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🌌 Embrace the Dark Side of Quality!
You Want It Darker is a premium product that comes shrink-wrapped for optimal freshness and protection, featuring a sleek dark aesthetic that appeals to modern sensibilities. Perfect for gifting or personal use, this product combines style with functionality, ensuring you stand out in any setting.
















| ASIN | B01KN6XDS6 |
| Batteries | 1 AA batteries required. |
| Best Sellers Rank | #10,429 in CDs & Vinyl ( See Top 100 in CDs & Vinyl ) #5,398 in Rock (CDs & Vinyl) #7,127 in Sexual Wellness Products |
| Customer Reviews | 4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars (5,164) |
| Date First Available | August 18, 2016 |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Label | Legacy Recordings |
| Language | English |
| Manufacturer | Legacy Recordings |
| Number of discs | 1 |
| Original Release Date | 2016 |
| Product Dimensions | 5.66 x 5.12 x 0.31 inches; 2.56 ounces |
| Run time | 36 minutes |
A**S
Heart Wrenching Masterwork
I came back to slightly edit my review when I read the discussion/comparison of Dylan and Cohen. My view? None. Cohen is a poet of the soul, a soul that turned itself inside out to tell us the truth. Truth is at the heart of every one of Cohen's masterworks - of which I agree, there were many, and many loved, and many sung. In his culminating album, I reprise the reviewer who wrote 'achingly' to add to my own. Cohen is an irreplaceable for all those who feel now inconsolable. That he was ready, consider "Treaty", consider "I'm Ready, My Lord. I stand with those who call You Want it Darker a masterpiece. In a single album we have the traveling light we all come to. May I detain you to recount a little story of the man's generosity. And, charm! And insouciant wry wit? Many years ago I'd read of a Canadian poet, not very known, a man who didn't perform. He was well educated but discovered poetry is the hardest art. I then saw him (you can, too) on You Tube in a panic. Judy Collins had invited him to sing with her. He wouldn't come out. The audience started to sing one of his songs.... I leave the ellipsis as he might have. Years later I learned Cohen was coming to my city. I felt sure the concert would be sold out. "No," said the ticket-taker. "Plenty of seats." There were fewer than 30. He came out in a raincoat, collar turned up, a fedora and leaned over the footlights. I'm paraphrasing: Hello. Come on down here where I can see you. Get right up close. What am I gonna do? (I noted he used more colloquial speech to join the disparate and diverse crowds he later gathered.) I'm gonna tell a few stories...sing a few songs...I'm gonna give you a full two and a/half hours. How many can you name who stands alone, in shadow, a man and his guitar .... those were there that night - no groupies ... knew unmistakably we were in the presence of a mystic who didn't disguise it. Those of us who heard Adam Cohen, who watched interviews over the years, didn't we feel the stab of his pain, of his painful, measured departure. We now know how the album was created. I don't understand those who wrote "not his best". Granted, each assessment is subjective. I write then for myself and any who may find this small eulogy to a man whose last songs were so intimate, human, vulnerable. I had the privilege of meeting the man when he was little known, when few showed up for his concert. He came out to the footlights, peered into the scattered 30 or fewer and said, "Come on up a little closer. Gather in. I'll tell a few stories, sing a few songs...we're gonna' have the whole two and a/half hours...." Unless you know the full story of Cohen's panic attacks (too long to recount here unless someone reading this queries in the box provided), I'll just say his rational fears and grief he talked of openly were generated by being forced to view his beloved father in an open casket in his own parlor. This is not done in the culltural heritage he did actually follow all his life, calling himself spiritual. He ran to his father's closet to cry among his father's clothes. He later said in an interview, he didn't know why he'd gotten a scissors and cut the tip off one of his father's bow ties. He said he didn't know why. That rending of cloth is symbolic that the dead no longer need clothes. How I wish I'd written him of this. I can hear the song he might have written. I do feel that early loss deepened his sensibility, many times brought him to the brink, turned him to alcohol, drugs. But unlike the many - he fought on. He battled the demons until