Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: Allen Mordica Date: 25 Oct 99 - 09:21 AM I'd have to nominate two sailor's tunes: The Old Fid (you should hear it accompanied by concertina!) and This Dreadful Life. |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: catspaw49 Date: 25 Oct 99 - 09:31 AM Skip Lake Superior....we're working on the entire Great Lakes system by now................... ...and what list of music around here would be complete (no matter what the topic) unless someone mentioned... "Waltzing with Bears"...so there we go. Spaw |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: T in Oklahoma (Okiemockbird) Date: 25 Oct 99 - 10:29 AM Sandy Paton, Thank you for bringing the tune Samanthra to my attention. Somehow I've overlooked it for years, but no longer. T. |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: kendall Date: 25 Oct 99 - 10:57 AM Old Fid works well on an Apollonio 12 string guitar tuned down to D and played in the Em position. |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: Dan Evergreen Date: 25 Oct 99 - 12:07 PM Alison Kraus sings a really haunting song named "I don't believe you've met my baby." "Evangeline", the cajun one, evokes visual images that will haunt one a long time: "High on the top of a hickory hill, She stands in the lightning and thunder..." Hey, Martin, where might one hear Nina Simone's "Ne me quitte pas?" |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: M. Ted (inactive) Date: 25 Oct 99 - 12:13 PM I am going to be away for a while, but will check this compendium when I get back-- I will leave you with a couple, first, no one has mentioned "Somewhere over the Rainbow" which, in recent years, I cannot hear without crying-- Someday I will get my tape recorder and a gun and force every guitarist that I know to play their secret arrangement of this song, because everyone fools around with it, though few will admit it-- I also love "Ali Pasha", which is a Turkish song, a story of a great and beloved leader who went off on a campaign and was ambushed and murdered--it is in 5/4, whcih gives it the very peculiar quality of lingering on the end of every phrase--
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Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: Liam's Brother Date: 25 Oct 99 - 12:32 PM Hi! I got a copy of the new Folk-Legacy CD, "Ceol Anum," today and it's absolutely beautiful... two guitars playing lovely (mostly) Irish tunes.
All the best, |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: Jack (who is called Jack) Date: 25 Oct 99 - 12:44 PM Re: El Condor Pasa. I have heard, but never made the effort to verify, that the tune for El Condor Pasa is a folk melody from South America and is one of the oldest folk tunes known. The person who told me this said that some estimates trace it back 900+ years. The lyrics were added for S & G's recording.
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Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: Brad Sondahl Date: 25 Oct 99 - 01:41 PM here's my favorite original MIDI haunting melody... http://www.camasnet.com/~asondahl/felicity.mid Bradhttp://www.camasnet.com/~asondahl/bradindex.html |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: MTM Date: 25 Oct 99 - 02:14 PM Ne Me Quitte Pas by Nina Simone might be found on her CD of the same name, or on "The Best Of Nina Simone"--try this page: http://www.boscarol.com/nina/html/album/670030.html Hope it helps. Shirley Bassey did it too. |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: Bert Date: 25 Oct 99 - 02:27 PM La Vie en Rose |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: MTM Date: 25 Oct 99 - 03:13 PM Lili Marlene Snowy Breasted Pearl (Wolfetones) |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: kendall Date: 25 Oct 99 - 03:52 PM jenny, I'm glad you also like the Loch Tay Boat song. It has been rattling around in my head since I saw it in the thread. Problem is, I cant sing it.. painful memories.. I'd also like to mention Come Back to Sorrento. |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: McBeagle Date: 25 Oct 99 - 11:13 PM RE: RE: El Condor Pasa - FASCINATING! |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: ddw Date: 26 Oct 99 - 12:33 AM One of the most haunting things I've ever heard is Loreena McKennitt's (SP?) All Souls Night. The fiddle/cello player on that a few other tracks from her Mask and Mirror album and The Visit is absolutely demented. Chilling