.
    Although I like Bob Dylan, my vote for the person who should have won the Nobel award for literature is Leonard Cohen vs Bob Dylan.

  • @Newfie-zc7ug
    @Newfie-zc7ug Год назад +1

    Oh Canada ..once again ! :)

  • @MichaelButchin
    @MichaelButchin 2 года назад +3

    I think this is an indictment against G-d. It has very little to do with Cohen making his peace before dying. Oh, no. just pay attention to the lyrics-- "a million candles burning for the help that never came?" "I didn't know I had permission to murder and to main?" "If you are the Healer, I am broken and lame?" Cohen is accusing God, and being almost sarcastic. "What, You want it darker? Fine; we kill the Flame." Hineini! Here I am, Lord!
    Cohen never could make a break from G-d; but neither could he forgive Him for the evil He allows in the world.
    Listen carefully to the lyrics of "Hallelujah;" it is NOT a joyful song, as so many try to make it out to be.

  • @double00spy
    @double00spy Год назад +2

    Leonard not only talks with God, but often argues with and criticizes Him (or Her).

  • @shelaghkeen7960
    @shelaghkeen7960 Год назад +1

    This album was released just after he died!

  • @kimbarry4674
    @kimbarry4674 Год назад

    Yes Leonard released this album 3 weeks before he passed❤😢

  • @goldbug7127
    @goldbug7127 Год назад +1

    interpreting poetry, or any art, is tricky because "good" art is universal in that we see ourselves reflected in it; we all interpret it as it applies to ourselves. That said, I think he is speaking for all humanity, asking how dark it must become before He comes again. As bad as it is, is it still not enough? Do you want it darker? That's how it hits me, anyway.

  • @judymeeker2925
    @judymeeker2925 2 года назад +1

    Avalanche by Cohen from his album Songs of Love and Hate tells a story of greed of destroying nature I think? Well worth listening to. The lyrics are deep.

  • @rebeccahutchings5536
    @rebeccahutchings5536 Год назад

    Wow, yeah! He probably is!

  • @ncmathsadist
    @ncmathsadist 3 месяца назад

    This is Leonard Cohen's elegy.

  • @pauldover1403
    @pauldover1403 2 года назад +1

    Johnny Cash's version of "Hurt" is also a great death song.

  • @deborahjohnson-peabody1951
    @deborahjohnson-peabody1951 2 года назад +1

    “Hineni, hineni; I'm ready, my lord.” Hineni is Hebrew for “here I am,” and is the response Abraham gives when God calls on him to sacrifice his son Isaac. It is also the name of a prayer of preparation and humility, addressed to God, chanted by the cantor on Rosh Hashanah.

  • @stephenmclaughlin5191
    @stephenmclaughlin5191 Год назад +1

    I miss Leonard.

  • @sch7194
    @sch7194 Год назад

    Your reaction was spot on....Leonard was dying of bone cancer when he wrote this...its Leonard questioning everything

  • @viceroyzh
    @viceroyzh 2 года назад +2

    "Suzanne" (his first song), "Sisters of mercy", "Avalanche", "Did I ever love you", "One of us cannot be wrong" and so many more a lighter than this one. Well, actually all of his songs are great and lighter than this one. I'm looking forward to you reacting to more songs by Leonard Cohen. Thank you.

  • @wrongosal3892
    @wrongosal3892 Год назад

    you got the point

  • @glibmedley2314
    @glibmedley2314 2 года назад +10

    "Hineni" is Hebrew for "Here I Am". It's the first thing the Patriarch Abraham said when God called upon him. I believe this is one of Cohen's last recordings, getting ready to meet his Maker.

    • @susannahiley9106
      @susannahiley9106 2 года назад +1

      The choir that sings the " hineni' bits is from the synagogue he had attended as a child

  • @ponfed
    @ponfed 4 месяца назад

    A good way to interpret this, imo, is saying : You want it darker, God? We've killed the flame. It's a question.. It's beautiful poetry.

