Michael Cohen (American musician)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Born1951
Died1997
Michael Cohen
Mike Cohen (1972) LP front cover picture
Born1951
Died1997

Michael Cohen (1951  November 1997) was an American singer-songwriter from New York City. He released three albums in the 1970s which were among the first to deal with explicitly gay themes.[1] Cohen was licensed as a cab driver in New York City in 1972.[2]

Cohen self-released his first album, eponymously titled Mike Cohen, in 1972. This was followed by two albums on Folkways Records, What Did You Expect? (Folkways Records FS 8582, 1973) and Some of Us Had to Live (Folkways Records FS 8582, 1976).[3][4] The latter two are available from Smithsonian Folkways. Cohen was influenced by Bob Dylan and Leonard Cohen.[5] "The Last Angry Young Man", which opens What did You Expect?, deals with the misconceptions around homosexuality of the older generation while "Gone", from the same album, deals sensitively with the death of a gay friend. Frieze Magazine describes Cohen's "Bitterfeast" from the same album as a "raw and chokingly emotional" ballad based on a poem by Leonard Cohen.[6] After releasing Some of Us Had to Live in 1976, Cohen "dropped off the radar" until his death in November 1997, following a decade-long battle with AIDS.[7]

Discography

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI