April 20, 20214 yr I have a feeling there might be lots of Mahler posts in this topic but my personal favorite:
April 21, 20214 yr Rachmaninoff's Prelude in C# minor. I remembering first hearing this and having such a sense of foreboding, as if it were the essence of an Edgar Allen Poe story set to music. I then later learned that it was inspired by a dream Rachmaninoff had where he was at a funeral and as he approached the coffin, he began feeling more and more terrified and anxious until he finally sees who is in it... him of course! So my initial impression was right after all.
April 24, 20214 yr I thought for sure someone was going to mention this Mahler Symphony No.5 movement here (I like this one too and it has a section labeled "Trauermarsch" which means "Funeral March" in German):
April 24, 20214 yr This one to me is decent example, especially the ending: No one writes in B minor like Tchaikovsky 😭 Or, maybe these ones (Check this guy out, he's pretty amazing):
April 25, 20214 yr Here are 3 pieces that I think illustrate 3 different aspects/types of death well: Grief after death, no matter how long after the death, the pain will return Slowly dying Tragic death
May 6, 20214 yr Henry Purcel- lament, It has a nice orchestral transcription: tchaikovsky- elegy for strings; a dramatic introduction, lyrical main theme and a tragic middle part (3:00) vivaldi rv 447-2 introduction part
February 3, 20224 yr Mahler, Symphony No. 10, in particular movement 5. m.337, or 1:12:00 exactly in the below recording, is pure catharsis, but given the context, the relief you feel is a very tragic relief. At least for me, I get the sense that the entire fifth movement is just someone dying, and this moment of release is when they finally come to terms with it.
June 18, 20223 yr The final movement of Mahler's Ninth Symphony. The ending seems to release itself into oblivion.
June 18, 20223 yr The final moments of Sibelius' 7th. The gentle swells and the ultimate release are just so tranquil and moving, like slipping into the embrace of the next life. Edited June 18, 20223 yr by Tónskáld
June 19, 20223 yr I was in two minds about responding on this topic but since Tónskáld has mentioned Sibelius, the one work that I feel captures death is Sibelius' Valse Triste. I once did a piano arrangement of it.
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