by Ira B. Nadel
For Dara & Ryan
I wish I could say everything there was to say in one word. I hate all the things that can happen between the beginning of a sentence and the end.
– Leonard Cohen, The Favorite Game
What is a poet? A poet is an unhappy being whose heart is torn by secret sufferings, but whose lips are so strangely formed that when the sighs and the cries escape them, they sound like beautiful music.
– Kierkegaard, Either/Or
CONTENTS
Introduction
1. The Root of the Chord
2. Life in a Golden Coffin
3. Passion Without Flesh
4. Molecules Dancing in the Mountains
5. Hopelessly Hollywood
6. Cocktails in the Shaving Kit
7. Black Photograph
8. Ain’t No Cure for Love
9. Trumpets and a Curtain of Razor Blades
10. Tibetan Desire
11. New Scripture
12. Plastic Algebra
13. My Secret Life
Afterword
Bibliography
Discography
Acknowledgments
Notes
Permissions
INTRODUCTION
The enigma of Leonard Cohen: a well-tailored bohemian, an infamous lover who lives alone, a singer whose voice resides in the basement of song, a Jew who practices Zen. Attempting to unravel this mystery has taken me to Los Angeles, New York, Nashville, Montreal, and the island of Hydra, retracing his steps. Cohen has been patient throughout this process, even when I posed a question the publisher insisted I ask: could this be called an authorized biography? Cohen paused and then thoughtfully said, “tolerated,” adding an instant later, “benignly tolerated.” Such understatement disguises the remarkable assistance he and those close to him have provided for my work. In some small way, this account is an acknowledgment of their trust.
Cohen has been called “part wolf and part angel;” “the grocer of despair;” the “poet laureate of pessimism;” and, more colloquially, the “prince of bummers.” His early albums supported this view, morbidly described as “music to slit your wrists by.” After listening to Leonard Cohen, one woman exclaimed, “Thank God Sylvia Plath never tried to sing!” His later work shifted this view and his most recent albums have been called celebratory and, in a moment of rashness, optimistic. But his stylish, self-regarding abjection is present in virtually all that he writes, exhibiting a “moody amorousness,” a narcissistic eroticism that has only enhanced his appeal. Cohen has always felt gloomy but, as he has said, his gloom is probably no more intense than anyone else’s. “There is a confusion between depression and seriousness. I happen to like the mode of seriousness. It’s peaceful and relaxing to me to be serious.” Nietzsche sums up the paradox: “In punishment there is so much that is festive.”
Cohen had early success, a poet maudit whose gloomy anthems helped define a lingering literary adolescence. But his success has always been a qualified one; his records were critically lauded but sold unspectacularly, his books were controversial though largely unread. In the mid-eighties his work underwent a commercial resurgence as younger artists recognized their debt to him. A 1991 tribute album entitled I’m Your Fan featured a series of alternative bands, and the 1995 tribute album Tower of Song followed.
The title of this book, Various Positions, originates in Cohen’s favorite album, released in 1984, but it is also a philosophical statement, reflecting a dictum offered by Cohen’s Zen master, Joshu Sasaki Roshi: “A Zen man has no attachments.” To fix a position, to hold a singular point of view for a lifetime, is antithetical to Zen because there are no absolutes in the Zen world. The only absolute is change; all is transition. The only thing that lasts and the only reality in Zen is the pure and unattached self, which one must constantly seek to uncover. To do so, however, requires discipline.
Whether writing three pages a day, as Cohen’s London landlady insisted he do in 1959, or laboring over song lyrics, which often take him years to complete, discipline is the source of Cohen’s success. Everything he writes must be worked over until it yields the truth. “Last thought best thought,” he has said, inverting the weight usually given to a first, spontaneous thought. “I am formal, uptight, agonized most of the time,” he told an interviewer in 1993. “I have to do a lot of undressing before I can get to the truth; I’m not a spontaneous, visceral kind of chap.”
