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Everybody knows that the dice are loaded

Everybody rolls with their fingers crossed

Everybody knows that the war is over

Everybody knows the good guys lost

Everybody knows the fight was fixed

The poor stay poor, the rich get rich

That's how it goes

Everybody knows

Everybody knows that the boat is leaking

Everybody knows that the captain lied

Everybody got this broken feeling

Like their father or their dog just died


I reckon Trump's victory was the final straw for him .

Otta Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Suzanne, and (over covered as it may be)

> Hallelujah. And it's only covered so much because

> it's a great song.



I don't like his version of it, though!


The only one I've heard that I like is Rufus Wainwright's. And I don't like anything else I've heard by Rufus Wainwright.


Weird.

Second the Buckley - first heard it in Without a Trace (I don't have my finger quite on the pulse) and after my absolute delight in realising a Cohen song was being used thought "I've got to have this..." Reckon his and Len's versions just about tie.


Random anecdote - Len once said to Dylan "Hey, I love Desolation Row, how long did it take you to write that?" Dylan, "Uh, 'bout twenny minutes. That Hallelujah, that's a great song too. How long did that take you?" Cohen: "Oh, about eight years..."


And another one I only heard today - Cohen and Dylan were in a car and Cohen said, "Bob, you're number one, no question, I just hope I'm number two." Dylan: "No man, you're number one. I'm number zero."


While I'm rambling (obviously the great man is much on all our minds today) I thought one of his last public pronouncements summed up his grace, wit and good humour: asked what he thought of Bob getting the Nobel prize, he replied, "To me it's like pinning a medal on Mount Everest for being the tallest mountain."

Robert Poste's Child Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Now I bid you farewell, I don't know when I'll be

> back

> They're moving us tomorrow to that tower down the

> track

> But you'll be hearing from me baby, long after I'm

> gone

> I'll be speaking to you sweetly

> From a window in the Tower of Song


One of my favourites, especially when he growls in those nicotine and whisky soaked tones, "I was born like this/I had no choice/I was born with the gift of a golden voice." All those who think he was just a prophet of doom overlook the fact that he had a brilliant self-deprecating sense of humour.

rendelharris Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------


> Random anecdote - Len once said to Dylan "Hey, I

> love Desolation Row, how long did it take you to

> write that?" Dylan, "Uh, 'bout twenny minutes.

> That Hallelujah, that's a great song too. How

> long did that take you?" Cohen: "Oh, about eight

> years..."



I remember him telling that one on Radio 4 some years ago (definitely before 2009, because I remember listening to it in an old flat I left in 2009).

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