Page 4 of 5

Re: Leonard Cohen To Attend PEN NE Award, Ceremony To Be Web

Posted: Tue Feb 28, 2012 5:55 am
by sturgess66
Roy wrote:
sturgess66 wrote:Would be wonderful to see Leonard Cohen sitting up there in that box next year!! 8)
Not next year... This December.
Yup Roy - sorry - that is what I meant - this December - 2012 !!

And also meant to say - I love that Shawn Colvin sang one of Leonard's new songs - from "Old Ideas."

Re: Leonard Cohen To Attend PEN NE Award, Ceremony To Be Web

Posted: Tue Feb 28, 2012 9:52 pm
by John Etherington
Keith mentions meeting Leonard, but can anyone hear what he says immediately afterwards?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UsfjJQfKU0Y

Re: Leonard Cohen To Attend PEN NE Award, Ceremony To Be Web

Posted: Tue Feb 28, 2012 10:17 pm
by holydove
John Etherington wrote:Keith mentions meeting Leonard, but can anyone hear what he says immediately afterwards?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UsfjJQfKU0Y
He says he was in Boston, they honored Chuck Berry & Leonard Cohen, & right after that, it sounds like he says, "Chuck's my man"; he doesn't say anything about actually meeting Leonard (though it seems apparent, from the photo, that he did), or anything else about Leonard (how disappointing!).

Re: Leonard Cohen To Attend PEN NE Award, Ceremony To Be Web

Posted: Tue Feb 28, 2012 11:42 pm
by Goldin
http://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set= ... 955&type=3
Song Lyrics of Literary Excellence
By John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum (Albums)

Image

Image

Image

Re: Leonard Cohen To Attend PEN NE Award, Ceremony To Be Web

Posted: Wed Feb 29, 2012 2:42 am
by Cheshire gal
Thank you Goldin for posting these beautiful photos of Leonard. Unfortunately time has not been so kind to the rest of them has it?

Leonard looks so debonair compared to them. :D :lol:

Re: Leonard Cohen To Attend PEN NE Award, Ceremony To Be Web

Posted: Wed Feb 29, 2012 4:01 am
by bridger15
Thank you so much, Roman.
These are great photos.
---Arlene

ps I like your new avatar. :D

Re: Leonard Cohen To Attend PEN NE Award, Ceremony To Be Web

Posted: Wed Feb 29, 2012 6:12 am
by mutti
Roman thanks for all these great photos. I too like your new Avatar!
Cheers! Leslie 8)

Re: Leonard Cohen To Attend PEN NE Award, Ceremony To Be Web

Posted: Wed Feb 29, 2012 9:49 am
by Goldin
Thank you, Arlene and Leslie!
It's an art by Matisse... & a friend of mine. I hope, that's not the last her work I post here.

Re: Leonard Cohen To Attend PEN NE Award, Ceremony To Be Web

Posted: Wed Feb 29, 2012 2:27 pm
by merton
Hi,

Appreciation to those who provided links and photographs. There is something majestical in looking at senior troubadours saluting one another and enjoying the moment. Paul Simon, Leonard, Keith Richards and Chuck Berry should be carved into a new Mount Rushmore. Many more, no doubt could be included.
I'm really enjoying this topic.

All the best,
Merton

giants

Posted: Wed Feb 29, 2012 3:27 pm
by wakeupmartin
merton wrote:Paul Simon, Leonard, Keith Richards and Chuck Berry should be carved into a new Mount Rushmore.
Great line Merton! I particularly liked that photo myself.

I liked Leonard's speech, but I found the video a bit boring. Though it was great to hear Chuck Berry pick up the guitar and play/sing some of Johnny B Goode. He's still got it - despite his 'bad ear'.

Re: Leonard Cohen To Attend PEN NE Award, Ceremony To Be Web

Posted: Wed Feb 29, 2012 4:37 pm
by Roy
I'm curious to know how many Leonard Cohen songs Chuck Berry actually knows.

Re: Leonard Cohen To Attend PEN NE Award, Ceremony To Be Web

Posted: Wed Feb 29, 2012 9:07 pm
by LisaLCFan
Roy wrote:I'm curious to know how many Leonard Cohen songs Chuck Berry actually knows.
Is that really a fair question? ;-)

It is an odd assortment of folks in those photos, some of whom I would not normally associate with Leonard Cohen. Mind you, I have always tended not to associate anyone else with Leonard, so it seems strange to see him with some of those people. But, he certainly looks happy! :D

Re: Leonard Cohen To Attend PEN NE Award, Ceremony To Be Web

Posted: Fri Mar 02, 2012 7:59 am
by mutti
http://blogs.bostonmagazine.com/boston_ ... k-library/

Sorry I am not able to copy the photo...


