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(FILES) This file photo taken on April 5, 2013 shows singer/musician Leonard Cohen as he performs at Radio City Music Hall in New York City. Leonard Cohen, whose meditative hymns have made him one of his generation's most influential artists, has recorded a new album at 81 for release this fall, his label said August 12, 2016. Columbia Records said that the album will be called "You Want It Darker," which is also the title of the opening track. It said that the new album, as the title suggests, was "haunting" in sound and in line with classic work by Cohen. / AFP / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Jemal Countess Image Credit: AFP

Leonard Cohen, whose meditative hymns have made him one of his generation’s most influential artists, has recorded a new album at 81 for release this autumn, his label said on Friday.

Columbia Records said that the album will be called You Want It Darker, which is also the title of the opening track. It said that the new album, as the title suggests, was “haunting” in sound and in line with classic work by Cohen.

The label did not reveal a release date, indicating it would come out this year and after Cohen turns 82 on September 21.

The Canadian singer and poet last released an album in 2014, Popular Problems, a collection of sombre, reflective tracks that delved into his favourite topics of lost love and the quest for spiritual meaning.

Cohen had gone into retirement in the 1990s, retreating to a monastery outside Los Angeles. He has acknowledged that his initial motivation for returning to music in the early 2000s was financial as his long-time accountant had stolen much of his savings.

Cohen’s first passion was literary and he emerged as one of Canada’s leading modern poets, but eventually decided he would reach a larger audience — and market — through music.

While releasing few hits in the traditional sense, his 1984 song Hallelujah has become a classic that has been frequently covered. The fruit of agonising evenings as Cohen struggled to find the right words, Hallelujah explores existential meaning, rooted in the language of Cohen’s own Jewish heritage.

Another of his most famous songs, So Long, Marianne, was inspired by his relationship with the Norwegian Marianne Ihlen, which blossomed when he lived on the Greek island of Hydra.

She died last month and Cohen, in a final letter made public by one of Ihlen’s friends, mourned her by wishing “endless love” and saying, “I think I will follow you very soon.”