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Posted: Mon Apr 11, 2005 2:03 am
by linda_lakeside
Hello to the Newbies! We all discovered Leonared in our own way, but the stories are always similar. 'Heard Leonard, now transfixed'. And with that, we are LC fans forever!
Mara, love your avatar.
Linda.
Posted: Mon Apr 11, 2005 11:50 pm
by lizzytysh
Raining in France. Perfect backdrop for discovery of Leonard.
Teratogen ~ I tried to get to your link. The page could not be displayed

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Reuben and the other new ones ~ Welcome. So good to see you here, and to see how it is you
got here
~ Lizzy
Posted: Tue Apr 12, 2005 9:16 am
by Teratogen
sorry, lizzy. try it now. i just noticed i misspelled something in the link, that's why it didn't work. haha. thanks for letting me know.
My "Leonard Quest"
Posted: Thu Apr 21, 2005 1:03 am
by John Etherington
I can't remember if I've posted this before , but here goes...I bought "The Rock Machine Turns You On" around Christmas 1968, and I thought the whole album was a revelation. However, the outstanding track for me was "Sisters of Mercy". I knew it was the most important song I had ever heard, and that in some way my whole future life was contained therein! At the time, I hadn't seen a picture of Leonard, and I imagined that he looked like Patrick McGoohan (Danger Man). Don't ask me why. Not long after, I was listening to The John Peel show, and he said "next week we have Leonard Cohen, Leonard Cohen, Leonard Cohen" (chanting his name like a mantra). I perceived there and then that something truly awesome was afoot. Following that, I purchased "Songs From a Room" at the time of its release (quickly followed by "Songs of Leonard Cohen") . I never looked back.
Posted: Thu Apr 21, 2005 1:29 am
by linda_lakeside
It's funny you should say that. At some point I said the same thing either in this or an old thread. I bought SFAR and never looked back. Those exact words. I'll bet we're not the only ones.
Linda.
Posted: Thu Apr 21, 2005 11:25 pm
by John Etherington
Hi Linda,
I've been away from the board for a while, but I seem tointuitively return, when there's some action. Maybe I read your post some time ago, and it left a subliminal impression...in which case I'm guilty of subconscious plagiarism! Nice to know that we've had the same experience though.
All good wishes, John E
Posted: Mon May 02, 2005 12:06 am
by niffin
My Getting Hooked Story is about a man looking a lot like Leonard....but Leonard was first; I heard Dance me to the end of love on the radio and simply LOVED it & it became a PART of me - and still is some 20 years later.And the other man - eyeing me like LC in the video.......whhhoooohaa...fell right then & there & we had a stormy relationship going on for three years - listening to everything LC & dancing to that song.........- went to Stockholm for two concerts- ... .. broke up & licking (my) wounds.....
Anyhow, that man & I are still friends but we're not close at all.
"But we will always have Stockholm..."

1970
Posted: Fri Jul 29, 2005 5:57 am
by RMHenderson
In 1970, I was just back from Vietnam and strung out on drugs. I listened to his first album hundreds of times and even learned to play a few of them on guitar. Deep and beautiful. I also quickly figured out that the ladies who liked LC were......easy. Of course, I mean that in a good way.
When CDs came that was the first one that I bought. I'm still waiting for the remastered from the original tapes version.
Posted: Fri Jul 29, 2005 6:08 am
by linda_lakeside
I also quickly figured out that the ladies who liked LC were......easy. Of course, I mean that in a good way.
Well, of course!! There couldn't possibly be a
bad way to take it!
Cheers,
Linda.
Posted: Fri Jul 29, 2005 10:58 am
by Shane
"Waiting For the Miracle" from Natural Born Killers Soundtrack.
Posted: Sat Jul 30, 2005 7:30 pm
by Tri-me
Welcome to the forum Breezie....copied this from my first post
I have been a big fan since grade 11 in 1982. I was taking guitar in high school my teacher busted a string on my bass guitar attempting to tune it. He felt very bad. Being the brat that I was (am) I told him that it would be ok if he gave me his Songs From a Room album. I loved and still love The Story of Issac and the entire album.
I remember being captivated when I heard this song, his voice the guitar playing, I have to say that it is my favourite because it is the song that brought Leonard Cohen into my life. ahhh. I have also been enjoying hearing Leonard Cohen stories from my friends. Last week a friend told me that she say him in Montreal wearing a trench coat. A man that lived here and has since moved to Toronto say him in a bagel shop and was amazed, could not talk. Another friend who lives in Montreal said that he is spotted in his neighbourhood from time to time... A woman I worked with in Toronto 16-17 years ago told me that her mom would read letters written to her by "Uncle Leonard" she lived in New York.
Waiting for a miracle to come a chance to meet Leonard Cohen.
Re: What started your Leonard Quest?
Posted: Wed Aug 10, 2005 5:58 pm
by Fljotsdale
breezie wrote:Fairly recently I just found out about this amazing poet/songwriter named Leonard Cohen. It started with a song called Light as the Breeze. I had to find out who wrote that song. (the version was actually sung by Billy Joel). I found the album "The Future"..and the rest they say is history. I have a lot of work to do to catch up though.
It was last year. I was on a forum I vist regularly, where I am a Mod, and one of the other Mods had the first verse of Everybody Knows in his sig. The words appealed to me instantly, and I demanded to know who wrote them, so he sent me the full text of the lyric and the name Leonard Cohen.
Without hearing him sing even once, I went and bought The Essential Leonard Cohen, just on the strength of the written lyrics of Everybody Knows.
I have almost all the CDs issued (just missing 1), The book of collected poetry, Stranger Music, the novels The Favourite Game, and Beautiful Losers (which is a bit heavy going, not finished it yet, can only do it in bite-size chunks).
I have virtually stopped listening to anyone but Leonard Cohen.
Obsessive? Who, me? Nah!
The fact that my younger daughter has taken to saying "SHUT UP about *&%$#ing Leonard COHEN!!!" means absolutely nothing...
Posted: Wed Aug 10, 2005 6:23 pm
by lizzytysh
I have virtually stopped listening to anyone but Leonard Cohen.
Obsessive? Who, me? Nah!
The fact that my younger daughter has taken to saying "SHUT UP about *&%$#ing Leonard COHEN!!!" means absolutely nothing...

Posted: Fri Aug 12, 2005 8:10 pm
by Fljotsdale
No, really!

Posted: Sat Aug 13, 2005 4:21 pm
by linmag
Keep plugging at it, Fljotsdale!

When I first joined this forum, my husband would leave the room every time I played Leonard Cohen, and my daughter insisted that she couldn't stand his voice. She now has a playlist of selected Cohen favourites on her hard drive, though she 's very sheepish when I catch her playing it. I dragged my husband along to the meeting on Hydra earlier this summer (not exactly kicking and screaming, but only because that's not his style!). He enjoyed it so much that he agreed to go with me to Berlin next year, and I have several witnesses to prove it if necesssary

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