Subject: RE: The Saddest Song of All From: Mike Regenstreif Date: 19 Jul 99 - 05:23 PM Not to be picky, but in the interest of accuracy, the song reffered to as "In a Mood for Going" and "Need for Going," is actually called "Urge for Going." As noted, it was written by Joni Mitchell. And the Tom Waits song identified as "Waltzing Matilda," is actually called "Tom Traubert's Blues." Mike Regenstreif |
Subject: RE: The Saddest Song of All From: Lowcountry Date: 19 Jul 99 - 05:19 PM Someone did a thread about an alleged third verse to The Rose of Tralee, and it turned out to be a gut wrencher: In the far fields of Africa, midst war's dreadful thunder,/ Her voice was a comfort and solace to me;/ The cold hand of death has now rent us asunder; /Tonight I am missing the Rose of Tralee. For such a beautiful and emotional love song, that really is a rough ending. |
Subject: RE: The Saddest Song of All From: LEJ Date: 19 Jul 99 - 04:49 PM Does Those were the Days my Friend conjure up nostalgic tears from any of you aging 60's revolutionaries? Especially the lines "Just last night I saw you in the tavern I saw your face, and heard you call my name Yes my friend, we're older but no wiser For in our hearts the dream is still the same" LEJ |
Subject: RE: The Saddest Song of All From: Tiger Date: 19 Jul 99 - 04:39 PM Sorry, that last msg got scrambled by a fat finger error. My current saddest nominee is "The Faded Coat of Blue" BTW, that Dave Van Ronk song mentioned earlier is "Need for Going" by Joni Mitchell, and I agree wholeheartedly. It's also done beautifully by Tom Rush. ....Tiger |
Subject: RE: The Saddest Song of All From: Tiger Date: 19 Jul 99 - 04:36 PM For me, the answer changes as I hear new ones. Right now, it's a Civil War song:
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Subject: RE: The Saddest Song of All From: Bryant Date: 19 Jul 99 - 03:40 PM Glad I'm not the only one who love sad tunes. I think Leonard Cohen does sad better than almost anyone I can think of. "It Seems so Long Ago, Nancy" "Famous Blue Raincoat". And then there's one called "Dress Rehersal Rag" where some washed-up, junky, entertainer has a long conversation with his reflection in a mirror just before offing himself. Maybe more scary than sad. . . Bryant |
Subject: RE: The Saddest Song of All From: PattyG Date: 19 Jul 99 - 02:32 PM Is this some form of mashochism, or what?! //For the Vietnam memorial: "Where Have All the Flowers Gone" and "Danny Boy" and, in general, "Sonny Boy."
"First Christmas" by Stan Rogers, the most depressing Christmas song written since "The Little Boy That Santa Claus Forgot". //Heard the former on a t.v. special and about lost it. I have two sons and my oldest has a terminal illness...... But this also reminds me of a thread some time back about Sad Christmas Songs - someone was going to make a CD of melancholy holiday music.......ever accomplished? I think Kevin Sharp singing, "Nobody Knows" is pretty darned sad too. Hate to admit this, but I guess I've never paid much attention to "Waltzing Matilda" - didn't realize it was sad! (I shouldn't admit this, but now I'd like to know the lyrics!) |
Subject: RE: The Saddest Song of All From: catspaw49 Date: 19 Jul 99 - 02:20 PM And on a serious note (C#)......Sorry, but seriously, I'm totally with you Jack. Way too strong, too true, forme to get through that one anymore. Spaw |
Subject: Lyr Add: BOB DYLAN'S DREAM From: Jack (who is called Jack) Date: 19 Jul 99 - 02:11 PM BOB DYLAN'S DREAM as sung by PP&M always gets me.
