A Day with Suzanne. A Tribute to Leonard Cohen

Record and Artist Details

Genre:

Vocal

Label: Deutsche Harmonia Mundi

Media Format: CD or Download

Media Runtime: 57

Mastering:

DDD

Catalogue Number: 19658 72502-2

1958 72502-2. A Day with Suzanne. A Tribute to Leonard Cohen

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
Devil the care Anonymous, Composer
Domen Marinčič, Viola
Emma-Lisa Roux, Voice
Hille Perl, Viola da gamba
Joel Frederiksen, Voice
Gaillarde Pierre Attaingnant, Composer
Domen Marinčič, Viola
Emma-Lisa Roux, Voice
Hille Perl, Viola da gamba
Joel Frederiksen, Voice
Prélude Pierre Attaingnant, Composer
Domen Marinčič, Viola
Emma-Lisa Roux, Voice
Hille Perl, Viola da gamba
Joel Frederiksen, Voice
Famous Blue Raincoat Leonard Cohen, Composer
Domen Marinčič, Viola
Emma-Lisa Roux, Voice
Hille Perl, Viola da gamba
Joel Frederiksen, Voice
Hey, that’s no way to say goodbye Leonard Cohen, Composer
Domen Marinčič, Viola
Emma-Lisa Roux, Voice
Hille Perl, Viola da gamba
Joel Frederiksen, Voice
Suzanne Leonard Cohen, Composer
Domen Marinčič, Viola
Emma-Lisa Roux, Voice
Hille Perl, Viola da gamba
Joel Frederiksen, Voice
A thousand kisses deep Leonard Cohen, Composer
Domen Marinčič, Viola
Emma-Lisa Roux, Voice
Hille Perl, Viola da gamba
Joel Frederiksen, Voice
Bird on the wire/Le rossignol/The Tuneful Nightingale Leonard Cohen, Composer
Anonymous, Composer
Domen Marinčič, Viola
Emma-Lisa Roux, Voice
Hille Perl, Viola da gamba
Joel Frederiksen, Voice
Dance me to the end of love/Pavane Anonymous, Composer
Pierre Attaingnant, Composer
Domen Marinčič, Viola
Emma-Lisa Roux, Voice
Hille Perl, Viola da gamba
Joel Frederiksen, Voice
You want it darker/Quand me souvient de ma triste fortune Leonard Cohen, Composer
Thomas Crecquillon, Composer
Domen Marinčič, Viola
Emma-Lisa Roux, Voice
Hille Perl, Viola da gamba
Joel Frederiksen, Voice
So long, Marianne/Le phoenix Leonard Cohen, Composer
Domen Marinčič, Viola
Emma-Lisa Roux, Voice
Hille Perl, Viola da gamba
Joel Frederiksen, Voice
Hallelujah/Hallelujah from The Evening Hymn Henry Purcell, Composer
Leonard Cohen, Composer
Domen Marinčič, Viola
Emma-Lisa Roux, Voice
Hille Perl, Viola da gamba
Joel Frederiksen, Voice

It had never occurred to me before to draw a Venn diagram showing the intersecting circles of lovers of the viola da gamba and fans of Leonard Cohen. Well, this album will attract those people and many more – it’s a triumph in creative play and thoughtful synthesis.

Joel Frederiksen has combined the songs of Cohen, whom he calls a modern-day ‘troubadour’, with, for the most part, French Renaissance chansons. It’s an extremely rich listening experience. For Cohen lovers, it’s wondrous if not uncanny to hear your favourite songs dropped off in a different universe, wearing different clothes, but just what – is it the hat? perhaps the shoes? – is trickier to determine. I adore how some of the songs are so lovingly stretched. For instance, the original of ‘So long, Marianne’, which comes in at 5'37", is spun out to 7'10". The tune Le phoenix by de Vincent – a 17th-century composer on whom I can find little to no information – functions as a glorious prelude and bridge-like sepia-coloured memory. The length of tracks is one of the album’s strengths: sumptuous space is given for the listener to sit with each of the magical meldings, so much so that one forgets the artistic assembly and curation at play. That Frederiksen sings while playing the lute – a confident nod to the troubadour tradition – is at the heart of why many of the performances sound so organic. I desperately wish Cohen could have heard just how beguilingly fabulous his songs sound with two violas da gamba and the gentle plucking of a lute.

Although the strophes in both genres allow for simple arrangements, structurally speaking, it’s not a simple case of alternation between Cohen and chanson. Perhaps the cleverest example of this divergence is the meeting of Cohen’s famous ‘Hallelujah’ and Purcell’s The Evening Hymn. Between Cohen’s verses, Frederiksen and friends prepare us with metric play and ground bass for the shift to Purcell. But the chaconne doesn’t last long, and we swerve back into Cohen: indeed, the melting back into the third verse of ‘Hallelujah’ is perhaps my favourite moment on the album. And though soprano Emma-Lisa Roux doesn’t compare with the liquid ease of Emma Kirkby’s matchless rendition with Christopher Hogwood and Anthony Rooley, it’s a moving performance. We begin to hear the Cohen not as pop song but rather as melody with basso continuo, and similarly, Purcell transforms from high art song to just the loveliest of tunes. Clever and heart-warming stuff.

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