Take This Waltz (song)

This article is about the Leonard Cohen song. For the 2011 film, see Take This Waltz (film).
"Take This Waltz"
Single by Leonard Cohen
from the album I'm Your Man
Released 1986
Recorded Studios Montmartre, Paris
Label CBS Records
Writer(s) Leonard Cohen
Federico García Lorca
Producer(s) Michel Reusser, Leonard Cohen

"Take This Waltz" is a song by Canadian singer-songwriter Leonard Cohen, originally released as part of the 1986 Federico García Lorca tribute album Poet in New York (Poeta en Nueva York)[1] and as a single.

The song was later included in Cohen's 1988 studio album I'm Your Man, in slightly re-arranged version (with addition of violin and Jennifer Warnes's duet vocals, both absent from the 1986 version).

The song's lyrics are a loose translation, into English, of the poem "Pequeño vals vienés" (Little Viennese Waltz) by the Spanish poet Federico García Lorca (one of Cohen's favorite poets). The poem was first published in Lorca's seminal book Poeta en Nueva York.

The song reached number one in Spain in 1986.[2]

Covers

Actor/Singer Sven Wollter recorded a version of the song with lyrics translated into Swedish on his 1989 album Nån sorts man. The title of the song is "Tag min vals" ("Take My Waltz").

Zorán Sztevanovity covered the song in 1991 with Cohen's original music but with different lyrics in Hungarian language written by his brother Dusán. The title of the song is "Volt egy tánc" ("There was a dance").

Enrique Morente and Lagartija Nick covered the song in 1996 with Cohen's music and Lorca's original verse on the album Omega. Two years later, Spanish singer Ana Belén covered the song in Spanish for her album Lorquiana. In 2014, Sílvia Pérez Cruz and Raül Fernandez Miró covered the song in Spanish for their Album Granada. The Spanish version is also included in the film La Novia 2015 (The Bride), based on Lorca's tragedy Blood Wedding.

The film Take This Waltz directed by Sarah Polley takes its name from the song which was also featured prominently in the movie.

The Canadian singer Patricia O'Callaghan performs the song on her 2001 album Real Emotional Girl.

References

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