Leonard Cohen died in his sleep after fall in Los Angeles home

Canadian singer-songwriter’s funeral took place earlier this week in Montreal

Musician Leonard Cohen has died aged 82, here is a selection of his greatest hits

Leonard Cohen died in his sleep after a fall at his home in Los Angeles, his manager has said.

The Canadian singer-songwriter died on November 7th at the age of 82.

His death was confirmed a few days later in an announcement on his official Facebook page, which gave no details of the circumstances.

Leonard Cohen’s family burial plot in a cemetery in Montreal. Photograph: Graham Hughes/The Canadian Press via AP
Leonard Cohen’s family burial plot in a cemetery in Montreal. Photograph: Graham Hughes/The Canadian Press via AP

On Wednesday, Mr Cohen’s manager, Robert Kory, said his death was unexpected.

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“Leonard Cohen died during his sleep following a fall in the middle of the night on 7 November,” Kory said. “The death was sudden, unexpected and peaceful.”

The statement said Mr Cohen is survived by his children, Adam and Lorca, and his three grandchildren, Cassius, Viva and Lyon.

Earlier this week, Adam Cohen said his father’s funeral had taken place.

“My sister and I just buried my father in Montreal. With only immediate family and a few lifelong friends present, he was lowered into the ground in an unadorned pine box, next to his mother and father. Exactly as he’d asked,” he wrote on Facebook.

“Thank you for your kind messages, for the outpouring of sympathy and for your love of my father.”

A memorial is due to take place in Los Angeles at a later date.

Mr Cohen had released his 14th album, You Want It Darker, in October, to five-star reviews.

In an interview that month, Mr Cohen said he was “ready to die”. He told the New Yorker: “I am ready to die. I hope it’s not too uncomfortable. That’s about it for me.”

In the same interview, he said he had a vault of unpublished poems and unfinished lyrics to finish and record or publish. “The big change is the proximity to death. I am a tidy kind of guy.

“I like to tie up the strings if I can. If I can’t, that’s OK. But my natural thrust is to finish things that I’ve begun.”

The Guardian