Interviewer:
Does something bother you? How can you write poetry if you are not bothered by something?

Leonard Cohen:
When I get up in the morning... my real concern is to discover whether I'm in a state of grace. And if I make that investigation, and I discover that I am not in a state of grace, I try to go [back] to bed.

Interviewer:
What do you mean by a state of grace?

Leonard Cohen:
A state of grace is that kind of balance with which you ride the chaos that you find around you. It's not a matter of resolving the chaos--because there's something arrogant and warlike about putting the world in order--but having a kind of escape ski down over a hill, just going through the contours of the hill.

Interviewer:
Oh, you have lost me!

Wuthering Heights Mixtape

Another literary mixtape from the past, this one inspired by Emily Bronte’s Wuthering Heights.  As always, click on the mixtape tag beside this post to get the full inventory of mixtapes, and to listen to any of them go to the bottom of my blog and listen to it streamed on streampad.

Enjoy.

1) Wonderwall - Ryan Adams   -    This was a late selection, for the longest time I had set Lambchop’s ‘I’m Glad I Never’ as the opening track.  It’s terse 1:24 duration and narrative cue “In the beginning there was nothing… [ending with] I’m glad I never owned a gun” was the right sort of beginning, or so I thought for over a month.  Then I heard Wonderwall on BBC and it just perfectly sums up the emotional dynamic of the relationship between Heathcliff and Cathy, and also has just the right tone musically which became a better signal than the Lampchop track of what was to come.  I also experimented with starting with ‘Rain’ by Ryuichi Sakamoto as a tongue-in-cheek play on the whole melodrama angle of the book.

 

2) Who by Fire - Leonard Cohen    - Very early on the list, Cohen’s ballads of love are perfect fits for this sort of playlist, I seriously could of used five or six if I was not restrained by a desire to bring variety.  This song took a while to grow on me, it was only after hearing it almost daily in the coffee shop at work that I began to register it from amongst my favorite Cohen tracks to appreciate it’s singular beauty.  The songs relates to the moment Heathcliff rebukes Cathy after her first return from the Lintons.  Here I am going more from the film then the book, as I read the book so long ago.  But there is this moment in the film where Cathy comes home and there is an awkwardness between the two, which the chorus of ‘Who By Fire’ seems to capture. 

 

3) Thirteen - Johnny Cash  - One of two musicians I have carried over from my last literary playlist.  I know very little Johnny Cash but I was noticing very early on that the playlist was going to have a country feel to it, that there would be a lot of guitar and gravely voices, and Cash was an obvious choice in the matter.  The song refers to an orphaned child who has a lot of misery, and that seemed perfect for Heathcliff.

 

4) You are a Runner and I am my Father’s Son - Wolf Parade - The last track to be added to the playlist but strangely one of the first I had thought to add, only it took me a hell of a time to get a hold of it.  Wolf Parade became an essential tonal valve to exist in juxtaposition to the quiet country ballads, and represent some of the anger of Heathcliff in the first person.  Also lyrically the segueway between this and ‘Thirteen’ was better than I could have hoped, the first line carrying on the association that the character is just a number.  Obviously the runner is Cathy, and the father’s son is Heathcliff who once again makes an association to his family lineage as something distressing.

 

5) Deeper - Eric’s Trip - I really liked a track MadPerc sent me some time ago by Lockgroove ‘Payin’ the Price’, and when I heard this song it felt like it was almost by the same group, very quiet and soothing.  This is an ‘on the moors’ peaceful track, with some nice references to snow at the end which again segues nicely into the next song where similiar landscape references are made.

 

6) The Pull - The Microphones - Again, there are dozens of songs by this group that could also have been chosen to fit this playlist, but I choose only one to keep variety.  This is a song I had for a long time and never fully listened to until much later, the song has to be listened to in its entirety; it is the crescendo of the playlist, the death of Cathy.

 

7) Gazebo Tree - Kristin Hersh - Late entry, but worked perfectly with that same grungy country feel that was being carried through.  I see it as Isabella’s song, in response to her loveless marriage to the abusive Heathcliff.

 

8) It’s a Curse - Wolf Parade - the least relevant song on the list, it just sounds good, and can stand in for Heathcliff.

 

9) Death to Birth - Pagoda - from the Gus Van Sant film ‘Last Days’ where Pitt does such a scary impersonation of Kurt Cobain that even his sound is note perfect.  This is a great song, an original song that could have been by Cobain.  The chorus of ‘death to birth’ works well with the whole death of Cathy and the birth of Catherine. 

10) Insomniacs of the World Goodnight - Gord Downie - The one true gem off of his solo work from The Tragically Hip.  The imagery of the neverstar and the wantoness in some of the lyrics seemed to be a perfect end to this love story which was only going to end in death.  This going to sleep seems to be a promise of something more, of love on the otherside. 

 

Following

If you blog about two or more of the following please like this post and I will check you out… In need of new sites to follow:

Anne Sexton
Fyodor Dostoevsky
Fernando Pessoa
Jack Kerouac
Jessica Chastain
Kiera Knightley
Kate Winslet
Michelle Williams
Terrence Malick
Feist
Charlotte Gainsbourg
Bob Dylan
Leonard Cohen
Greta Gerwig
Walt Whitman
Melanie Laurent
Lea Seydoux

Who by fire - Leonard Cohen

Who by fire

  • by Leonard Cohen
  • on The best of Leonard Cohen

sundrynotes:

Who By Fire ~ Leonard Cohen

  • 179 plays

Sing Another Song, Boys

  • by Leonard Cohen


Leonard Cohen - Sing Another Song, Boys

Clever Beast: not so much the music nor the lyrics but the wavering of Leonard’s voice, the detuned humanity in it - like a live wire to my heart.  

(via oneblackline-deactivated2012021)

  • 120 plays
Famous Blue Raincoat - Leonard Cohen

Famous Blue Raincoat

  • by Leonard Cohen
  • on Songs of Love and Hate

Leonard Cohen - Famous Blue Raincoat

It’s four in the morning, the end of December
I’m writing you now just to see if you’re better
New York is cold, but I like where I’m living
There’s music on Clinton Street all through the evening.

I hear that you’re building your little house deep in the desert
You’re living for nothing now, I hope you’re keeping some kind of record.

Yes, and Jane came by with a lock of your hair
She said that you gave it to her
That night that you planned to go clear
Did you ever go clear?

Ah, the last time we saw you you looked so much older
Your famous blue raincoat was torn at the shoulder
You’d been to the station to meet every train
And you came home without Lili Marlene

And you treated my woman to a flake of your life
And when she came back she was nobody’s wife.

Well I see you there with the rose in your teeth
One more thin gypsy thief
Well I see Jane’s awake —

She sends her regards.
And what can I tell you my brother, my killer
What can I possibly say?
I guess that I miss you, I guess I forgive you
I’m glad you stood in my way.

If you ever come by here, for Jane or for me
Your enemy is sleeping, and his woman is free.

Yes, and thanks, for the trouble you took from her eyes
I thought it was there for good so I never tried.

And Jane came by with a lock of your hair
She said that you gave it to her
That night that you planned to go clear

Sincerely, L. Cohen
  • 190 plays