Leonard Cohen – Songs From The Road [BluRay Untouched, 1080i]
MPEG-4 AVC, 1080i, 1.78:1 | Dolby True-HD 5.1 & LPCM Stereo @ 24Bit/96kHz | Full Artwork
Label/Cat#: Sony Music, Legacy # 88697759099 | Country/Year: Europe 2010 | Size: 21,60 GB | 5% Recovery Info
Genre: Pop, Chanson | Style: Acoustic, Singer/Songwriter
MD5 [X] CUE [X] LOG [] INFO TEXT [X] ARTWORK [X]
my rip [X] not my rip []
foobar2000 1.1.7 / Dynamic Range Meter 1.1.1
log date: 2012-03-09 20:22:37
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Analyzed: Leonard Cohen / Songs From The Road
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DR Peak RMS Duration Track
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DR11 -3.00 dB -16.25 dB 8:32 01-Lover, Lover, Lover
DR12 -3.00 dB -17.90 dB 6:24 02-Bird On The Wire
DR12 -3.00 dB -18.54 dB 3:44 03-Chelsea Hotel
DR11 -3.00 dB -16.89 dB 6:32 04-Heart With No Companion
DR12 -3.00 dB -17.77 dB 4:49 05-That Don't Make It Junk
DR12 -3.00 dB -16.43 dB 8:02 06-Wainting For The Miracle
DR14 -5.50 dB -22.46 dB 4:17 07-Avalanche
DR13 -3.00 dB -18.95 dB 3:48 08-Suzanne
DR12 -3.00 dB -17.01 dB 5:11 09-The Partisan
DR13 -3.00 dB -18.95 dB 5:35 10-Famous Blue Raincoat
DR9 -3.00 dB -15.54 dB 8:36 11-Hallelujah
DR11 -3.00 dB -15.05 dB 6:23 12-Closing Time
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Number of tracks: 12
Official DR value: DR12
Samplerate: 96000 Hz
Channels: 2
Bits per sample: 24
Bitrate: 2956 kbps
Codec: FLAC
================================================================================
log date: 2012-03-09 20:22:37
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Analyzed: Leonard Cohen / Songs From The Road
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
DR Peak RMS Duration Track
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
DR11 -3.00 dB -16.25 dB 8:32 01-Lover, Lover, Lover
DR12 -3.00 dB -17.90 dB 6:24 02-Bird On The Wire
DR12 -3.00 dB -18.54 dB 3:44 03-Chelsea Hotel
DR11 -3.00 dB -16.89 dB 6:32 04-Heart With No Companion
DR12 -3.00 dB -17.77 dB 4:49 05-That Don't Make It Junk
DR12 -3.00 dB -16.43 dB 8:02 06-Wainting For The Miracle
DR14 -5.50 dB -22.46 dB 4:17 07-Avalanche
DR13 -3.00 dB -18.95 dB 3:48 08-Suzanne
DR12 -3.00 dB -17.01 dB 5:11 09-The Partisan
DR13 -3.00 dB -18.95 dB 5:35 10-Famous Blue Raincoat
DR9 -3.00 dB -15.54 dB 8:36 11-Hallelujah
DR11 -3.00 dB -15.05 dB 6:23 12-Closing Time
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Number of tracks: 12
Official DR value: DR12
Samplerate: 96000 Hz
Channels: 2
Bits per sample: 24
Bitrate: 2956 kbps
Codec: FLAC
================================================================================
BluRay Info:
Leonard Cohen – Songs From The Road
Label: Sony Music, Legacy
Catalog#: 88697759099
Format: Blu-ray, Stereo, Multichannel
Country: Europe
Released: 2010
Genre: Rock
Style: Folk Rock
Video
Codec: MPEG-4 AVC
Resolution: 1080i
Aspect ratio: 1.78:1
Audio
English: Dolby TrueHD 5.1 (96kHz, 24-bit)
English: LPCM 2.0 (96kHz, 24-bit)
Screenshots can be found here
Tracklist:
1 Lover, Lover, Lover 7:44
2 Bird On The Wire 6:09
3 Chelsea Hotel 3:32
4 Heart With No Companion 5:07
5 That Don't Make It Junk 4:23
6 Waiting For The Miracle 8:02
7 Avalanche 4:17
8 Suzanne 3:41
9 The Partisan 5:19
10 Famous Blue Raincoat 5:24
11 Hallelujah 7:32
12 Closing Time 6:07
Notes:
"Lover, Lover, Lover" - Live Sept 24, 2009; Ramat Gan Stadium, Tel Aviv, Israel
"Bird On The Wire" - Live Nov 6, 2008; Clyde Auditorium, Glasgow, Scotland
"Chelsea Hotel" - Live Nov 17, 2008; Royal Albert Hall, London, England
"Heart With No Companion" - Live Nov 2, 2008; Oberhausen King Pilsener Arena, Oberhausen, Germany
"That Don't Make It Junk" - Live Nov 13, 2008; O2 Arena, London, England
"Waiting For The Miracle" - Live Nov 13, 2009; HP Pavilion, San Jose, California
"Avalanche" - Live Oct 12, 2008; Gothenburg Scandinavium, Gothengurg, Sweden
"Suzanne" - Live Nov 30, 2008; MENA Arena, Manchester, England
"The Partisan" - Live Oct 10, 2008; Hartwall Arena, Helsinki, Finland
