When I'm Your Fan: The Songs of Leonard Cohen hit stores in 1991,
Leonard Cohen's career had plummeted from its revered 1960s high.
Cohen's record label had refused to release his 1984 album Various
Positions--including the song Hallelujah--in the United States.
Luckily, Velvet Underground founder John Cale was one of the few who
did hear Hallelujah, and he covered it for I'm Your Fan, a
collection of Cohen's songs produced by a French fanzine. Jeff Buckley
adored the tribute album and covered Cale's cover in 1994, never having
heard Cohen's still-obscure original version.
In 2016, Stereogum labeled the tribute album possibly the most
universally derided format in pop music. However, without a tribute
album, you wouldn't know the song Hallelujah. Through Buckley through
Cale, Hallelujah is now one of the most often-performed songs in the
world--and it wouldn't be without this tribute album. I'm Your Fan
thus offers a particularly notable example of a much broader truth:
Despite all the eye-rolling they inspire, tribute albums matter. They
can resuscitate legends' fading careers, or expose obscure artists who
never had much of a career to begin with.