As part of the process of artistic discovery, Cohen preserves his work in all of its stages. His collection of notes, papers, journals, drafts, memoirs, and letters form a lasting record of his work. Such an archive, he explains, is “at the very center of the thing. I see the work floating on the material.” The published songs or poems are “just the Beacon, the designation—somehow the signal for an investigation of the entire work…. The archive is the mountain, and the published work the volcano.”
He views his archive as the unhewn rock cited in the Bible: “the thing you place on the altar, the ark, whatever the thing is that’s hammered, that’s ornamented, that’s careful, but the platform has got to be unhewn rock, and it’s got to be there, and it’s got to be solid.” His progress is noted in the increments of a miniaturist, each draft inching toward its goal. Through the work, Cohen’s life is seen, its small victories and continual setbacks. For better or worse, Cohen has retained every record of himself.
“Keeping things was the only thing I had a sense of,” Cohen has said:
I didn’t have a sense of who I was, or where I was going, or what the world was like, what women were like. The only thing I had a sense of is that I’m going to document this little life…. I never said I was a great poet; never once did I suggest I was anything more than a minor poet and a songster and whatever it is. Let some other people make the designations. I only said that I got it here. It’s all here…. I did do what I set out to do which was to document my trip without any judgment on it. But my trip is here. There is no question about it.
Art holds a unity that history does not, and for Cohen, there is no separation between music and writing. This embodies the Judaic tradition of the unity of the Written Law with the Oral Law; they are inseparable, the Oral Law sometimes interpreted as the soul of the Written Law. Their revelations are contemporaneous.
In his life, Cohen has sought to witness, touch, and experience beauty at close quarters. The irony of this desire, however, is that once he touches it, it evaporates. The many he has loved, he has left. When he has obtained beauty, he has abandoned it, feeling that it entrapped him. As he writes in an unpublished novel, “what I admire in the morning I despise by sundown. I change between glutton and renunciation.” This has meant numerous broken love affairs; but it has also meant the endurance of his aesthetic. Out of the depression and despair comes the will to create.
But Cohen has always exhibited an undercurrent of self-mocking humor. “I like to include a permission to laugh with most of my work,” he remarked in 1992. “I’ve always thought I was a comic voice.” But the humor doesn’t undercut the essential seriousness of his work. “Each book represents for me a different kind of crisis,” he explained early in his career. He has dealt with such crises ritualistically, initially through poetry and later with novels, psalms, and narrative songs. His small but faithful audience recognizes him as an almost pastoral figure, providing a form of spiritual guidance. His music is eclectic: a mix of Mediterranean rhythms, folk ballads, country and western, blues, jazz, and gospel, a flexible, mournful idiom that constantly reshapes itself.
At the core of Leonard Cohen’s appeal is a poetics of survival, a means of confronting and transcending the darkness of the self. Aiding his own survival has been a twenty-five-year involvement with Zen Budd
hism. Judaism initiated Cohen’s spiritual quest, but Buddhism has provided direction. Its process of liberation through suffering “has led me to wherever I am.” The importance of self-understanding in Zen has been its great attraction for him:
I want no attachments. I want to begin again. I think I love you, but I love the idea of a clean slate more … the temptation of discipline makes me ruthless.
Cohen repeats this manifesto in his poems, songs, and fiction, and enacts it in his personal life. The passage summarizes Cohen’s ongoing dilemma: how to be true to another as well as to himself.
Every biography is, of course, incomplete; it can only approximate moments that represent the life of its subject. But most of Cohen’s artistic energy has gone toward approximating those moments, too, providing the biographer with some clues to the mystery of Leonard Cohen:
Far from flying with the angels, he traces with the fidelity of a seismograph needle the state of the solid bloody landscape. … He can love the shapes of human beings, the fine and twisted shapes of the heart. It is good to have among us such men, such balancing monsters of love.
