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Is Hallelujah a Christmas song?

Is Hallelujah a Christmas song?

It is a vehicle to showcase a singer’s range. But it is by no means a Christmas song. In fact, it really isn’t a religious song at all. It is a story of a love gone wrong, with some religious imagery splattered in.

Who wrote Christmas Hallelujah?

Written by Cohen — a Jewish Buddhist — the song was first associated with Christmas in 2010, when Britain’s Got Talent sensation Susan Boyle included it on her 2010 holiday album, The Gift, which hit No. 1 on both the Billboard 200 and on the Official U.K. Albums Chart.

What is the most popular version of Hallelujah?

The best covers of Leonard Cohen’s ‘Hallelujah’

  • Jeff Buckley. Buckley’s version is perhaps the most well-known, and has been credited with giving the song the final shove into the American consciousness.
  • John Cale.
  • Rufus Wainwright.
  • Bob Dylan.
  • Regina Spektor.
  • Imogen Heap.
  • Damien Rice.
  • K.D.

Why do people think that Hallelujah is a Christmas song?

because people dig the sound and melody but don’t exactly pay attention the lyrical make up that is questionable in content at best. So, people hear a pretty song where people are singing out ‘hallelujah’ and think it’s a good for the holiday season.

What is the meaning of Hallelujah by Leonard Cohen?

Take a look at the original lyrics. Cohen alludes to the biblical King David — the baffled king composing Hallelujah. His faith was strong, but he needed proof. He saw Bathsheba bathing on the roof; her beauty in the moonlight overthrew him.

What is Leonard Cohen’s Judaism?

Anyone who knows Cohen knows that his Judaism is not the tribalist sort. For him, music transcends religion. It’s spiritual, but only in the sublime sense; he couldn’t care less about thou-shalt-and-shalt-not Judaism, and he couldn’t care less about members of another religion making a spin-off of his song.

Is Leonard Cohen’s ‘conversion’ a Christian song?

Am I pissed off — as many Jews appear to be — on Cohen’s behalf, because he’s Jewish and these musicians have “converted” his lyrics, turning the song into the Christian story of Jesus’ birth? Of course not. Anyone who knows Cohen knows that his Judaism is not the tribalist sort. For him, music transcends religion.