AN INTERVIEW WITH LEONARD COHEN
(Montreal, Quebec - 1984)

Leonard Cohen,
Montreal, Quebec, 1984. Photo by Robert Sward
SWARD: Your latest album is called Various Positions. Why
that title?
LC: When you're gathering songs together, the ones that you have and
the ones that you can finish, they generally fall around a certain position:
and this position seemed to me like walking, like walking around the
circumference of the circle. It's the same area looked at from different
positions. I like to have very neutral titles. My last album was called
Recent Songs and that was the most perfect title I've ever
come up with. But Various Positions is okay. My next one
is going to be called Songs in English.
SWARD: What connections are there between Various Positions
and Book of Mercy, your new book of poems?
LC: Book of Mercy is a secret book for me. It's something
I never considered, although it has an organic place, I guess, among
the things I've done. It is a book of prayer and it is a sacred kind
of conversation; the songs are related, of course. Everybody's work
is all of one piece, but Book of Mercy is somehow to one
side. For me personally it's just a document, an important document.
But a popular song has to move more easily, lip to lip. Songs are addressed
and
constructed that way. Book of Mercy is a little book of
prayer that is only valuable to someone who needs it at the time. It
isn't aimed in the same way that a song is aimed.
SWARD: Yet I find it reads very much as if it were a love poem. It
is a book of love ... without the kinds of tensions that are in your
other love poems and songs. It's very much an I-Thou relationship.
LC: Well, I hope it has those qualities, because if a thing doesn't
have those qualities it doesn't go anywhere. It doesn't even touch yourself.
But it is a particular kind of love poem. We always have someone looking
over our shoulder when we write and we always have an idea of a public.
But I think that in Book of Mercy that process was as rarefied
as possible. The public almost evaporated in the construction of that
book. It really was meant for people like myself who could use it at
a particular time.
SWARD: Have you been surprised by the audience that it has found?
LC: I'm always happy that a thing finds any audience at all and I've
gotten some very kind letters from people who are not readers of poetry.
I've gotten letters from soldiers and people I ordinarily never hear
from.
SWARD: In an early poem of yours, "Lines from My Grandfather's-Journal,"
you write, "Even now prayer is my natural language."It strikes
me that you may, to some extent, have found your natural language in
Book of Mercy. And of course a psalm is also a song.
LC: I think that I was touched as a child by the music and the kind
of charged speech that I heard in the synagogue, where everything was
important. The absence of the casual has always attracted me. I've always
considered the act of speaking in public to be very, very important
and that's why I've never been terribly touched by the kind of work
that is so deliberately casual, so deliberately colloquial. There are
many great masters of that form, like Robert Creeley, but it isn't the
sweetness for me. It isn't delicious. I always feel that the world was
created through words, through speech in our tradition, and I've always
seen the enormous light in charged speech, and that's what I've tried
to get to. That's a hazardous position because you can get a kind of
highfalutin' sound that doesn't really strike the ear very well, so
it has its risks, that kind of attachment. But that is where I squarely
stand.
SWARD: One sees the importance of naming in Book of Mercy, and you
have just suggested that this is how the world came into being, through
incantation, through saying and through naming.
LC: Yes, that's always touched me, the capacity to create the world
through speech, and my world is created that way. It's only by naming
the thing that it becomes a reality. A lot of people quarrel with that
idea because that limits the direct perception of things. Everything
is going through speech; everything is going through the idea, and a
lot of
people feel that things should be able to manifest before your awareness
without the encumbrance of speech. I know it's a very old-fashioned
idea and not popular today, but the kind of speech designed to last
forever has always attracted me.
SWARD: You once said that "the angels of mercy are other people."
What does that mean? And what is the relationship between angels and
language?
LC: I don't know. One of the things I always liked about the early
Beatnik poetry -- Ginsberg and Kerouac and Corso-- was the use of the
word "angel." I never knew what they meant, except that it
was a designation for a human being and that it affirmed the light in
an individual. I don't know how I used the word "angel." I've
forgotten exactly, but I don't think I ever got better than the way
that Ginsberg and Kerouac used the word in the early fifties. I always
loved reading their poems where they talked about angels. I've read
a lot of things about angels. I just wrote a song with Lewis Furey called
"Angel Eyes." I like it as a term of endearment: "Darling,
you're an angel." I mean the fact that somebody can bring you the
light, and you feel it, you feel healed or situated. And it's a migratory
gift. We're all that for other people. Sometimes we are and sometimes
we aren't. I know that sometimes it's.just the girl who sells you cigarettes
saying "have a good day" that changes the day. In that function
she is an angel. An angel has no will of its own.
An angel is only a messenger, only a channel. We have another kind
of mythology that suggests angels act independently. But as I understand
it from people who have gone into the matter, the angel actually has
no will. The angel is merely a channel for the will.
