The Sentinel-Record

Leonard Cohen old and wise on ‘You Want It Darker’

- PABLO GORONDI

Leonard Cohen’s late, late career resurgence reaches new heights on “You Want It Darker,” an elegant treatise with deep felt layers of wisdom and a sense of finality.

Produced mostly by son Adam, Cohen’s third studio album in five years puts his most effective musical forms through a filter of restraint. Nothing distracts from the 82-year-old’s haunting lyrics, and his vocals remain both otherworld­ly and down-to-earth.

A physical, naked bass line drives the title song, as Cohen’s woofer-rattling vocals are underpinne­d by a cantor and the Shaar Hashomayim Synagogue Choir, connection­s to his Montreal youth. Full of recriminat­ions and frustratio­ns while also ready to accept fate, it may be God who wants it darker, but it’s us who “kill the flame.”

The Mediterran­ean stylings of “Traveling Light” are like the soundtrack to Cohen’s courtship of the legendary (and recently deceased) Marianne Ihlen on a Greek island in the 1960s. “Leaving the Table” is a country song glowing from the jukebox and Johnny Cash could have recorded “If I Didn’t Have Your Love” with Rick Rubin.

If it’s too early to say goodbye, we can consider “You Want It Darker” as simply his new album, not the end of a trilogy.

No matter which station of life he’s at, Cohen shines on, darkly.

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