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Leonard Cohen - The Future mp3

Tracklist

1Be For Real
Arranged By, Producer – Steve Lindsey Written-By – Frederick Knight
4:30
2The Future (Edit)
Written-By, Arranged By, Producer – Leonard Cohen
4:25
3Ain't No Cure For Love
Producer – Leonard Cohen, Roscoe BeckWritten-By – Leonard Cohen
4:50

Versions

CategoryArtistTitle (Format)LabelCategoryCountryYear
PRO 759Leonard Cohen The Future ‎(CD, Single, Promo, Car)ColumbiaPRO 759Austria1993
COL 658948 1Leonard Cohen The Future ‎(CD, Single, Car)ColumbiaCOL 658948 1Austria1993
PRO 741Leonard Cohen The Future ‎(CD, Promo)ColumbiaPRO 741Austria1992
ARIC 197Leonard Cohen The Future ‎(7", S/Sided, Promo)CBS/SonyARIC 197Spain1993

Credits

  • Photography ByDominique Isserman

Notes

Tracks 1 & 2 taken from the album 'The Future'

Issued in a standard J-card case with an insert.

Barcodes

  • Barcode: 5 099765 894820
  • Rights Society: BIEM/STEMRA
  • Distribution Code: CB 608
  • Other (Format Code): CD-MS
  • Other: 01-658948-14

Companies

  • Phonographic Copyright (p) – Sony Music Entertainment Inc.
  • Copyright (c) – Sony Music Entertainment Inc.
  • Distributed By – Sony Music

Video

Info

The Future is the ninth studio album by Canadian singer-songwriter Leonard Cohen, released in 1992. Almost an hour in length, it was Cohen's longest album up to that date. Both the fall of the Berlin Wall and the 1992 Los Angeles riots took place while Cohen was writing and recording the album, which expressed his sense of the world's turbulence. The album built. Текст песни: Give me back my broken night my mirrored room, my secret life its lonely here, theres no one left to Future is an album by Leonard Cohen. All songs written by Leonard Cohen, except where noted. Orchestral and background vocal arrangements by David Campbell. The Future 6:41. Waiting for the Miracle Cohen, Sharon Robinson 7:42. Be for Real Frederick Knight 4:32. Closing Time 6:00. Anthem 6:09. Democracy 7:13. Light as the Breeze 7:14. Always Irving Berlin 8:04. Tacoma Trailer 5:57. The title track from Cohen's ninth studio album 1992, a rocker with a gospel chorus, describes the advanced decay of our society. The singer is nostalgic for order and boundaries without them, where does anyone belong When the forbidden becomes commonplace, there is no mystery, no chance for illicit pleasure or even romance. Chaos negates freedom. ixzz3MGjKAtMd View wiki. As with most every Leonard Cohen album, a new record means a new means of musical exploration. With The Future, Cohen adds chiming synthesizers and eerie orchestrations to his brooding anthems about life's darker half. One of the last of Cohen's full-length albums, The Future is definitely one of the most direct. More notable tracks include The Future and Waiting for the Miracle, both of which were featured on the Natural Born Killers soundtrack. Closer to spoken word poetry set to music than simply songs, the entire album is one long manifesto calling all to. Album: The Future 1994. Get the Sheet Music License This Song . songfacts . Artistfacts . Many of Cohen's songs are inspired by music heard in churches, synagogues and mosques. He explained in the April 1993 issue of Song Talk: There's a line in 'The Future': 'When they said repent I wonder what they meant. I understand that they forgot how to build the arch for several hundred years. Masons forgot how to do certain kinds of arches, it was lost. The Future. Leonard Cohen. Released November 24, 1992. The Future Tracklist. The Future Lyrics. Producers Bill Ginn, Leanne Ungar, Leonard Cohen & 3 more. Writers Frederick Knight, Irving Berlin, Leonard Cohen & 1 more. Additional Production Steve Lindsey. Arranged By Leonard Cohen. Arranged By Steve Lindsey. More Leonard Cohen albums. The Flame. You Want It Darker. Show all albums by Leonard Cohen. Band Name Leonard Cohen. Album Name The Future. Type Album. Released date 1992. Labels Columbia Records Sony Music. Music StyleFolk Rock. Members owning this album4. Waiting for the Miracle. Be for Real. Closing Time. Light As the Breeze. Tacoma Trailer. Leonard Cohen The Future. Genre: Rock, Pop, Folk, World, & Country. Style: Folk, Pop Rock. Année: 1992. Vendre cette version. CK 53226, 53226. The Future CD, Album. Columbia, Columbia

Leonard Cohen - The Future mp3

Performer: Leonard Cohen

Title: The Future

Country: UK & Europe

Release date: 1993

Label: Columbia

Style: Blues Rock, Alternative Rock, Soft Rock

Catalog: COL 658948 2

Genre: Jazz / Rock

Size MP3: 2043 mb

Rating: 4.7 / 5

Votes: 458

Record source: CD, Maxi-Single

MP3 Related to Leonard Cohen - The Future

Via
Though it was used in the Oliver Stone film "Natural Born Killers" soon after release, Cohen's "The Future" really suits Cormac McCarthy more in certain regards; it echoes the utterly despairing bleakness of "The Road" and the confusing moral breakdown of the "code of the West" in "No Country For Old Men" in particular. Yes, McCarthy has also seen the future and it is murder, a vision which seems to fuel many of his tales. I love the shifting perspective of this Cohen song, and the fact that the backing track sounds like it's just six minutes excerpted from the endless performance of some spectral band at a seedy drinking establishment off a minor U.S. highway in some Lynchy version of "Hotel California.". Is it the future, really? Or is it the past, since the narrator can see it all played out? Or is it the present? It certainly seems so in 2018, when you dwell a bit on the lyrics. I really enjoy that it's all filtered through this sort of Christian prophet viewpoint, a character living in the outer box that is Cohen's own thoughtful Buddhism with its attendant perspective on human suffering and change. This is very dark, apocalyptic stuff, but, as usual, something about Cohen's delivery gives this the very delicate spin of a weary jest. Even as it paints the macabre details.
Via
Though it was used in the Oliver Stone film "Natural Born Killers" soon after release, Cohen's "The Future" really suits Cormac McCarthy more in certain regards; it echoes the utterly despairing bleakness of "The Road" and the confusing moral breakdown of the "code of the West" in "No Country For Old Men" in particular. Yes, McCarthy has also seen the future and it is murder, a vision which seems to fuel many of his tales. I love the shifting perspective of this Cohen song, and the fact that the backing track sounds like it's just six minutes excerpted from the endless performance of some spectral band at a seedy drinking establishment off a minor U.S. highway in some Lynchy version of "Hotel California.". Is it the future, really? Or is it the past, since the narrator can see it all played out? Or is it the present? It certainly seems so in 2018, when you dwell a bit on the lyrics. I really enjoy that it's all filtered through this sort of Christian prophet viewpoint, a character living in the outer box that is Cohen's own thoughtful Buddhism with its attendant perspective on human suffering and change. This is very dark, apocalyptic stuff, but, as usual, something about Cohen's delivery gives this the very delicate spin of a weary jest. Even as it paints the macabre details.