“IT TOOK HIM 5 YEARS AND 80 DRAFT VERSES TO WRITE ONE SONG — AND IT CHANGED MUSIC FOREVER.” Leonard Cohen wrote this song in 1984. It took him 5 years and 80 draft verses just to finish it. His own record label didn’t even want to release it. But something about “Hallelujah” refused to die. When Cohen returned to touring in 2008 after 15 years of silence, nobody knew what to expect. He was 73. His voice had dropped to a whisper. And yet — when he stepped onto that stage and began to sing, something happened that no one in the audience could explain. There was no big voice. No dramatic runs. Just a man, standing still, letting every broken word fall like a prayer. Fans who were there said the room went completely silent. One wrote: the performance was “absolutely amazing — worth every cent.” What most people don’t know is why Cohen came back at all. It wasn’t nostalgia. It wasn’t legacy. The reason was something far more painful — and far more human — than anyone expected.
It Took Him 5 Years and 80 Draft Verses to Write One Song — and It Changed Music Forever Some…