  • @Wonderpoem
    @Wonderpoem 2 года назад +1

    Leonard was a very special incredible poet, writer, singer. He saw the terrible things happening in the world and didn't like what God has allowed humans to do but knew that in the end all he could do was turn himself over to God.

  • @comparedtowhat2638
    @comparedtowhat2638 Год назад

    As has been stated, this song was recorded prior to Cohen’s death. He knew his time was short.
    Cohen was born into a middle class Jewish family. He also knew Christianity very well. He studied Buddhism and was an ordained Buddhist priest.
    Cohen knows what he is doing when he mixes the metaphors of those religions.
    The backing chorus is from his childhood synagogue in Montreal.
    The Hebrew word he uses does mean, I am ready.
    Some of the song parallels the Old Testament story of Abraham and Isaac. Part of it is from the Kiddish, the prayer for sanctifying the name of G*d. It is also used in the prayers of mourning.
    And it is a chilling song and introduces ideas or interpretations that are not standard. It does question G*d. BTW, Abraham had conversations with G*d. In those he sometimes questioned and argued.
    Thanks Harry for looking into this.

  • @bamagirl218
    @bamagirl218 2 года назад +1

    Be sure and listen to A Thousand Kisses deep. It’ll make you think

  • @dalebrewer4350
    @dalebrewer4350 Год назад +1

    It is a spine chilling song that fits with todays world unfortunately.

  • @constantwireless3290
    @constantwireless3290 Год назад

    Leonard got it. God, The Son, nailed on the cross.
    *Magnified, sanctified Be thy holy name Vilified, crucified In the human frame*

  • @swansong8516
    @swansong8516 Год назад

    This is the last song he wrote. He died 19 days later. Hineni is Hebrew for "I am here". Long time fan of Leonard Cohen. He was a brilliant lyricist. He struggled. Listen to "Everybody Knows". Now that is a hard, no punches pulled, work.

    • @kentclark6420
      @kentclark6420 Год назад

      Actually 'here am I'.

    • @swansong8516
      @swansong8516 Год назад

      @@kentclark6420 Thank you for the correction. 🙂

    • @kentclark6420
      @kentclark6420 Год назад

      @@swansong8516 I was flaunting my knowledge, having just read it before checking out the comment section.

    • @swansong8516
      @swansong8516 Год назад

      @@kentclark6420 I'm fine with that. 🙂

  • @crowwoman9218
    @crowwoman9218 2 года назад +1

    Hinani is Here I am.

  • @Sanddreams33
    @Sanddreams33 Год назад

    First 4 Albums are the most intimate albums ever made. Just you and him.
    Some Great Lines : Let me see your beauty broken down... like you would do for one that you love... Just take this longing from my tongue
    and : Ah but don't go home with your hard-on, It will only drive you insane, You can't shake it (or break it) with your Motown, You can't melt it down in the rain

  • @freeasihavebeendeceivedtob7361
    @freeasihavebeendeceivedtob7361 2 года назад

    This was his reply to tons of fan mail asking him to make more darker music. Hence “ you want it darker” .

  • @pamalaalford1081
    @pamalaalford1081 2 года назад

    Harri, I think it would be interesting for you to come back in a few days and comment on this song again. Read the comments for their analysis, think about more yourself and then let us know what conclusions you have regarding the meaning of this song. I think many of us would be so interested to know what you think. It was such a haunting song. Just a suggestion. I have loved watching you since the first time I saw you - a long time ago!