"Famous Blue Raincoat" - Live Nov 13, 2008; O2 Arena, London, England
"Hallelujah" - Live April 17, 2009; Coachella Music Festival, Indio, California
"Closing Time" - Live May 24, 2009; John Labatt Centre, London, Ontario, Canada
Bonus Feature: "Backstage Sketch" Film by Lorca Cohen
Barcode and Other Identifiers:
Barcode: 8 8697-75909-9 3
Discogs Url: http://www.discogs.com/release/3462259
Review by Mark Deming
Given that Leonard Cohen's recent international concert tour was prompted by the fact his former manager purportedly made off with his life's savings, only a curmudgeon would blame the man for trying to make the enterprise as profitable as possible. Roughly 14 months after releasing Live in London, which preserved Cohen's July 2008 performance at London's 02 Arena, the venerable singer and songwriter is presenting to his fans Songs from the Road, featuring 12 tunes (on both CD and DVD) from his 2008 and 2009 concert dates. While Live in London captured the feel and flow of a single concert and featured most of Cohen's best-known songs, this set includes bits and pieces from 11 different shows, and while this album isn't exactly a collection of rarities, it does feature a number of lesser-known tunes (such as "Heart With No Companion" and "That Don't Make It Junk") and variant versions of some of his more famous numbers (Cohen juggles the order of the verses on "Suzanne" and adds a new verse to "Bird on a Wire"). While Live in London was a richly satisfying souvenir of Cohen's inspired comeback shows, Songs from the Road is less impressive in its more modest scale and less cohesive atmosphere. But the album still demonstrates that Cohen is a compelling and absorbing performer who brings his soul into every verse he sings, and his band is nothing less that superb; even when Dino Soldo's sax and Bob Metzger's guitar dip into jazz fusion sleepyland, they give Cohen just the musical support he needs, and the interplay between them and the vocalist is a marvel. Songs from the Road seems a bit pale compared to the excellence of Live in London, but both albums are enough to convince anyone that even at the age of 74, Leonard Cohen remains one of the most vital figures in contemporary music, and his gifts as a performer nearly match his abilities as a writer, no small accomplishment. allmusicguide
Leonard Cohen: Songs from the Road Blu-ray Review
Hallelujah.
Reviewed by Jeffrey Kauffman, October 22, 2010
Bob Dylan. Superstar, countless hit records, quite possibly a billionaire. Leonard Cohen. Cult figure, a few scattered hit singles (by other artists covering his songs), probably "only" made it to multimillionaire. It's odd, isn't it, especially when one compares both Dylan and Cohen's literary ambitions within the ostensible confines of the folk rock idiom. If Cohen has never really risen to the pop consciousness levels that Dylan has enjoyed for going on 50 years, he doesn't seem to be particularly upset about it, and in fact probably prefers his relative anonymity. Cohen is a famously reclusive character, one who disappeared for several years into a Zen retreat center. But even his artistic persona seems cloaked in enigmas. His lyrics are typically poetically opaque and even discursive, hinting at great truths without ever coming right out and stating them. As with Dylan's songs, a surface simplicity hides an amazing profundity, one which defies easy categorization, and may have contributed as much as anything to keeping Cohen himself off of the Top 10 charts. While several of his songs have become pop music icons, notably "Suzanne" and "Hallelujah," Cohen himself has remained a mystery, a shadowy figure who just happens to write one amazing song after another. And so it's both bracing and a little frightening to see Cohen himself front and center, friendly, relaxed, even (amazingly enough) joking with the audience, albeit in his ever quiet and understated way, throughout this wonderful compendium of 12 Songs from the Road, culled from Cohen's 2008-2009 world tour.
