Music legend Leonard Cohen sadly passed away today, causing countless people to hum one of his greatest hits when they heard the news.
But with 14 studio albums and several live albums and compilations to his name, there's much more to the man's music than simply 'Hallelujah' or 'Suzanne'.
Newshub has gathered together some of Cohen's lesser known, but equally awesome tunes for your listening pleasure.
The song that introduced Cohen to the MTV generation in 1988 (including bored teenagers from Christchurch); 'Manhattan' is an underappreciated classic that hasn't aged a day. Timeless and prophetic.
A beautiful but brutal folk tale from 1969, 'Partisan' helped put Cohen's music onto the turntables of politically-minded students and stoners everywhere.
A nihilistic gem from 1992, this song is all about the end of the world following an apocalyptic event. Perfect listening for the Donald Trump-world we now live in.
OK, so this song appears on most of Cohen's greatest hits compilations, but it makes our list because legendary Kiwi guitar band Straitjacket Fits covered it for their seminal 1988 album Hail.
Produced by 'wall of sound' devotee Phil Spector (who's currently in prison for murder), this 1977 tune actually has Bob Dylan on backing vocals, and is one of several Cohen wrote about German singer Nico. Leonard really liked Nico, as you can probably imagine from the song title.
Newshub.