  • @JaffaRoad
    @JaffaRoad 2 года назад

    BTW - Magnified, Sanctified be thy holy name is an almost direct translation of the Aramaic first line of the Kaddish ( יִתְגַּדַּל וְיִתְקַדַּשׁ שְׁמֵהּ רַבָּא- Yitgadal vyitkadash shemeh rabbah) , a prayer central to all Jewish prayer services, and which is traditionally recited daily by Jewish mourners for a year after the loss of a loved one.
    This line is brilliantly placed as he was aware that his own death was imminent. Also the way the following line (vilified Crucified…) deviates from the Jewish tradition to reference Cohen's life long fascination with Jesus.
    Hineni -הִנֵּֽנִי- (Here I am) is the prayer of humility composed by an anonymous Hebrew poet in the middle-ages, that is chanted by Jewish Cantors during the high holiday services where the community collectively prays for atonement from individual and collective transgressions.
    This was a deeply spiritual piece especially in light of Marianne's death (just before he wrote it) and his own imminent death just after he recorded it.
    This may have been Cohen's greatest masterpiece. Which is why we just had to record it.
    Please check out our version - You Want it Darker Performed by JAFFA ROAD
    Please leave a comment to let us know what you think of our interpretation of Cohen's incredible song.
    ruclips.net/video/nsllSJt6F-A/видео.html

  • @georgerigberg4335
    @georgerigberg4335 Год назад

    For a similarly upbeat trip, check out Johnny Cash 's cover of "Hurt" (unless you already have...!)

  • @TheFireMonkey
    @TheFireMonkey 2 года назад +1

    He is in part challenging The Creator for things that have been allowed and yet he still has reverence for The Creator - the "Million candles burning" is a reference to the Holocaust and the question of how can a loving God allow that to happen - it was a struggle between his faith and history - the juxtaposition of his love for God and his anger at God and in the end, the acceptance of God's will.

  • @Bnmig
    @Bnmig 5 месяцев назад +1

    The phrase “Hineni” means “Here I am!” in Hebrew. It is both a call to God stating readiness and an affirmation from God that things are moving. If you believe in that sort of thing.

  • @toerag572
    @toerag572 10 месяцев назад

    It always saddened me that Bob Dylan got the Nobel Prize for Literature, and Leonard Cohen didn't. To me, Cohen was always the finer poet.

  • @domfontana4809
    @domfontana4809 2 года назад

    a song for those who are siily enough to ignore that great gift: awareness.

  • @stephenqualtrough7322
    @stephenqualtrough7322 2 года назад

    This sounds like a companion to Dylan song Not Dark Yet...but it's getting there
    Or the other way around depending on who wrote what firstb

  • @budyza180
    @budyza180 2 года назад +4

    Robbie Robertson - 'Ghost Dance'. Please. Powerful stuff. Needs to be heard.
    Also 'Shine Your Light'.

  • @JoanHolt-b8w
    @JoanHolt-b8w Год назад

    Every time. I hear this it cuts me open.

  • @KittyCarlile-490
    @KittyCarlile-490 Год назад

    Leonard can make it darker than anyone

  • @asyrotk7604
    @asyrotk7604 2 года назад

    Please react to Leonard Cohens 'Anthem'.

  • @R3D3Y3J3D1
    @R3D3Y3J3D1 2 года назад

    Just found you, been a Leonard Cohen fan a long while, I'm guessing you did other Cohen music... his is a complexity of opposite in his approach. I would almost say opposite of David Bowie.

  • @elinstar6034
    @elinstar6034 Год назад

    He's making the arguments against the possibility of a loving God, in a sacred song conversing with God, as he approaches his own death. Go Leonard. Holding all the contradictions.

  • @ZahraIsMyDog
    @ZahraIsMyDog 2 года назад

    The answer to this song is out there. It’s a retelling of Abraham’s sacrifice of Isaac as Leonard himself is near death and is, too, questioning god.

  • @dr.geraldcohen3791
    @dr.geraldcohen3791 2 года назад

    On the day of his death he tells G-d Hinani meaning I am here waiting for you

  • @belkyhernandez8281
    @belkyhernandez8281 2 года назад +1

    Yes, he is challenging God. He's saying "God you want evil in the world? You must because millions of prayers went unanswered. Ok. I will give you evil....If that's not what you want then actually show me ."

  • @davidbentley145
    @davidbentley145 Год назад

    Hmmm...there wouldn't be any appreciation for the light in life if not for the darkness too...