SWARD: You speak about will in Book of Mercy. There's one psalm about
the will and it seems to be a wall that prevents something happening
or some opening of a channel
LC: Well, we sense that there is a will that is behind all things,
and we're also aware of our own will, and it's the distance between
those two wills that creates the mystery that we call religion. It is
the attempt to reconcile our will with another will that we can't quite
put our finger on, but we feel is powerful and existent. It's the space
between those two wills that creates our predicament.
SWARD: I am struck, in Book of Mercy, by the relative absence of will.
One of course needs a thread of will to pray. One even needs a thread
of will to write a psalm.
LC: Those are really ticklish questions. I think you put your finger
on it. Somehow, in some way, we have to be a reflection of the will
that is behind the whole mess. When you describe the outer husk of that
will which is yours, which is your own tiny will -- in all things mostly
to succeed, to dominate, to influence, to be king -- when that will
under certain conditions destroys itself, we come into contact with
another will which seems to be much more authentic. But to reach that
authentic
will, our little will has to undergo a lot of battering. And it's not
appropriate that our little will should be destroyed too often because
we need it to interact with all the other little wills.
From time to time things arrange themselves in such a way that that
tiny will is annihilated, and then you're thrown back into a kind of
silence until you can make contact with another authentic thrust of
your being. And we call that prayer when we can affirm it. It happens
rarely, but it happens in Book of Mercy, and that's why I feel it's
kind of to one side, because I don't have any ambitions towards leading
a religious life or a saintly life or a life of prayer. It's not my
nature. I'm out on the street hustling with all the other wills. But
from time to time you're thrown back to the point where you can't locate
your tiny will, where it isn't functioning, and then you're invited
to find another source of energy.
SWARD: You have to rediscover the little wills in order to take up
various positions again.
LC: Yeah, that's right. The various positions are the positions of
the little will.
SWARD: Has there been another time in your work where you have discovered
the will, where you have abandoned the little wills?
LC: Well, I think that in writing, when you're cooking as a writer,
it is a destruction of the little will ... you are operating on some
other fuel. But there are all kinds of writing. There are people like
Charles Bukowski who make that tiny will glorious, and that's a kind
of writing that I like very much: a writing in which there is no reference
to anything beyond the individual's own predicament, his own mess, his
own struggle. We don't really live in Sunday school, and Book of Mercy
is
Sunday school. It's a good little book and it's a good little Sunday
school, but it isn't something that I could honestly stand behind all
the time. I certainly wouldn't want to stand behind it publicly. It
is that curious thing: a private book that has a public possibility.
But it's not my intention to become known as a writer of prayers.
SWARD: What is it like going from Book of Mercy to a tour of forty
European cities giving concerts, as youre about to do, singing
songs from the new album?
LC: Well, it's not very different. You definitely go into a concert
with a prayer on your lips. There's no question about that. I think
that anything risky that you do, anything that sets you up for the possibility
of humiliation like a concert does ... you have to lean on something
that is a little better than yourself I feel I'm always struggling with
the material, whether it's a concert or a poem or a prayer or a conversation.
It's very rarely that I find I'm in a condition of grace where there's
a kind of flow that is natural. I don't inhabit that landscape too often.
SWARD: Do you really feel as though you're experiencing humiliation
when you're out there?
LC: Well, I mean this in a kind of lighthearted way. When you walk
on the stage and 5,000 people have paid good money to hear you, there's
definitely a sense that you can blow it. The possibilities for disgrace
are enormous.
SWARD: Are your audiences in Europe, where you've done many, perhaps
most of your concerts in the recent past, very different ftom your audiences
in North America?
LC: Speaking technically, like a salesman about territories, there
are real differences in audiences. For instance, a Berlin audience is
very different from a Viennese audience. A Berlin audience is very tough,
very critical and sharp, like the edge of a crystal. You have to demonstrate
the capacity to master your material, yourself, the audience. There's
a certain value placed on mastery. In Vienna, there's a certain value
placed on vulnerability. They like to feel you struggling. They're warm,
compassionate. Of course it changes with seasons, whether you're playing
in winter or summer, there's a thousand
variables, but at the bottom, if you can find the door into the song....
You're singing the same songs every night and it's necessary to find
the entrance into the song, and that always changes, and sometimes you
betray yourself in a song. You try to sing it the way you did the night
before and people can feel it. People can feel that you haven't found
your way into it. If you find your way into it, people repond to that.
If you don't, you feel a certain frisson of alienation that you yourself
have created. It's in the air.
SWARD: A resentment?
LC: It can go from a certain absence of warmth in the applause to things
being thrown on the stage.
SWARD: Did that ever happen?
LC: I think I was shot at once at a big festival in Aix-en-Provence.
