don’t have a programme. I’m not on an archeological expedition. (1974)
Leonard Cohen In His Own Words, 26
A pessimist is someone who is waiting for it to rain. But I’m already soaked to the
skin. (1993)
Leonard Cohen In His Own Words, 26
I’ve always been on the outside. My mother used to leave me outside in the snow in
the winter in Montreal. She ussed to dress me very warmly and then just leave me
outside. I could never get in, and those Montreal winter were bitter. (1985)
Leonard Cohen In His Own Words, 26-28
371
They used to say razor blades should be distributed with my records. (1992)
Leonard Cohen In His Own Words, 31
I’ve been living in an exploded landscape for a long time. I have a place to situate all
of this. Because I’ve felt that things were going to blow up – it wasn’t as specific as
the twin towers – but I’ve felt for some time there was going to be a shaking of the
situation.
MacLean’s, 2001
I do feel anxious a lot of the time. I don’t know whether my anxiety is more intense
than anybody else’s. I suspect that it isn’t. But there’s also a confusion between
depression and seriousness. I happen to like the mode of seriousness. (1979)
Leonard Cohen In His Own Words, 26
There’s a place for my kind of music although it can never be mainstream. It is a
sanctuary for me and for the people who can use it that way. That’s what I use it for.
A sanctuary. (1972)
Leonard Cohen In His Own Words, 25
Perhaps the songs have a form or a mood that is melancholy but they are not meant
to depress. On the contrary, I know that in some cases they can have the opposite
effect. (1974)
Leonard Cohen In His Own Words, 26
372
I would say I write my songs for people who find themselves in the kinds of
predicaments that I found myself in. I think that’s a wide number of people. You
could roughly call these people the broken-hearted. (1988)
Leonard Cohen In His Own Words, 53
I have explored the same territory – in many different ways – because I have no
answers to the problems and because I keep going to the same sources because they
are timeless. And as I get older, I hope I can explore them more deeply, and with
more courage and honesty rather than just urgency. Irving Layton, the great
Canadian poet, once wrote about me that “Leonard Cohen has been blessed with
never having had an original idea,” and I take that as a compliment because these
things are what everybody goes through. Everybody lives the life of the heart, and
we all know what it’s like to feel and break down, and I think we cherish that in our
musicians and singers when they reveal that.
Los Angeles Reader, 1993
My depression, so bleak and anguished, was just crucial, and I couldn’t shake it, it
wouldn’t go away. I didn’t know what it was. I was ashamed of it, because it would
be there even when things were good, and I would be saying to myself, “Really,
what have you got to complain about?” But for people who suffer from acute clinical
depression, it is quite irrelevant what the circumstances of your life are.
Saturday Night, 2001
So one day, a few years ago, I was in a car, on my way to the airport. I was really,
really low, on many medications, and pulled over, I reached behind to my valise,
took out the pills, and threw out all the drugs I had. I said, “These things really don't
even begin to confront my predicament.” I figured, If I am going to go down I would
rather go down with my eyes wide open.
Saturday Night, 2001
A big part of my life has been about overcoming depression. But as far as I could see,
there was nothing to be depressed about (...) I had a deep sense of suffering that
influenced most of my life. Most of my activities were about drinking, taking drugs,
courting women or flirting with religious studies. With all this I tried to confront this
depression that I simply couldn’t penetrate.
The Euroman, 2001
I think people, perhaps legitimately sometimes, feel that anguish or suffering is the
engine of creativity. It’s a very popular notion... I think most people live their lives in
an emergency, and I’m certainly not unique in this respect. I have certainly battled
depression over the years, and my time on Mount Baldy was one of the remedies.
And I found that my depression might have been the background of my work, but
not the spur, not the trigger. Although, without that background, the work isn’t
373
easier. You know, lifting boulders isn’t easier when you’re in a good mood.
Toronto Globe and Mail, 2001
Most of the songs that we love are sad songs, because we experience profound
disappointment in our lives, all of us. And to hear it sung, well, that’s what this
whole racket is about, isn’t it?
LA Weekly, 2001
It's too late to be depressed.
France-Inter Radio, 2001
From the letters I receive, I understand that many people who are or have been in the
same situation have felt a kind of relief, a healing while listening to my songs. This is
something that I have been very thankful for. If somebody has got enough time - or
are bored enough - to examine my entire work in books and songs, there will, to a
certain extent, be an exact description of the process and a few insights in the matter
along the way. But I don't imagine that I am a therapist nor possess wisdom about
what it is all about. I have described it as well as I could.
The Euroman, Denmark, September 2001
374
375
Document Outline
Song Lyrics
The Guests
Humbled In Love
The Window
I Came So Far For Beauty
Un Canadien Errant
The Traitor
Our Lady Of Solitude
The Gypsys Wife
The Smokey Life
Ballad Of The Absent Mare
Suzanne
The Master Song
Winter Lady
Stranger Song
Sisters Of Mercy
So Long,Marianne
Hey,That's No Way To Say Goodbye
Stories Of The Street
Teachers
One Of Us Cannot Be Wrong
Bird On The Wire
Story Of Isaac
A Bunch Of Lonesome Heroes
The Partisan
Seem So Long Ago Nancy
The Old Revolution
The Butcher
You Know Who I Am
Lady Midnight
Tonight Will Be Fine
Avalanche
Last