Leonard Cohen & Anjani
Thomas
May 13, 2006
Toronto. Indigo Books. Bay Street.
Photos by Bill Bryson. Words by Michael Bryson.
He came, he spoke, he sang, he joked,
he smiled, he laughed, he recited poetry.
It began with Heather
Reisman, Founder and CEO of Indigo Books & Music Inc., saying
she was known around her corporation as "Chief Book Lover
. . . but on this occasion, I'm just 'Chief Lover.'"
Reisman spoke shortly after 3:45 p.m.
from a 20'-wide stage set up outside the Bay Street entrance of Indigo's
Toronto flagship store. At 3:00 p.m., the police had blocked off the
road at either end of the block and the crowd, which had been slow to
gather, soon filled the street well over 1,000 strong.
Reisman introduced Ron Sexsmith and the
Bare Naked Ladies. Sexsmith sang "Heart With No Companion,"
noting it was "one of my favorite Leonard Cohen songs."
Sexsmith gave the song a strong and heartfelt rendition, a twinge
of sadness in his voice, a seeming requirement of every Cohen
composition.
Sadness was replaced with a complicated
mix of camp and nostalgia when BNL's Steven Page followed Sexsmith with
lead vocals on "Sister's Of Mercy." The Bare Naked Ladies and
Leonard Cohen? Only in Canada, eh? Somehow it all worked fine. There was
a keen "in-joke" quality to the performance, but a deep
reverence also.
Reisman
then returned to exhort the audience with the news that for the first
time ever in Canada: "a poetry book is the number one
best-seller!!!" The crowd cheered. The title was, of course,
Cohen's Book of Longing (M&S, 2006), his first new title in
over a decade.
Then there he was!
The crowd
responded with sustained applause. Cohen: "I want to apologize to
the pedestrians and the drivers for the inconvenience." He looked
relaxed, pleased, slightly hunched. He recited a poem, then introduced
Anjani Thomas and her band -- keyboard, bass, guitar -- and left the
stage. Thomas, under the name "Anjani," has just released
"Blue Alert," a CD of new songs, lyrics by Cohen with whom she
has worked off and on since 1984 when she sang backing vocals on the
Cohen classic "Hallelujah."
Thomas sang five songs from "Blue
Alert." Her vocal styling was Cohenesque, if two voices
remarkably different can be said to be remarkably similar. Thomas is
heavily jazz-influenced, and she sang at times breathless like Billie
Holiday, or Joni Mitchell. Chorus lyrics included: "thanks for the
dance" and "saying goodbye at the innermost door." It
seemed almost as if Thomas was Cohen's 21st century voice, delivering
his goodbye as the poet/songwriter himself knelt at the back of the
stage, hands clasped in front of him as if in prayer.
For the fifth and final song of her
set, Thomas called Cohen to the microphone, but not before thanking the
crowd for its "Canadian aloha." The Hawaiian native said,
"In Hawaii, we take off our shoes, so I hope you don't
mind."
Lyrics from the final song included:
You're my first love
and my last
there's no love after you
and
I had so much to tell you
but now it's closing time
the heart is always right
and
I never got to tell you
how beautiful you are
and
I don't know how it happened
but I missed the exit sign
it's dark out in Los Angeles
it's dark out along the line
and
I never got to love you
like I heard it can be done
the heart is always right
Is the heart always right? In Cohen's
universe, the song and poem is a vehicle of purity in emotion. Back at
McGill in the 1950s, Cohen had a country & western band. He must
have learned something from Hank Williams early on and stuck with it.
Ambiguity of expression is not a Cohen trademark. Recovering lost
perfection is. Speaking with gratitude for what's lost is, too.
And so, Ron Sexsmith and the Bare Naked
Ladies returned to share the stage with Cohen and deliver spirited
versions of two of Cohen's better known "goodbye songs."
("Blue Alert" -- we were reminded sharply -- is only the
latest in a long line of song/poetry cycles from Cohen that obsess about
endings.)
Sexsmith and Page shared the microphone
with Cohen. "I'll follow you guys," Cohen said, but soon the
other two had maneuvered their elder into taking over lead vocals. And
he smiled like he'd been reunited with "Suzanne." His voice
raised on the lines: "you held on to me/ like a crucifix"
("So Long Marianne"). Should we let him go? No, the next --
and final -- song was "Hey, That's No Way To Say
Goodbye."
Michael Bryson knows
the dice is loaded, the war is over and the good guys lost. He believes,
however, that the bare naked ladies are not a thing of the past.
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