That was when the Maoists were very powerful in France and they resented
the fact that they actually had to buy a ticket. A lot of them broke
down the fence and came into the concert and I did notice one of the
lights on the stage go out after a kind of crack that sounded like a
gunshot. I don't know. But they're tough critics, the Maoists.
SWARD: What about the French generally? You have said you are French.
How do they respond to you?
LC: My work has been well received in France. One of the reasons is
that they have a tradition that my work fits into. They like to hear
that battle in the voice. They want to hear the real story. The well-known
ones are Brassaens and Brel, but they have hundreds of such singers.
They don't have a preconception of what the voice should be. So my songs
have struck home there.
SWARD: There was a lot of ferment in Montreal in the late 1940's and
early 50's, a lot of excitement around poetry and figures like Irving
Layton and Louis Dudek. Did that touch you at all?
LC: Oh, very much so. Both those men were very kind to me. I studied
with Louis Dudek at McGill University and he, as many people have mentioned,
is a really magnificent teacher. He gave a sort of dignity, an importance,
to the whole enterprise of writing that enflamed young people. You wanted
to write. You wanted to be a poet. And he looked at your poems and spoke
about them and criticized them in a very accurate and compassionate
way, which is his style. I never studied with Irving Layton. I never
felt influenced by Irving or Louis as models, and there was never any
attempt by Irving or Louis to influence their students toward a certain
kind of writing. But they enlightened the whole
process.
SWARD: Im sure you're familiar with Irving's assessment of you
as the high priest of poetry, himself [Irving Layton] as the prophet,
and A. M. Klein as the archivist. How do you feel about that?
LC: I don't know what "archivist" means.
SWARD: Collector of the archives. Keeper of the scrolls. Keeper of
the tradition.
LC: Well, I would never quarrel with that. That's a useful description.
Irving, as the prophet, and probably the best writer we've ever produced
in this country, does stand on a mountain. I inhabit a different kind
of landscape.
SWARD: Is there any tension between your role as solitary poet, if
one
can call it that, and the role of public performer?
LC: I never think of myself as a solitary poet. I don't feel any conflicts
in what I do. There are economic pressures, and there's a desire too,
as a musician would say, to "keep your chops up," to keep
singing and keep playing, just because that's the thing you know how
to do. So between that and the need to make a living, you find yourself
putting a tour together. What the real high calling behind any life
is is very difficult for me to determine. It goes all the way from
thinking that nothing any of us do is terribly important to feeling
that every person has a divine spark and is here to fulfil a special
mission. So between those two positions, there's lots of space. But
I've put out a record and I know I have to go on a tour or nobody will
know about the record and if nobody knows about the record, it defeats
the idea of the song moving from lip to lip, and it also makes it impossible
for me to support my family. So all these things conspire to place me
on a stage
and hopefully be able to entertain people for an evening.
SWARD: So there are really very practical considerations as well.
LC: Well, I don't think there is any other consideration but practical.
I've never been able to disassociate the spiritual from the practical.
I think that what we call the spirit or spirituality is the most intense
form of the practical. I think you have to find those sources within
yourself or there is no movement, there is no life to be led. Many people
have different ways of locating that source. Some people avail themselves
of the traditional ways which we call religion or religious practice.
There are many people who have absolutely no need of those particular
references, but it doesn't mean that their lives are any less spiritual.
On the contrary, it might meant that their lives are more spiritual.
They are living spirits. And there's no distance.
SWARD: It strikes me that there's sometimes more irony in your songs
than in your poems. Im thinking of lines like "He was just
some Joseph looking for a manger." The inflections in your singing
voice convey a variety of different attitudes, and in some instances
an attitude like irony comes through more clearly in the songs.
LC: Yeah, I see what you mean. I think of Bob Dylan, who gets the inflections
of street talk, the inflections of conversation, and does that with
such mastery ... where you can hear a little tough guy talking. You
can hear somebody praying. You can hear somebody asking. You can hear
somebody coming onto you. When you're composing that material and you
know that it's going to occupy aural space, you can compose it with
those inflections in mind. And of course it does invite irony because
that irony can be conveyed with the voice alone whereas on the page
you generally have to have a larger construction around the irony for
it to come through. You can't just write, "What's it to ya?"
If you sing, "What's it to ya?" to some nice chords it really
does sound like, "Well, what's it to yah, baby?" But.just
to see it written, it would need a location.
SWARD: How much connection do you feel with Dylan's music, or with
others, like Joni Mitchell, for example? Whose music is closest to you
now...?
LC: Well, like the Talmud says, there's good wine in every generation.
We have a particular feeling for the music of our own generation and
usually the songs we courted to are the songs that stay with us all
our life as being the heavy ones. The singers of my own period, Joni
Mitchell, Bob Dylan, Joan Baez, Ray Charles, all those singers have
crossed over the generations. But we have a special kind of feeling
for the singers that we use to make love to.
© Robert Sward.
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