they quit him. Rather, he quit them. His songs are multi-layered, metaphysical, melodious. Oh those bridges, those shifting melancholy chords. We here on the side of profoundest praise doff our hats to his subtle genius, sardonic charm, his wit, his clear-sighted self-awareness. Praise his social activism, commentary, encompassed in a well-educated man of 'good family' whose deferential manner wrapped his in-person eloquence. His gravelly voice and truth-telling make him a forever star in the pantheon. Was he a force? I say, a multitude of one. A singularity. Listen to the interviews of which there are many. Hear, then read his last poignant message sent to Marianne (also dying), Marianne, his lifelong true-love. If you happen to be Jewish, (or even if you're not), there's a rabbi on You Tube who analyzes the meaning of every word of "You Want it Darker" -- most lines transliterated from the Old Testament. So, our great poet of the people came full circle. Cohen said he was never religious. You rarely find anything of the sort in his songs. All the Cohen songs you ever loved were glorious testimony to being alive - at whatever stage on the road. "Chelsea Hotel", "Bird on a Wire", "Dance me to the End of Love". So many. It's a cumulative mother-lode. Then came Hallelujah, possibly the legacy song for some as so many singers have made it their own. Of "You Want it Darker" - a testimony to love of life and acceptance of Death. "If you're the dealer, I'm out of the game." Here's to the high-hatted fedora tossed in the air. Here's to the man who danced near the end. "I'm ready, My Lord."
R**O
...you want it leonard...
In my life, sadly, I have lived thru too many passings, not only of a personal nature, but also those who have been such a personal influence on my life from afar... Leonard Cohen is such a person...and, as many know, he recently passed, leaving us with one last album before he left, appropriately titled, 'You Want It Darker'... Adding to his already previous canon of brilliant, often dark, masterpieces, the man who came up with 'Bird On A Wire', 'Chelsea Hotel #2', 'Anthem', 'First We Take Manhattan', 'A Thousand Kisses Deep', 'The Future', 'If It Be Your Will', 'Famous Blue Raincoat', and so many more to mention, now has songs like 'Treaty', 'Traveling Light', and the title track, 'You Want It Darker, to add to his definitive work... In fact, every track on this album is so brilliant, that it is indeed at the very top of my list as best album of the year...It begins with the title track, in an almost prophetic funeral chant that leads into a beat and lyrics that will send chills up your spine... And this is DEFINITELY an album to listen to...This is not just background music while you're cleaning the toilet or texting the electors for a change...These lyrics are not only brilliant on their own, but also with a definite premonition of days left to come... Tracks like 'Steer Your Way', 'If I Didn't Have Your Love', and 'Leaving The Table' are lyrical depth charges now knowing what we know...and it probably wouldn't have been so unexpected had this album been heard prior to his leaving... One great sadness is thinking about not being able to see him perform these live, whether in person or on dvd...I bet they would have been incredible... But by any event...in his leaving, he fortunately left us with this intimate reminder of his soul exposed...
O**H
Masterpiece to finish his body of work
Before Cohen created this final release of his lifetime, I felt that "I'm Your Man" was his best followed closely by "Various Positions". Then I listened to this. In my mind this is a biographical work. He lays it all out. His view of faith, life, love and evil which resides in us all. It is pure raw Cohen. I think it is his most personal and honest album he did. It is beautiful. It is sad. It is questioning. Cohen knew he was coming to the end and this would be his chance to make his statement. When I finished listening to it the first time, I just sat and thought about what I had just heard. I felt a lump in my throat realizing that this was his final message to the world. He manages to pack all of this into a mere 36 minutes. His voice is somber and emotional. I recommend this album to everyone I know. It is Cohen at his best. It is one of my go to albums when I need it. Perfect masterpiece to bring his body of work to an end. Part of me wishes that "Thanks For The Dance" would have been left on the shelf, but a little more Cohen is a good thing. But this, this was his true swansong. Thank you Mr.Cohen.
H**I
LP You Want It Darker
I really like it! Tnx!
