ext_281244 (
freakytigger.livejournal.com) wrote in
poptimists2008-12-15 11:54 am
The Hallelujah Chorus
[Poll #1315469]
I enjoyed both the X-Factor finalists' versions a lot more than I was expecting to. What occurred to me is that the lyrics aren't really designed to be sung in a power-soul style, but that actually this left me feeling a bit embarassed for the lyrics themselves*, not the singing or performance.
*and of course someone - Simon Cowell's? - selection from them: "Hallelujah" has about 50 billion verses so like American Pie any shortened cover versh will be a selection box.
I enjoyed both the X-Factor finalists' versions a lot more than I was expecting to. What occurred to me is that the lyrics aren't really designed to be sung in a power-soul style, but that actually this left me feeling a bit embarassed for the lyrics themselves*, not the singing or performance.
*and of course someone - Simon Cowell's? - selection from them: "Hallelujah" has about 50 billion verses so like American Pie any shortened cover versh will be a selection box.
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"And remember when I moved in you
the holy dove was moving too
And every breath we drew was Hallelujah"
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It's quite *positive* about it all, for L Cohen anyway, in that it sort of reconciles the two, but it's not some huge choral production about God and ting. I dislike versions of it where the Huge Towering Chorus overpower the verses, and I have beef with the way it seems to get played at Huge Emotional Moments on tv programmes.
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We'll take a bit of this and that
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I don't think I have a favourite version - there's one by Kathryn Williams which is nice I guess. Will tick Alexandra as I feel quite kindly towards her at the minute.
*b/c obv a full-on house version, complete with big-lunged diva belting out the lyrics, would be amazing.
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Yep, that's exactly how I felt about it. Stupid Simon Cowell ruins everything.
Kathryn Williams
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how about bon jovi
dirty hymnal
Re: dirty hymnal
Re: dirty hymnal
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"It Doesn't Matter Which You Heard": the Curious Cultural Journey of Leonard Cohen's "Hallelujah"
What's fascinating about all this is not simply the song's ubiquity on TV dramas - it's that it's used in the exact same way every time. Songs can be used sincerely, ironically, as background shading, as subtle comment, as product placement. But "Hallelujah" always appears as people are being sad, quietly sitting and staring into space or ostentatiously crying, and always as a way of tying together the sadness of different characters in different places. In short, it's always used as part of a "sad montage."
(Mike's piece also contains excellent graphs.)
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The interesting thing about this is that it predates the OC and Scrubs surge - while it's Cale on the soundtrack to Shrek, it's Wainwright on the soundtrack album.
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My favourite is the k.d. lang version.