50th Anniversary Edition on opaque white vinyl, with updated / re-typeset embossed packaging that includes a brand new 8 page 12x12 lyric booklet.
The audio has been sourced from the original analogue tapes via a new direct digital transfer.
It doesn't get darker than this. Though Leonard Cohen had already established himself as the doyen of doom with his first two albums, his third, Songs of Love And Hate, finds him kicking off the 1970s with the sharpest repudiation of the '60s peace-and-love / flower-power ethic the world had yet seen from the 'sensitive troubadour' corner of the music map.
Though it's not really a concept album, it does feel like a guided tour through one man's battle-scarred love life. The utter emotional degradation of "Avalanche", the suicidal frenzy of "Dress Rehearsal Rag", and the bitter regret of "Last Year's Man" all sound like stops on the same ill-fated journey.
The arrangements are wisely based around cohen's world-weary voice and hypnotic acoustic-guitar patterns, with occasional orchestrations rising like dark clouds in the background.
Possibly Cohen's finest album, it would stand as a monument to explorers of the musical dark side for decades to come - such as Nick Cave, who memorably covered "Avalanche" - and to anyone nursing a bitter, broken heart.
Songs Of Love And Hate (Black Friday 2021)
£34.99
180 Gram Vinyl with 12x12 Lyric Booklet
Opaque White
19439882371
Usually dispatched in 5-10 days
Songs Of Love And Hate (Black Friday 2021)
£34.99
180 Gram Vinyl with 12x12 Lyric Booklet
Opaque White
19439882371
Usually dispatched in 5-10 days
50th Anniversary Edition on opaque white vinyl, with updated / re-typeset embossed packaging that includes a brand new 8 page 12x12 lyric booklet.
The audio has been sourced from the original analogue tapes via a new direct digital transfer.
It doesn't get darker than this. Though Leonard Cohen had already established himself as the doyen of doom with his first two albums, his third, Songs of Love And Hate, finds him kicking off the 1970s with the sharpest repudiation of the '60s peace-and-love / flower-power ethic the world had yet seen from the 'sensitive troubadour' corner of the music map.
Though it's not really a concept album, it does feel like a guided tour through one man's battle-scarred love life. The utter emotional degradation of "Avalanche", the suicidal frenzy of "Dress Rehearsal Rag", and the bitter regret of "Last Year's Man" all sound like stops on the same ill-fated journey.
The arrangements are wisely based around cohen's world-weary voice and hypnotic acoustic-guitar patterns, with occasional orchestrations rising like dark clouds in the background.
Possibly Cohen's finest album, it would stand as a monument to explorers of the musical dark side for decades to come - such as Nick Cave, who memorably covered "Avalanche" - and to anyone nursing a bitter, broken heart.