C**E
Leonard, you'll be missed! LC is the only songwriter whose every studio album I have in my collection, from the first to this one: the last. A little over 35 minutes of his trademark excellency in lyrics; the music like always, not exciting but full of little surprises. The beauty is in the detail. And yes, it's called "You Want It Darker", but listening to it makes me feel lighter. Must have to Leonard's Zen attitude, shining through all the Judeo/Christian images.
タ**ん
レナード・コーエンの14枚目にして最後のアルバム。恥ずかしながらコーエンのアルバムは「Hallelujah」が入っている『Various Positions』しか聴いたことがなかったが、タイトル曲の「You Want It Darker」を試聴したところ、そのあまりの素晴らしさに一発でやられた。荘厳な雰囲気のなか、コーエンはあの渋いバリトンボイスで「ヒネーニ、ヒネーニ(ヘブライ語で私はここにいる、の意味)/主よ、覚悟はできている」と繰り返す。4曲目の「Leaving The Table」では「私はテーブルを離れよう/私はゲームの外にいる」というフレーズがあるが、コーエンがこのアルバムを出した直後に亡くなったことを考えると何か示唆的なものを感じる。全編を貫いているのは気が滅入るような暗さであり、ユダヤ教・キリスト教的な比喩表現がそれに重々しさを添えている。しかし、聴けば聴くほどこのアルバムがいかに光に満ちているかわかると思う。レビュータイトルは2曲目「Treaty」の一節だが、これはアルバムの最後を飾る一節でもある。
J**T
Absolutely beautiful music and lyrics. Unforgettable Leonard Cohen
D**R
Not too surprisingly, Cohen's latest album is a masterpiece. Given the deeper context of an aging singer reflecting on career, mortality and women (always a subject of interest to Cohen), there's a CD of wonderful tracks featuring his quintissential gravely voice over some lovely songs. Looking for top 10? Not here. This is a CD of mostly brooding songs, all well presented, with lyrics that you have to listen to in order to understand what Cohen is trying to pass on. I've been a Cohen fan for decades, admiring his songwriting and performance talents, but my wife had never heard his work before (she's Chinese, and Cohen doesn't seem to have a big presence in China for some reason!). Her first reaction was something along the lines of "you call this singing?" but after a few songs, listening to the lyrics, she really began to enjoy the tracks. While Cohen may not replace the latest pop songs on her music list, she was impressed with Cohen's voice ("deep and gravelly", which described him perfectly) and his messages in the songs. We went back to previous albums so she could hear more. Some people have complained all Cohen tracks sound the same, and while I understand their point of view, it's simply not the case when you listen to each song carefully. There's some really wonderful lyrics here, as well as some interesting observations accumulated over a lifetime in the business. Cohen's voice is top notch, perhaps a little gravellier than previous albums, but all to good effect given the content of these songs. It's his song writing and voice he'll undoubtedly be remembered for, and this album is a great example of a master at work. Hopefully there's more albums to come, as this one simply whetted my appetite for more. One of his better albums of the past two decades, I believe, and a fitting message from a stellar songwriter. Postscript: I write this the day after Cohen's death was announced. It is sad to see the passing of such a legend, both a musician and poet, but the timing of the album and its overall message seem almost prophetic. Listening to You Want It Darker yet again, I have to reiterate this is probably his best album in years, and a great last album (although I wish it were not so). A tribute from a master, and also to the master. RIP, Leonard. Your voice will be missed.
P**Y
Nonostante ascolti musica da molti molti anni, mi sono avvicinato solo di recente al grande Leonard Cohen, riconosciuto al pari di Dylan come uno dei più importanti (forse i più importanti) cantautori di sempre. Questo ultimo album del canadese è assolutamente incredibile. Arrangiamenti e strumenti ridotti al minimo, una voce che penetra nell' anima e non esce più. Ascoltato una volta senti il bisogno di risuonarlo ancora. Consigliato a tutti indipendentemente dal genere preferito. Rimarrete ipnotizzati.
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