Chuck Berry, Leonard Cohen Honored at JFK Library
A backstage report as the rock 'n' roll idols come to Boston.
Text Size: A | A | ABY BILL JANOVITZ POSTED ON 3/1/2012
From left to right: Tom Perrotta; Salman Rushdie; Elvis Costello; Peter Wolf; Shawn Colvin; Paul Simon; Leonard Cohen; Chuck Berry; Keith Richards; Bill Flanagan. (Photo by Rick Friedman/Kennedy Library Foundation)

On Sunday, in one fell swoop, I met a significant segment of my record collection: Keith Richards, Paul Simon, Leonard Cohen, Chuck Berry, Elvis Costello, and others. The “others” are people like Salman Rushdie, Caroline Kennedy, Al Kooper, Shawn Colvin, and Peter Wolf. I mean, we get to see Wolf all the time around here. But while it is clear that he is a rock ‘n’ roll legend, when he is the low man on the totem pole, you know you’re in rarefied air. Can you imagine thinking, geeze, Paul Simon, would you get out of my way so I could go talk to Keith Richards?

I was fortunate to be able to attend the PEN New England Song Lyrics of Literary Excellence award presentation to Berry and Cohen (video of the whole thing here). My friend, novelist Tom Perrotta, was invited to present the opening remarks. At that point, it was only confirmed that Berry would attend and Elvis Costello would perform a song or two. Tom asked if I wanted to come along.

Hmm, lemme check my calendar.

Well, as the date drew closer, rumors had it that Cohen was now looking likely to attend and that none other than my main man, Keith Richards, was going to come as a tribute to his hero, Berry. Now we were entering real Bill Janovitz Fantasy Land. I did not allow myself to get too excited about it. But then Tom would check in with an update: Paul Simon will be presenting the award to Chuck Berry. Salman Rushdie will do the same for Cohen. Still, I would not get too excited. After all, I was to be a tag-along for this event. I figured it would be the high-rollers paying to be there would get access, if available, but not me. I was just hoping to catch a glimpse at these idols of mine.

Arriving, however, we were led up to the room where the artists and their entourages were to assemble. But none of them brought more than a few people along. It was so low-key. We were instantly introduced to Berry, who gave me one of those handshake bro-hugs. He is mostly deaf now, at 85. I said something. He said he had a bum ear, could not hear me, and drew me closer. I yelled in his good ear, “congratulations on the award, Mr. Berry!” He replied ,”I heard that!”

We chatted with author Peter Guralnick and his wife, Alexandra. So, as others came in — Costello; author and director of MTV Networks Bill Flanagan and his family — they came over to chat with Guralnick, whose books musicians love. We watched in amazement, though, as Cohen, Simon, and Richards all filtered in. Soon, people were organizing started to organize these jaw-dropping group shots. Finally, I got to chat with Richards for a few minutes, one on one. He had left the room after taking a few of the photos. Then he came back into the room, sidling up next to me with a drink, which he rested on a side table beside us. He was standing right next to me. I had thought about such a moment my whole life: What would I ever say to Keith Richards or Mick Jagger if I met them?

Leonard Cohen, Chuck Berry, Keith Richards, Caroline Kennedy, and Peter Wolf. (Photo by Bill Janovitz.)

I said, “Keith, I just want to say hello. I am a huge fan, like everyone else. I mean, what can you say to Keith Richards?” He smiled, shaking my hand, bowing his head down modestly, and replied in that raspy drawl, “Hey, man, I feel the same way about Chuck Berry.” He proceeded to discuss how sad a song “Memphis, Tennessee” is. “Hurry home drops in her eyes,” indeed. It was a gracious transition, moving me away from talking about him to talking about Berry. I was having an out-of-body experience discussing music with the guy who was on a poster on my wall when I was a kid. A guy whose records I started listening to when I was maybe 8 years old. A man who influenced my whole career. A man about whom I wrote a book. One of the giants of our era. It was everything I could do to keep from begging, Keith, please let me be in the Rolling Stones with you! I know all the chords!

It was a heart-warming, soul-stirring ceremony, after which the lucky few of us were able to retire to an after-party at one of those houses on the Public Garden on Arlington Street you walk buy thinking, “Wow, I wonder who lives there.” There, we were able to chat with Al Kooper, known as a rock ‘n’ roll Zelig, who for over a decade has lived here in Boston and has played huge parts (literally) on some of rock music’s most iconic songs, such as the opening organ riff on “Like a Rolling Stone” as well as organ, piano, and the french horn opening on “You Can’t Always Get What You Want.”

Well, maybe if you wait around to middle age, you can. Or at least, you get what you need, aw yeah.



Re: Leonard Cohen To Attend PEN NE Award, Ceremony To Be Web

Posted: Fri Mar 02, 2012 1:09 pm
by Roy
Image

Re: Leonard Cohen To Attend PEN NE Award, Ceremony To Be Web

Posted: Sun Mar 04, 2012 4:10 am
by Evie B
I think Leonard was staying out of the way and far too cute to get mixed up in the excruciating 'jam session' on live tv with out-of-tune guitars and even more so out-of-tune voices :lol: My guess is that if he had picked up his guitar and started singing something like Crazy to Love You he would have made them all look like the load of old has-beens they are (unlike Leonard who is cool to the core).

Paul Simon droned on as usual, and it's a long time since anything worth listening to came out of Keith Richards's mouth even when we could still understand him. I would usually feel sorry for somebody who is hard-of-hearing but I think Chuck was the lucky one not being able to hear what was going on.

I take nothing away from any of them as songwriters, over the years I have listened to and enjoyed a lot of their music and lyrics (Elvis who?) but none of them has even come near to the heights that Leonard achieved lyrically. In my opinion he is just on a different level altogether - a "hundred floors" above them.

Evie B