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I’ve seen The Future, baby and it is stunning in black leather – Official Leonard Cohen 1993 The Future World Tour Jacket.“I’ve tried, and I’ve messed it up like everybody else, but that was the effort” Leonard Cohen Talks About “I have tried in my way to be free” From Bird On The Wire.Photos: Leonard Cohen’s Montreal & The Guy Who Carries His Guitar.
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Little Richard in Tutti Frutti: A-Wop-Bop-A-Loo-Bop-A-Lop-Bop-Bop.Barry Mann in Who Put the Bomp: Bomp Bah Bomp Bah Bomp, Rama Lama Ding Dong, Bop Shoo Bop Shoo Bop, and Dip Da Dip Da Dip.Nonsense syllables, known in musicological circles as non-lexical vocables, have long been a part of music, having been used in second century AD Greek and Byzantine music 3 and manifesting more recently in such forms as yodeling, scat singing, beatboxing, and doo-wop.Ī few examples of popular songs featuring nonsense syllables follow: More about that in a moment.ĭo Dum Dum Dum, De Do Dum Dum – Nonsense Syllables In Leonard Cohen’s Tower Of Song While the above photo, taken in Montreal by Leslie Py Wener, makes a case for a confectionery theory of the genesis of those syllables, 2 Mr Cohen himself attributes that phrase to another singer-songwriter. Echoing Barry Mann’s metaphysical query, “Who Put the Bomp (in the Bomp, Bomp, Bomp),” 1 is the question of the origin of the “Dum Dum” – an essential component in the key “Do Dum Dum Dum, De Do Dum Dum” refrain of Leonard Cohen’s Tower Of Song.