Some idea of the esteem in which Cohen is held in certain literary circles are the absolutely eloquent liner notes in the insert booklet of this new Blu-ray, written by The New Republic's Leon Wieseltier. Wieseltier waxes poetic, and really quite profoundly, about our transient society, and how the road is seen as a bridging element between a departure and a destination, rather than a place of its own. "We have forgotten how to be travelers and we are tourists instead, sitting still before the window and watching the world speed past, when in fact we are the ones who are speeding and it s the world that is still, for those who possess the capacity for stillness." Wow. Wieseltier posits Cohen as a mystic traveler, an itinerant shaman who delivered some semblance of the Divine as he played 195 shows between May 2008 and November 2009.
Cohen has always been an artist who plays it, both figuratively and literally, close to the vest, and there is still a somewhat guarded aspect to his persona, even in this up close and personal journey through nearly a year and a half of touring. Though Cohen is perhaps unfairly thought of as a cult figure, the mammoth crowds that greet him in places as far flung as Tel Aviv and Glasgow prove that he has an ardent fan base that is willing to turn out by the thousands to see their musical hero in person. What is truly celebratory about these concerts is not just the fact that Cohen is still spry enough to do them (he's 76), but that he seems to have come to a place of joy himself. Long regarded as either a recluse or a depressive, Cohen may not exactly be tripping the light fantastic in any of these venues, but he's obviously touched and, in his own introspective way, cheerful throughout these twelve disparate performances. In fact, Cohen is blissful, in the most effulgent meaning of that word.
With his voice significantly deepened and burnished by the increasing years, Cohen is more of a declaimer than he is actually a singer. But that wealth of soul informs his brilliant lyric writing as perhaps a "prettier" voice could never do. Backed by an ace band, including music director/bassist Roscoe Beck and keyboardist Neil Larsen (of the late lamented Feiten-Larsen Band), Cohen calmly moves through twelve of his songs, some classic, some less known. Through it all, Cohen is quietly commanding on stage, communicating the essence of his spirituality, one wise with age but not bowed to cynicism. There's a nice variety to the arrangements here, with several of the band members taking extended solos, and Leonard himself contributing a gypsy guitar lick or two. As might be expected of an artist this enamored of the ballad, there aren't a wealth of up tempo blockbusters here; rather, this is an elegant set of stories set to more contemplative rhythm arrangements.
The good news is most fans will probably flock to this release for its audio rather than its video. The bad news is the video is pretty soft looking, with some attendant blooming, perhaps due to over aggressive stage lighting, which makes the background curtains flare in a variety of colors throughout Cohen's worldwide trek. The Blu-ray is presented with an AVC encode, in 1080i and 1.78:1, and while close-ups deliver some nice fine detail and decent contrast, mid-range and far-range shots are really a muddle, with faces turning to amorphous goo and detail all but disappearing. The film segues in and out of black and white sequences, and those sport good contrast and excellent black levels, and indeed the black levels in the color sequences are also excellent. But more often than not the bright orange, blue and other lit colored curtains flare into blooming, almost threatening to take over the musicians standing in front of them.Luckily, Songs from the Road is presented with a sterling Dolby TrueHD 5.1 (96kHz, 24-bit) mix which offers Cohen's magnetic performances in beautiful and heartfelt fidelity. Cohen deep voice comes through loudly and clearly, despite the fact that Cohen is really not much of a singer, and the band is presented with excellent separation and with great surround utilization. Cohen's guitar and harmonica sound fantastic, and the backing band and three backup singers are offered with brilliant, distortion free fidelity and excellent dynamic range, at least insofar as this kind of mellow-skewed set of tunes allows. These are some very eloquent performances, and the Dolby TrueHD 5.1 mix presents them with crystal clarity. There is also an LPCM 2.0 lossless stereo fold down available.
On the Blu-ray itself, we get a really interesting Backstage Sketches (HD; 21:26) featurette, which offers interviews with a lot of Cohen's backing band. In the keepcase is one of the oddest extras ever: a little plastic pouch containing a "Fortune Telling Fish," a little piece of vinyl you leave on your hand which supposedly tells your fortune by how it curls.
Songs from the Road offers the chance to see one of the most enigmatic and lyrically brilliant artists working in the realm of popular music. Cohen has been such a reclusive figure for so long it's a bit bracing to see him, warts and all, in this amazing amalgamation of performances from venues near and far. Though the image quality here isn't great, the audio quality more than makes up for it, and this Blu-ray is highly recommended. blu-ray.com