While riding on a train goin' west,
With half-damp eyes I stared to the room
By the old wooden stove where our hats was hung,
With haunted hearts through the heat and cold,
As easy it was to tell black from white,
How many a year has passed and gone,
I wish, I wish, I wish in vain, HTML line breaks added in place of double spacing. --JoeClone, 6-Oct-02. |
Subject: RE: The Saddest Song of All From: Cara Date: 19 Jul 99 - 02:11 PM Sad sons are my favorite. One of my favorite performers used to call the songs that my friends and I requested "the wrist-slasher set". I love "Waltzing Matilda" by Tom Waites, a good interpretation of "Where have all the Flowers Gone?", that Reba McIntyre song about the little boy whose father killed his mother, "Daniel" by Elton John, and, I shamefacedly admit that I wwas in my twenties before I could sing "Puff the Magic Dragon" to my little cousins without choking up (I'm still in my twentiesw, so it wasn't long ago). Also "You are My Sunshine"; that damn Oscar Mayer commercial song makes it look so cute, then you hear the second verse ahnd it's just wrenching. |
Subject: RE: The Saddest Song of All From: catspaw49 Date: 19 Jul 99 - 01:20 PM Well this is quite a list. Personally, I dunno'....... It seems that most of the songs I do are sad songs. At least that's what I'm told. Every time I finish one, someone says, "Jesus, that was really sad." catspaw |
Subject: RE: The Saddest Song of All From: Art Thieme Date: 19 Jul 99 - 12:06 PM "The Death Of Queen Jane" Art |
Subject: RE: The Saddest Song of All From: Allan C. Date: 19 Jul 99 - 10:14 AM Last night I heard the cry Of my last companion. A blast from a harpoon gun And I was alone... I arose for to take a breath It was my last one. From a gun came the roar of death And I am undone... from "The Last Leviathan" as I have heard it by Golden Bough It brings me to tears nearly every time. |
Subject: RE: The Saddest Song of All From: Mike Regenstreif Date: 19 Jul 99 - 10:03 AM One of the saddest songs I've heard in recent years is David Massengill's "Rider On An Orphan Train." It's also performed by Tom Russell. Mike Regenstreif |
Subject: RE: The Saddest Song of All From: Mr. D. Date: 19 Jul 99 - 09:42 AM This is really a good thread. I get tear-jerked just reading ABOUT these songs. One of the saddest songs to me is "Lullabye Blues" by Jimmie Rodgers. Another heart-wrencher, especially the way it is sung, is Travis Tritt's "Nobody Answers When I Call Your Name." |
Subject: RE: The Saddest Song of All From: MudGuard Date: 19 Jul 99 - 09:24 AM Two Little Orphans a.k.a. The Orphan's Lament |
Subject: RE: The Saddest Song of All From: NSC Date: 19 Jul 99 - 09:23 AM The saddest song I have ever come across is a very new one written by Deidre Scanlan and included on her inaugural and just released CD. The song is titled Dunblane and is about the tragic occurrence of chldren and teachers who were shot in Scotland a couple of years ago. American catters will relate to the many similar occurrences in the USA. When Deirdre performed this song in Dublin about 3 weeks ago, at the Goílín Singers Club, there was a stunned silence. It was the last song of the night and people had difficulty getting up to leave. See her Web site or contact Nenagh Singers Circle for details of how to obtain this unique CD. George Henderson |
Subject: RE: The Saddest Song of All From: Animaterra Date: 19 Jul 99 - 09:12 AM I know it's hardly folk, but Eric Clapton's "Tears in Heaven" does me in every time, thinking about his little boy who died. Other than that, "There were roses," and a Yiddish song, "S'dremlen feygl" which was a poem written by Leah Rudzinski after a Polish ghetto was "cleansed"- there were few survivors, among them a 3-year old for whom the lullabye was written. Rudzinski later disappeared before WWII was over. Allison |
Subject: RE: The Saddest Song of All From: Margo Date: 19 Jul 99 - 01:18 AM Lot's of civil war songs, but in particular, "The Vacant Chair". I get real choked up on that one. Plus, it has a wonderful melody. Then there is the "Kindertotenlieder" by Mahler which means Children's Death Songs. Written when it was all to common for one or more children in a family to die from illness, the songs talk about missing the little footsteps and such. I can't listen to them. Ah, Rick. Madama Butterfly. Of course, always touching. Margarita |
Subject: Lyr Add: HOME FROM THE FOREST (Gordon Lightfoot) From: Dale Rose Date: 18 Jul 99 - 11:54 PM Home from the forest Gordon Lightfoot, 1967.
