Monday 23 June 2008

Leonard Cohen, Opera House, Manchester

When announcing a tour it is not usually the done thing to mention financial incentives. The Rolling Stones, for example, try to give the impression that they would be happy to play for nothing more than travel expenses and a hot meal.

The primary motivation behind Leonard Cohen's return to the stage after 15 years, however, is unashamedly pecuniary.

His former manager Kelley Lynch siphoned off $5m from his retirement fund - money that, despite Cohen winning a civil suit, she shows no inclination to pay back. And so, arguably the greatest songwriter of his era has had to gird his 73-year-old loins for a lengthy tour of Europe and Canada.












It is a dreadful business, but fans who had given up hope of ever seeing Cohen in action again could be forgiven for feeling guiltily grateful to Lynch.

Fortunately, Cohen does not seem in the least bit reluctant. He wears his age well. He was already 33, and a published novelist, when he released his debut album in 1967, so his songwriting persona was careworn and battle scarred from the off.

Tonight, in his suit and hat, he resembles a senior 1920s mobster, only with a guitar instead of a tommy gun.

When he and his similarly attired band open with the Italian-flavoured Dance Me to the End of Love, we could almost be at a mafia wedding. The hat is gracefully doffed to acknowledge applause.

Cohen's baritone has become deeper and more formidable over the years; the line in Tower of Song - "I was born with the gift of a golden voice" - prompts a wave of knowing laughter and applause. The golden voice now resembles a boulder rolling down a tunnel: something huge and elemental.

Older songs such as Suzanne lure him back to the upper limits of his range, but most of the material dates from after he discovered synthesizers and politics in the 80s.

The acrid, dystopian humour of The Future and First We Take Manhattan is as resonant now as it was 20 years ago, a reminder that the only people who dub Cohen depressing are those that don't get the jokes. He delivers plenty tonight, like a wry nightclub host.

"Please sit down," he says after one standing ovation. "It makes me nervous. I think you're going to leave."

Only the slightly hokey, jazz-club arrangements sometimes threaten to distract from Cohen's commanding presence - a saxophone solo is never too far away - but songwriting this good is indomitable.

Seizing his magnificent Hallelujah back from Jeff Buckley, Rufus Wainwright and dozens more, he is possessed by the words, his eyes squeezed tight, his body trembling.

After three hours, the final encore is the aptly titled I Tried to Leave You. "Goodnight my darling/ I hope you're satisfied," Cohen rumbles with a wink. "Here's a man still working for your smile."

· At Manchester Opera House tonight (0844 847 2277), then touring


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Sunday 1 June 2008

Israel@60: A Capital Celebration to be Held on National Mall

Internationally-Acclaimed Singer-Song Writer Regina Spektor to Headline
Event

Tony and Emmy Award-Winning Actor Mandy Patinkin to Emcee Free
Community-Wide Festival

Sesame Street Muppets Oscar the Grouch and his Israeli cousin Moishe
Oofnik to Participate

WASHINGTON, May 30 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Israel@60: A Capital
Celebration will take place on Sunday, June, 1, 2008, from noon to 5:00
p.m. on the National Mall in the Nation's Capital. This free,
community-wide celebration will feature internationally-acclaimed
singer-songwriter Regina Spektor (who wrote and recorded a song in the new
"Narnia" movie); Tony and Emmy award-winning actor on both the television
and the stage, Mandy Patinkin, who will emcee the program; Sesame Street
Muppets Oscar the Grouch and his Israeli cousin Moishe Oofnik; and the
Israeli rock band Mashina. The event is sponsored by The Jewish Federation
of Greater Washington, in partnership with the Embassy of Israel and other
community organizations.

Regina Spektor, an emerging young Jewish artist whose music resonates
among a diverse age group and wide variety of audiences, brings her
personal sound and story to all of her performances. Spektor and her family
emigrated from the former Soviet Union when she was a child and settled in
the New York City area. Praised by such magazines as People Magazine, USA
Today, Alternative Press, Spin, The New York Times, Vanity Fair, Blender,
and many others, Spektor is one of those rare talents who manage to outrun
the trends and force the rest of the world to keep up. Rolling Stone raves
Spektor breathes as much heartbreaking meaning and inflection into
individual syllables as most singers give entire words.

Since his Broadway debut in 1980, Mandy Patinkin has extensive credits
on and off Broadway, including Evita (TONY AWARD), Sunday In The Park With
George (TONY AWARD), Mandy Patinkin in Concert: Dress Casual, The Secret
Garden, Enemy of the People (Williamstown Theater Festival), Henry IV, Part
I, Winters Tale, The Knife, and Leave It to Beaver is Dead. He has appeared
in over 20 films and has starred in numerous television shows, recently
including Criminal Minds on CBS. Patinkin is also famously known for his
role as Inigo Montoya, in The Princess Bride (1987), where he delivered the
oft-quoted line: "Hello, my name is Inigo Montoya. You killed my father.
Prepare to die."

Spektor and Patinkin will be joined by other performers and
entertainers, including acclaimed Israeli rock band Mashina and Sesame
Street Muppets. Sponsored by The Jewish Federation of Greater Washington.

WHAT: National celebration of Israel's 60th birthday on National Mall

Multiple festival happenings, hands-on exhibits and activities for all
ages: music, dance, theater performances, Israeli food, children's
activities and family workshops.

WHO: Greater Washington celebration to include headline performer
singer/songwriter Regina Spektor, actor Mandy Patinkin, Sesame Street
Muppets Oscar the Grouch and his Israeli cousin Moishe Oofnik, Israeli rock
band Mashina, and others. Free and open to the public.

WHEN: Sunday, June 1, 2008; 12:00 Noon-5:00 P.M.

WHERE: Israel@60: A Capital Celebration will take place on the National
Mall, in front of The National Gallery of Art and The National Air and
Space Museum, between Archives-Navy Memorial and L'Enfant Plaza metro
stops. Parking is limited; take Metro.

For more information: http://www.shalomdc.org




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