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So Long Marianne is a cover of a Leonard Cohen song recorded for a tribute album called I’m Your Fan that was released by the French magazine Les Irrockuptibles.
It was later released to help fans acquire it more easily on 2004’s The Collection.
The band played the song live once on a French radio session in February 1992.
Song: | So Long Marianne (by Leonard Cohen) |
Released: | 30th September 1991 |
Main Associated Album (or Single): | The Collection |
First Heard Live: | Radio Europe Black Session – 30th April 1992 |
James complete recording of the Seven album with Youth at Olympic Studios in London. James embark on their biggest ever tour, 31 sold out dates previewing most of the Seven album, which should have been ready to coincide with the tour.
A cover of the Leonard Cohen song for a tribute album that also featured Pixies, Nick Cave and REM. The song was later released on the 2004 compilation album The Collection.
So Long Marianne
Release Name: | I'm Your Fan - The Songs Of Leonard Cohen |
Artist Name: | |
Release Date: | 16th September 1991 |
Format: | Compilation (non James) Album |
Catalogue: | 9031-75598-2 |
A cover of the Leonard Cohen song for a tribute album that also featured Pixies, Nick Cave and REM. The song was later released on the 2004 compilation album The Collection.
James career should have ground to a resounding halt in 1988. They had left the Sire label after two singly unsuccessful albums and accumulated debts of £50,000. Instead they ploughed on, building a fanatical following in their native Manchester. The line-up expanded as James’ twisted, almost folky approach was married to a twisted almost dancey beat. “A&R people used to seeing crowds of 30 would see 2000 in our audiences and wonder why we weren’t signed,” remembers singer Tim Booth, once a Bez-type dancer. “They thought there was something wrong with us.”
After a live album, One Man Clapping, Fontana took the plunge. Three singles and the Gold Mother album charted in 1990, James audience extended beyond Greater Manchester and finally they looked poised for the big breakthrough in 1991. It came with Sit Down, a song from 1989, re-recorded and re-released. “The mechanism to reach the public wasn’t ready at the time,” says Booth. “It’s slower than James. We have to wait for it to catch up.”
Sit Down charged towards the top 5 as if making up for 9 lost years and Fontana had the seemingly quirky idea of re-pressing Gold Mother (including Sit Down) and giving purchasers the opportunity to replace it for free. It entered the chart at Number 2 to all-round hosannas, not least because of the precedent-setting marketing ploy.
James are headlining Saturday night at the Reading Festival, their own crowds are larger and possibly more fanatical than before (hence the live version of Sit Down where the song stops and the crowd take over for nigh on 15 minutes), and Tim Booth is confident: “We developed a theory that the longer it took, the bigger we’d be. It took us a long time getting here and now we won’t bloody leave.”
After their own set was curtailed by power failure and with Andy and all their equipment shipped home, James are drafted in at the last moment to headline the Hultsfred Festival in Sweden after Status Quo withdrew. James headline Reading Festival and are critically mauled for daring to play Sit Down early in the set and playing five new songs.