1
THE ROOT OF THE CHORD
LEONARD COHEN buried the first thing he ever wrote. After his father died, he cut open one of his formal bow ties, sewed a message into it, then buried it in the snow in the small garden behind his Montreal home. For a nine-year-old boy, it was a powerful and symbolic gesture. In effect, Cohen conducted his own private burial, substituting prose for an outward expression of grief. The message also preserved a link with his father which was re-enacted each time he composed. Art and sacrament, ritual and writing, became fused.
The day of the funeral was also his sister’s birthday, but no one mentioned it. Only later that night, when the two children tearfully confided to one another that they had glimpsed their father in the open coffin at the funeral service, was it noted. Cohen asked his sister not to cry because it was to be a day of celebration, but neither could escape the dominating image of the day: the face of their father, as stern in death as it had been in life.
His father’s death in January 1944 was the central event of Cohen’s youth and provided a rationale for his art. As he explained in The Favorite Game: “deprivation is the mother of poetry.” It also sent him on a quest for a series of father/teachers, a quest he pursues to this day. Psychologically, the death of his father freed Cohen by allowing him to pursue his own interests unobstructed, but it also imprisoned him by forcing upon him the role of compromised patriarch, responsible for the welfare of the family, yet entirely dependent on his uncles.
“What was it like to have no father? It made you more grown up. You carved the chicken, you sat where he sat,” the narrator answers in The Favorite Game. As with much of his work, Cohen transforms the psychological into the spiritual: “His father’s death gave him a touch of mystery, contact with the unknown. He could speak with extra authority on God and Hell.” The loss of his father left a lasting scar, one that Cohen defined in his first novel as “what happens when the word is made flesh.” The note in the bow tie has been the talisman he has carried for a lifetime: “I’ve been digging in the garden for years, looking for it. Maybe that’s all I’m doing, looking for the note.”
————
LEONARD COHEN grew up in Westmount, the upper-middle-class Montreal neighborhood on the slope of Mount Royal. The semidetached, two-story brick house backs onto Murray Hill Park, an open space which connects the mansions to Côte-St-Antoine, where the Shaar Hashomayim Synagogue commands most of a city block. The park provides a view of the St. Lawrence River to the south and downtown Montreal to the east. From the enclosed second-story porch at the rear of the house, Cohen could see the city in the distance or spy on the lovers below him in the park. The park, he later wrote, “nourished all the sleepers in the surrounding houses. It was the green heart” that gave the playing children “heroic landscapes … the nurses and maids winding walks so they could imagine beauty.”
Until 1950, Cohen had the small back bedroom that faced the park. When Cohen’s mother Masha remarried in 1950 and a stepdaughter joined the family, Cohen gave up his small room and moved into what had once been the library. The room still contains his bed, dresser, two walls of crammed bookcases, and a desk facing the side window.
On the walls are a portrait of his father and photographs of Cohen and his sister Esther in their graduation robes from McGill. There is also one of Cohen praying in tallit (prayer shawl) and tefillin (symbolic representations of the commandments, actually leather straps attached to two small boxes containing portions of the Torah and worn at daily prayer) at the Wailing Wall in Jerusalem. Leather sets of Chaucer, Milton, Byron, Scott, Longfellow, Wordsworth, and Palgrave’s Golden Treasury sit on the bookshelves. The books were given to his father for his bar mitzvah and inherited by the son. The Daily Prayer Book of the United Hebrew Congregations, given to his mother, rests on the top shelf of one bookcase, alongside Ozar Taamei Hazal, Thesaurus of Talmudical Interpretations, a seven-hundred-page volume compiled by Cohen’s maternal grandfather, Rabbi Solomon Klinitsky-Klein.
There are poems by A.M. Klein, Canadian Constitutional Law by Bora Laskin, the Writers Market 1957, The Criminal Code of Canada, 1953–54, the collected poems of Marianne Moore, Harmonium by Wallace Stevens, the collected shorter poems of Auden, A History of Sexual Customs by Richard Lewinsohn, and Torture of the Christian Martyrs by A.R. Allinson, as well as Matthew Arnold’s poems, Scott’s The Lady of the Lake, Whitman’s Poems, Poems by Robert Louis Stevenson, Memoirs of Napoleon, and, in white leather, Dante’s Divine Comedy. Some of Cohen’s diverse influences and budding ambitions are glimpsed, including his early interest in becoming a lawyer.
