LEONARD COHEN  PRESENTS  
ANJANI 
 
  
 
  
Photo from the newspaper Rzeczpospolita/Piotr Fotek
 
  
ANJANI AND  
LEONARD 
LIVE 
IN  
WARSAW 
  
 
 
  
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Leonard and Anjani wrote their greetings on the wall after the interview.
Photos © 2007 Eija Arjatsalo  
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Introduction by Marek Niedzwiedzki  
Leonard Cohen's opening words (see below)  
Anjani's songs: 
1. Blue Alert  
2. The Golden Gate  
3. Half the Perfect World  
4. Innermost Door  
5. No One After You  
6.   Never Got to Love You 
7. Thanks for the Dance  
8.   Whither Thou Goest
  
Encore:  
9. Nightingale  
 Songs 6 and 8 were duets with Leonard 
Click on the links to hear the duets from the  1heckofaguy.com website
  
Musicians:  
Anjani Thomas - vocals, piano  
Lou Pomanti - keyboard  
Rob Piltch - guitar  
Scott Alexander - bass
  
Photo on the right:  © Agnieszka Ksenia Wojtanowska  
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Four close-ups © 2007 Vlad Arghir, processed by Wojtek Wilk
  
  
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"Thank you so much, friends... Please, sit down, thank you so much. Thank you, Marek, thank you very much. Thank you for coming tonight. Thank 
you, the listeners of Trójka. It's a great privilege and a great honour for 
us to be here. We were here 22 years ago. There were brave men in prison. 
There were people under house arrest. There was the Heavy Hand over the 
society and over the culture. And here today, 22 years later, they're 
calling this the "New Paris". Warsaw is the new Paris. Well, maybe Warsaw 
doesn't want to be the new Paris? In any case, we don't live in Warsaw, we 
don't live in Paris although those geographies may define our actual 
location; we live in other places that are more intimate and more real and 
more authentic than whatever the official culture defines us as. I was 
reading in Milosz's book today... just one beautiful paragraph... He says:"
  
Man has been given to understand
 that he lives only by the grace of those in power.
 Let him therefore busy himself sipping coffee, catching butterflies.  And whoever cares for the republic will have his right hand cut off.  There is so much death and that is why affection for pigtails,  bright-coloured skirts in the wind, for paper boats no more durable  than we are.(*)
  
"And then the poem just drifts off. And it's in that drifting off that these 
songs that we have tonight are written. Just... The songs not of great love, 
not of... songs that address the great bewildering challenges of today 
whether they're global warming of the clash of civilizations  or the 
resolution of all the horrendous conflicts that beset us. These are songs 
that Anjani and I wrote about the little places, about the little loves, 
about the little corners."
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"Some distinguished musicians have come with us from Canada. And I'd like to 
introduce them to you. These are master musicians - soloists and composers 
in their own right. On keyboard, Lou Pomanti. On guitar, Rob Piltch. On 
bass, Scott Alexander."
  
"These songs are honoured by the company of these musicians. Now, one day... 
I know Anjani very well - some of you may know - we've been singing and 
working and living together for many years, but one day very recently I woke 
up and I heard her singing in a completely different voice. It was as though 
her voice--and I know her voice very, very well--but it was as though her 
voice had moved from the throat to the heart. And it was a completely 
different sound, a completely different timbre, a completely different 
dimension." 
  "And I was so happy when she began to put my words to music, so I 
hope that you will find favour in these songs that we're going to offer you 
tonight. They are new songs with a new voice, and I'd like to present to you 
Anjani."
  
*) an excerpt from Polish poet and 1980 Literary Nobel Prize laureate, 
Czeslaw Milosz's "Alfabet Milosza" (pub. 1997).
 
 
"I feel so lucky to have been a part of writing 
these songs which I think might have laid buried in Leonard's notebooks for 
a long time--maybe forever--if we had not found them and given them some 
tender loving care. I feel like the world could always use another of 
Leonard Cohen's song. And this one I think is a particularly fun for me, 
because it's a song that he never would have written for himself. It's 
really kind of my tune. This is No One After You... - Anjani
  
 
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Visit Anjani's website at  www.anjani.music.com
  
On the next page: Backstage report from Warsaw
   
On the previous page: Anjani and Leonard Live in London
  
Transcription from tape by Artur Jarosinski
  
Reports on the 1985 Warsaw concert: 
Warsaw 1985 story by Daniel Wyszogrodzki 
Warsaw 1985 transcription by Artur Jarosinski
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