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1 of 1 found the following review helpful:
Great Band Great Concerts...The True Companion To RECENT SONGS Dec 05, 2005 I was at this tour somewhere in Tel-Aviv...Cohen was coming off the "minor" setback of his 'Death Of Ladies Man" with a new album in a more countryish,gypsy,smoky,song structure with a great band of musicians..the studio "Recent Songs" was a welcome back to well crafted,beautiful lyrics and melody with the ambiance lacking the over zealous LA Spector sound..these songs on this live CD spanned his career in a humble elegance..Cohen and the band play beautiful..the cover photo is a photo shot of the cartoonish Cohen gracing the cover of the studio "Recent Song"..both need be not to be missed.
3 of 3 found the following review helpful:
Reaching for the sky just to surrender... Jan 06, 2005 I have been a Leonard Cohen fan since I was a teenager. I have never seen him perform in concert and this disc has revealed to me how much I have missed!!! This disc is incredible and I'm so grateful it has been released. The musicianship is superb, and Cohen's poetry and vocals never cease to amaze me.
The program is a cross selection of songs from Cohen's recording career up through 1979, with a generous sprinkling of his strongest early songs ("The Stranger Song," "Bird On a Wire," "So Long, Marianne," "Hey That's No Way To Say Goodbye"), as well as a terrific sampling of songs from the mid-to-late 1970s ("Lover, Lover, Lover," "Why Don't You Try," "The Gypsy's Wife," etc.).
Every song is exceptionally performed. The highest high points: Cohen's interspersing Morey Amsterdam's routine in "Field Commander Cohen" is hilarious, especially given Cohen's deadpan delivery; "The Stranger Song" is performed even more hauntingly than the studio version; "Memories" is outstanding and far surpasses the Phil Spector-produced studio version; and the closer, "So Long, Marianne" brings it all back home.
Cohen really put together an outstanding group of musicians on this tour. Special kudos to Raffi Hakopian (on violin) and John Bilezkjian (on oud and mandolin) and to vocalists Jennifer Warnes and Sharon Robinson. (And special thanks to Judy Collins for convincing Cohen that he must perform...)
1 of 1 found the following review helpful:
Dig on Cohen, Live! Oct 14, 2004 I very much like this album. Lover, Lover, Lover is rousing and passionate, and literate like the best of L. Cohen. His accomplaces on stage are equally solid. Add the roar of the crowd when he begins Bird On A Wire and you get the feeling of what a '79 Cohen show was like. Still I come back to Lover, Lover, Lover...Definitely an album for Cohen lovers...
6 of 7 found the following review helpful:
4.5 Stars....Leonard Cohen's Best Live Album Mar 29, 2004 In 1979 Leonard Cohen (45 years at that time) was touring behind the just-released "Recent Songs". 22 years later Columbia released this album, and none too soon, as it proves to be the best live album of Leonard Cohen to date."Field Commander Cohen: Tour 0f 1979" (12 tracks, 63 min.) gives us a great mix of Cohen songs old and new. There are 4 tracks of the then-new "Recent Songs" album, including a great "The Guests". Leonard's back-up band is Passenger, a jazz-band which appears also on "Recent Songs, and they are outstanding throughout, perhaps nowhere better than on "Lover Lover Lover" which comes with an extended instrumental intro, just beautiful. The set includes of course old staples like "Hey That's No Way to Say Goodbye", "So Long Marianne" and "The Stranger Song", all from Leonard's 1967 debut album. The question always has been whether Leonard was a great poet who happened to write some darn good songs, or whether he was a terrific singer-songwriter in his own right. This live album should answer that debate for once and all. "Field Commander Cohen" is a terrific testament to Cohen's songs and live preformances. Strongly recommended!
3 of 3 found the following review helpful:
Belated Gift Dec 31, 2002 We had always regarded Cohen more as a poet/writer than a musician. Whoops. Certainly he remains among the most literary of the singer/songwriters, as these songs will attest. But what makes this album a treasure is the amazing music. Recorded live in concert in Great Britain in 1979, Cohen and Columbia Records have bestowed this belated gift upon us. Cohen's voice is more melodic than we remember it, and so evocative. "Back-up singers" Jennifer Warnes and Sharon Robinson are much more than that title implies. And the musicians, particularly Raffi Hakopian on violin and John Bilezikjian on oud and mandolin, create a marvelous, cinematic soundscape for Cohen's rich and thrilling songpoems.
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