There is also a portrait of Cohen’s father Nathan that reveals a well-dressed, serious looking man with slicked-back hair, a groomed moustache, and large, penetrating eyes. Known in the family as Nat, he affected Edwardian attire and in the picture wears an English suit with “all the English reticence that can be woven into the cloth.” The portrait suggests nothing of his disability or poor health, the result of the war. He looks solid and middle class. But he had high blood pressure and would become flushed when angry, which was often. His sense of foreboding was great, and Edgar Cohen, Leonard Cohen’s second cousin, twenty years his senior, recalled that once in synagogue, Nathan Cohen turned around and said to him, “My son, Leonard, I’ll never see his bar mitzvah.” He was right. Another time, when the youthful Cohen mistakenly recited the Kaddish, the prayer for the dead, instead of the Kiddush, the blessing over wine at the dinner table, his father did not interrupt him but with resignation murmured, “Let him go on; he will have to say it soon enough.”
Nathan Cohen was trained as an engineer, but played an important role in the family’s clothing manufacturing business. Cohen admired him, but within the Cohen family, Nathan was, in Cohen’s words, “the persecuted brother, the near-poet, the innocent of machine toys, the sighing judge who listens but does not sentence.” When he died, he threw the stable life of the family into turmoil: “He died ripe for myths and revenge, survived by a son who already believed in destiny-election. He died spitting blood, wondering why he wasn’t president of the synagogue. One of the last things he said to his wife was: ‘You should have married an Ambassador.’”
A photograph of Cohen’s mother and father in a garden shows a smiling woman in an elegant dress, slightly taller than her husband. Husband and wife stare proudly at the camera, the mother with an inquisitive, suspicious glance, the father with a more imposing, slightly rigid demeanor. Nathan looks dapper with a cigar, boutonniere, and spats. They were married in 1927.
Cohen’s mother was of Russian descent and exemplified the national character: by turns melancholic, emotional, romantic, and vital. Suzanne Elrod, the mother of Cohen’s two children, remembers her as Cohen’s “most dreamy spiritual influence.” According to Masha’s stepdaughter Roz Van Zaig, Masha “had the flair to be bohemian.” She was qu
ite musical and often sang European folksongs in Russian and Yiddish around the house. When her son learned to play the guitar, she sang with him in a magnificent contralto voice. She was dramatic and heavyset, with a flair for cooking. Masha’s personality initially clashed with the quiet formality of the Cohens. Her English was poor and she always spoke in a deep voice with a Russian accent; some Cohens thought that Nathan had married beneath him. She had trained as a nurse and her caring manner, essential for her physically ailing husband, soon made her acceptable to the larger family. Her zestful behavior, however, unsettled some of the more demure aunts and uncles.
————
THE ARRIVAL of Lazarus Cohen to rural Ontario in 1869 followed the arc of nineteenth-century Jewish immigration to Canada. He established himself in Maberly and after two years sent for his family who were still living in what was then Lithuania. By 1883, he had moved to Montreal, where his son had been going for religious training and where Jewish settlement was expanding. Lazarus was from a devout and scholarly family, a rabbi who reinvented himself as a businessman in the new world. His younger brother Hirsch was also a rabbi and later became the Chief Rabbi of Canada, celebrated for his powerful, rumbling, resonant voice, perhaps the source of Cohen’s own unique sound. Lazarus proved to have a talent for business and in 1895, after he had moved to Montreal, became president of W.R. Cuthbert & Company, brass founders who, between 1896 and 1906, formed the first Jewish dredging firm in Canada. They had a fleet of dredges and a government contract to deepen almost every tributary of the St. Lawrence River between Lake Ontario and Quebec.