Oh, the neon lights were flashin' and the icy wind did blow
Up a dark and dingy staircase the old man made his way
And as he lay there sleeping, a vision did appear |
Subject: RE: The Saddest Song of All From: Tim Jaques tjaques@netcom.ca Date: 18 Jul 99 - 11:35 PM "Waltzing With Bears"? |
Subject: RE: The Saddest Song of All From: Art Thieme Date: 18 Jul 99 - 11:10 PM "Waltzing With Bears" Art |
Subject: RE: The Saddest Song of All From: Jeri Date: 18 Jul 99 - 10:56 PM I second many of the above contributions. Nobody's mentioned 'Kilkelly' yet. I don't know how many times I heard that song before I quit getting choked up. |
Subject: RE: The Saddest Song of All From: mountain tyme Date: 18 Jul 99 - 10:42 PM WyoWoman..."A Soldiers Grave" by the Stanley Brothers. Always wets the floor when we do it on the various Memorial days. |
Subject: RE: The Saddest Song of All From: Lonesome EJ Date: 18 Jul 99 - 10:24 PM Vincent by Don McLean has always brought tears to my eyes. |
Subject: RE: The Saddest Song of All From: campfire Date: 18 Jul 99 - 10:07 PM I'd like to add "Lying To the Moon" to the list, written by Matraca Berg. The version that "gets" me is by Robin and Linda Williams. campfire |
Subject: RE: The Saddest Song of All From: Rick Fielding Date: 18 Jul 99 - 09:53 PM Un Bel Dia, from "Butterfly", sung by Lucretzia Bori, some time in the 1920s. I've been playing it every few months for many years now and I still cry, cry, cry my little eyes out. I'm just a big Wuzzum! rick |
Subject: RE: The Saddest Song of All From: Gene Date: 18 Jul 99 - 09:51 PM Three of my favorite SAD SONGS... 1/Sing Me A Sad Song Hank Williams and 2/When *He Sang [*Hank Williams]and 3/Hank Williams Sings The Blues No More
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Subject: RE: The Saddest Song of All From: Tim Jaques tjaques@netcom.ca Date: 18 Jul 99 - 09:43 PM "First Christmas" by Stan Rogers, the most depressing Christmas song written since "The Little Boy That Santa Claus Forgot". I think "Dark-Eyed Molly" by Archie Fisher a quite sad love song, but a very beautiful one. Kate Rusby from England seems to specialize in melancholy songs, like "Annan Water." Indeed I am worried when one so young specializes in such tunes.
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Subject: RE: The Saddest Song of All From: WyoWoman Date: 18 Jul 99 - 09:12 PM Oh, Pete. That was a really, really good sad one..."taking nothing but my baby and my mind..." Emily, where could I hear the melody to that one? I need a sad song today. I went to see the traveling exhibit for The Wall That Heals, the replica of the Vietnam memorial wall. Found the name of a boy I grew up with. Drafted in late May, dead October 1. What's a song for that? I need to do some sobbing. WW |
Subject: RE: The Saddest Song of All From: jbrandberg Date: 18 Jul 99 - 08:07 PM There are so many good sad songs, but one of them that always gets to me is THERE WERE ROSES by Tommy Sands. Unfortunately, it may become more topical again if the situation in Northern Ireland continues to deteriorate. |
Subject: Lyr Add: SOMEBODY MUST LEAVE (Reba McIntire) From: bseed(charleskratz) Date: 18 Jul 99 - 08:00 PM Impressive list, Pete--but I'd have a hard time keeping a straight face rhyming mercy with nursery. Another George Jones tearjerker is "He Stopped Loving Her Today." Reba McIntire's "Somebody Must Leave" is one that always gets me: It sure gets quiet when the kids go to bed; We sit here in the silence putting off what must be said. I read a book, you watch TV, as our love dies quietly: I'm so sad I don't know what I just read. (chorus) Somebody should leave, but which one should it be? You need the kids, and they need me. Somebody should leave, but we hate to give in;-- We keep hopin' somehow we might need each other again. You say goodnight and turn and face the wall; We lie here in the darkness and the tears start to fall. If it was only you and me, goodbye might come more easily, But what about those babies down the hall? chorus, chorus repeated with "We just keep hopin' we might need each other again," spoken. Of course, Reba is a great interpreter of sad songs. --seed |
