Leonard Cohen - Death of a Ladies' Man

Floyd

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As can be expected from such a drastic creative turn; the reception for this album on its release was not warm. Contemporary reviewers and Cohen fans were confused at the production and collaboration choice, and were largely derisive. Subsequently neither artist collaborated again, making this album perhaps Cohen’s most unique, and polarizing.

Time has warmed the reception towards the album, as it so often does. It still remains however, a highly overlooked album; filled with haunting lyricism and arrangements.

Coming from the then 43 year old Cohen, it is often viewed as a ‘mid-life-crisis’ album, and it explores a range of topics; such as love, inadequacy, and infidelity. A general theme of melancholy not uncommon for Cohen, is shown throughout; and there is a Death of Cohen’s persona as a Ladies’ man. Love is the key subject throughout the album; whether it’s out of the narrator’s control in ’Paper Thin Hotel’, or something that inevitably fails leaving both parties unfulfilled on ’Death of a Ladies man’. Cohen explores Love from different perspectives, and often describes it with an air of dissatisfaction and regret. Sex is to be expected in discussing a Ladies’ man; and it is a topic explored on most of the songs. Whether it’s sexual inadequacy on ’Iodine’, or the emptiness in the act itself without love on ’Don’t Go Home With your Hard On’ and the title track, or infidelity on ’Fingerprints’.

While the album is lyrically consistent, Spector’s nostalgic arrangements bring a musical consistency that is strong for most of the album. Many of the arrangements nod to the music of Cohen’s youth; such as the song ’Memories’. While the song’s lyrics explore the hormonal lust of the narrator’s teenage days, the strong is strengthened by Spector’s chamber pop production hearkening to the pop of the late 50’s and early 60’s. ’Memories’ being the standout example of this; the doo-wop and chamber pop style is consistent throughout most of the album. Apart from the rockabilly-esque ’Fingerprints’, a song that is reminiscent to some of Spector’s early 70’s productions with John Lennon and George Harrison; and the pounding ’Don’t Go Home With Your Hard On’, the production is usually consistent.

That being said, it is definitely not an album for everyone. It is a jarringly different album to anything else Cohen ever did; and the layered and sometimes crowded production choices are neither artists’ best. Death of a Ladies Man is a truly bizarre album, but it is not without some moments of great lyrical and musical beauty.


Tracklist for Death of a Ladies' Man:
True Love Leaves No Traces
Iodine
Paper Thin Hotel
Memories
I Left a Woman Waiting
Don't Go Home with Your Hard-On
Fingerprints
Death of a Ladies Man

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