9. Leonard CohenYou Want It Darker
I found out about Leonard Cohen from Nirvana, from Pennyroyal Tea. I was vastly too young and I didn’t understand [his music] at the time, but you still want to be into what’s ‘in’ and it’s tough to make such bold strides, whether you understand it subconsciously or not. When you’ve got someone that has a voice, that voice only gets better with age and… fuck, there’s so much character on this record. It was a tough album to listen to after he died, the same with Bowie’s Blackstar. When you go back into a record and listen to someone talk about mortality on a level where they’re really trying to understand it because it’s imminent… that’s an intense listen.
There’s been a lot of media attention because of his passing, and I got to catch some documentaries on his life with some really beautiful moments I’d never seen before. There’s a show he was playing in a university for this crowd. He walks off and is out the back smoking, and they’re chanting his name but he’s got nothing left to play. He walks back out and he’s crying, playing one more thing, and everything’s silent as he’s still drying his tears, overwhelmed by this love from strangers.