Artist: Adam Cohen
Album: We Go Home
Genre: Folk
Release Date: Cooking Vinyl
Audio Format: FLAC (tracks) 24bit, 44,1 kHz
Duration: 37:00
Total Tracks: 11
Total Size: 386 MB
Tracklist:
1-01. Adam Cohen – Song of Me and You (03:13)
1-02. Adam Cohen – Too Real (04:20)
1-03. Adam Cohen – We Go Home (03:13)
1-04. Adam Cohen – Put Your Bags Down (03:26)
1-05. Adam Cohen – So Much to Learn (03:27)
1-06. Adam Cohen – Uniform (02:59)
1-07. Adam Cohen – Love Is (02:38)
1-08. Adam Cohen – What Kind of Woman (03:50)
1-09. Adam Cohen – Fall Apart (03:56)
1-10. Adam Cohen – Swear I Was There (04:25)
1-11. Adam Cohen – Boats (01:29)
1-02. Adam Cohen – Too Real (04:20)
1-03. Adam Cohen – We Go Home (03:13)
1-04. Adam Cohen – Put Your Bags Down (03:26)
1-05. Adam Cohen – So Much to Learn (03:27)
1-06. Adam Cohen – Uniform (02:59)
1-07. Adam Cohen – Love Is (02:38)
1-08. Adam Cohen – What Kind of Woman (03:50)
1-09. Adam Cohen – Fall Apart (03:56)
1-10. Adam Cohen – Swear I Was There (04:25)
1-11. Adam Cohen – Boats (01:29)
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Adam Cohen is a Canadian musician and singer-songwriter. He is the son of Leonard Cohen. “We Go Home”, Cohen’s fifth album, is a homemade affair. Since his band was playing in Europe, Adam decided to set up shop in the little white house on the Greek island of Hydra where he had spent much of his childhood. They continued recording in Montreal, where Adam was born, in the house where he spent his earliest years. “I knew I was painting a target on my back, making my album in the so-called homes of Leonard Cohen, but they’re my homes too. These are the walls that saw me grow up the most and that I needed to come back to. My muse is my home”.
The road to hell is paved with the records of pop stars’ offspring, from Julian Lennon to I Blame Coco. Adam Cohen has the advantage of at least knowing what he’s doing: his fifth album of unshowy singer-songwriter fare occupies similarly confessional territory to that marked out by his father, Leonard. Indeed, Cohenologists will find much to pore over here, as his lyrics frequently address that relationship, and at times appear to be explicitly encouraging comparisons, not least on Fall Apart (“You’ll be hearing his voice, like you’re hearing it now”). It’s a disarmingly bold move, but while We Go Home is an undeniably fine record, it’s not quite good enough to escape Dad’s long shadow.