Main content

Hallelujah

Episode 3 of 3

Leonard Cohen's Hallelujah was almost ignored when first released in 1984. Singer Brandi Carlisle, James Talerico and Jim Kullander explain their deep relationship with the song.

Leonard Cohen's 'Hallelujah' took him years to write. It originally had as many as 80 verses. Recorded for his Various Positions album, it was almost ignored when first released in 1984. Only Bob Dylan saw its true worth and would play it live. John Cale eventually recorded a version which was heard by an obscure musician called Jeff Buckley.

The song has been covered by hundreds of artists including Rufus Wainwright, K.D.Lang and Alexandra Burke.

We hear from those whose relationship with the song is deep and profound - singer Brandi Carlisle listened to it over and over again as a troubled teenager; it became a sound-track to James Talerico falling in love and Jim Kullander made a connexion with the song after the death of his wife.

(Photo: Singer-musician Leonard Cohen performs at Radio City Music Hall, in New York City, 2013. Credit: Jemal Countess/Getty Images)

Available now

27 minutes

Last on

Sun 17 Apr 2016 19:32GMT

More episodes

Next

You are at the last episode

See all episodes from The Compass

Broadcasts

  • Thu 14 Apr 2016 01:06GMT
  • Thu 14 Apr 2016 02:06GMT
  • Thu 14 Apr 2016 03:06GMT
  • Thu 14 Apr 2016 04:06GMT
  • Thu 14 Apr 2016 06:06GMT
  • Thu 14 Apr 2016 08:06GMT
  • Thu 14 Apr 2016 11:06GMT
  • Thu 14 Apr 2016 14:06GMT
  • Thu 14 Apr 2016 21:06GMT
  • Sat 16 Apr 2016 02:32GMT
  • Sat 16 Apr 2016 08:06GMT
  • Sat 16 Apr 2016 16:32GMT
  • Sat 16 Apr 2016 17:32GMT
  • Sat 16 Apr 2016 19:32GMT
  • Sun 17 Apr 2016 09:06GMT
  • Sun 17 Apr 2016 19:32GMT

The Documentary Podcast

The Documentary Podcast

Hear more documentaries from the 麻豆社 World Service

Podcast