Subject: RE: The Saddest Song of All From: mountain tyme Date: 18 Jul 99 - 07:44 PM One song we perform that always wets the floor.... Jack & May (sweethearts were they) (Stanley Brothers) Dozens of others that bring tears I could list as well but two that stand out in my memory that are fitting to list on this thread are... The Little Old Log Cabin In The Lane (Albert E. Brumley) and He Stopped Loving Her Today (George Jones) Great thread idea/subject..may it become the longest on the "Cat" Thanks Shack |
Subject: RE: The Saddest Song of All From: emily rain Date: 18 Jul 99 - 07:39 PM the saddest song i know is a ladino (sephardic) song with a haunting, east-meets-west melody. the translations goes like this:
here comes the captive
it was not dawn,
oh green fields,
oh beautiful pine
oh white tombs
it was not dawn, |
Subject: RE: The Saddest Song of All From: Pete Curry Date: 18 Jul 99 - 07:25 PM This topic should be a Web site all its own! Some of my favorites have already been mentioned (eg. "Who Knows Where The Time Goes," "Waltzing Matilda"). Others include: "The Grand Tour" by George Jones (which ends, "When you leave you'll see the nursery/She left me, without mercy/Taking nothing but my baby and my mind"); "Sad Songs & Waltzes" by Willie Nelson; "Yesterday Just Passed My Way Again" and "My Wishing Room" by Lefty Frizzell; "Swiss Cottage Place" by Mickey Newburry; "No One Will Ever Know" by Ronnie Milsap or Hank Snow; "Mexican Divorce" by Ry Cooder (written by Burt Bacharach & Bob Hillard, orig. recorded by The Drifters); "Afraid to Care" by Jack Green; "The Gypsy" and "Time Out For Tears" by The Ink Spots; and last, because I'm basically a child of the 1950s, the following by Lee Andrews & The Hearts never fail to choke me up--"Why Do I," "I'm Sorry Pillow," and "Try The Impossible." Phew... I feel better now. |
Subject: RE: The Saddest Song of All From: WyoWoman Date: 18 Jul 99 - 06:49 PM Too many to name. I LOVE a good melancholy song -- must be the Irish in me (sorry, all '-} ) One version of "Geordie," in which the judge tells her, "sorry about you bein' pregnant with his child and all, but it's off to the gallows with 'im." Some versions have a very uppity wife reacting in various ways, but the one I learned years ago and still love ends with him being hanged for killing one of the King's deer. "I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry" One by Malvina Reynolds, of "Little Boxes" fame, called "The Girl on the Rim of the World," written about a homeless girl she kept seeing out the window of her apartment in San Francisco. One by Dave van Ronk, which I think is called "In a Mood for Going," and which is just wonderful for when you're really morose and just need a song as sad as you are. "Waltzing Matilda," by Tom Waits. And ... oh, heavens. I could keep this up all day. What does it say about me (whom most people would describe as having a downright *merry* disposition) that I love really, really sad songs so much? WW |
Subject: RE: The Saddest Song of All From: Llanfair Date: 18 Jul 99 - 06:05 PM There's two. The first is "Who Knows Where the Time Goes" Sandy Denny, of course, and the other is "Beautiful Boy" John Lennon. Both are so sad because the creators died so young. Lennon could "Hardly wait, to see you come of age" but he never did. Hwyl, Bron. |
Subject: The Saddest Song of All From: Shack Date: 18 Jul 99 - 05:58 PM I think the saddest song I ever heard is "I Heard a Heart Break Last Night." I heard it on a jukebox in an old honkey tonk and don't know the artist. The final verse goes like this: "I heard the mournful sobbing/ Of the wind in the pines;/ I felt the cold icey (eye-see) fingers (fangers)/ Of fear in my spine,/ For I knew in my heart/ You'd never be mine,/ And I heard a heart break last night." What is the saddest song you ever heard? |
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