stuff! david |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: Lonesome EJ Date: 26 Oct 99 - 01:55 AM I have felt, since first I heard it, that The Fireside Largo from Vivaldi's Four Seasons is the most emotive piece of music ever written. It stirs the Soul. After that, I would agree with others on So Lonesome I could Cry, Long,Long Trail, and Shenandoah. To those I would also add McCartney's Yesterday, Gram Parson's Hickory Wind, and Corral Nocturne from Copland's Rodeo. |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: Meg Date: 26 Oct 99 - 02:54 PM For me the most haunting songs are 'By yon castle wa'at the close of the day' and 'The Highland Widow's Lament". |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: GUEST,Julia Date: 30 Apr 05 - 08:00 PM The phantom of the opera..the vocals are just soo haunting |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: jaze Date: 30 Apr 05 - 10:28 PM Tonight My Sleep Will Be Restless-Alisdair Fraser |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: Stephen L. Rich Date: 01 May 05 - 12:21 PM For me it's Tom Paxton's "Dance In The Shadows". Stephen Lee |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: GUEST,Navigator Date: 01 May 05 - 01:05 PM Angel Eyes { Sinatra's version } |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: Ebbie Date: 01 May 05 - 01:47 PM One of the most haunting tunes I know is 'Lament for the Reverend Archie Beaton'. It is such a visual piece. |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: Cruiser Date: 01 May 05 - 02:51 PM Wind That Shakes the Corn (Irish Rovers) Mary of the Wild Moor (Heart Songs, Dolly Patton) Sally Garden Quentin's Theme (Shadows in the Night) In the Pines Barbara Allen Whispering Pines (Johnny Horton) Wayward Wind (Gogi Grant) Aura Lee Streets of Laredo Springtime in Alaska (Johnny Horton) Crusier |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: Peace Date: 01 May 05 - 02:58 PM "Prince's Day" by Alan Sylvestri (sp?). It was the opening piece from the movie "Blown Away" (1994). Terrible movie. Good soundtrack. And the aforementioned piece will stay with you forever. October Winds (Castle of Dramore). |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: Nick Date: 01 May 05 - 03:01 PM Canyon Moonrise - John McCann Floating to Skerry - Lynn Tocken Calliope House - Dave Richardson Sheebeg and Sheemore - O'Carolan |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: GUEST,cromdubh Date: 01 May 05 - 04:39 PM Farewell to Weaverly Park, a very strange haunting reel composed by Cathal McConnell of the Boys of the lough. Can be heard on his solo album "Long Expectant comes at last" |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: GUEST,James Date: 02 May 05 - 07:12 AM The Minstrel Boy, Will Ye Go Lassie, The Parting Glass, Ballad of Springhill, Crazy Man Michael( Fairport) oh, sooooooo many. |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: GUEST,JTT Date: 02 May 05 - 07:25 AM Brad, your midi gave me a 404. The Coolin The Snowy-Breasted Pearl Fill, Fill, a Rún Ó and of course.... ...a wim a weh, a wim a weh... |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: Neighmond Date: 02 May 05 - 09:49 AM Two come to mind at present: Bittersweet Waltz (Leon Redbone sang it) When Johnny Comes Marching home Again |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: GUEST,MTflyfisher Date: 02 May 05 - 12:03 PM O mio caro bambino The French Girl Constant Billy The refrain from Los Hojas de Veranos Plaisir d'Amour This is a great thread. |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: GUEST Date: 02 May 05 - 02:25 PM "Dalnabreac", written and performed by John McKusker on the Battlefield Band "Quiet Days" album tops my list of most haunting melodies. Gives me goosebumps, it does. I heard a song performed at a Dundee Strathspey & Reel Society fiddler's rally in Caird Hall (1979 or 80) called "Kishmul" (not "Kishmul's Galley" of The Corries fame.) The arrangement featured a solo flautist and was absolutely beautiful. Moira Kerr's "MacIain of Glencoe" also comes to mind, as does "The Dark Isle", especially played on accordion. "By the Water's Edge", tune on the Schotts and Dykehead Caledonia Pipe Band album of the same name will grab you, if you're into pipe music. There's loads more, but I'll stop there. SND |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: GUEST Date: 03 May 05 - 10:03 AM Avalanche - Leonard Cohen |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: RobbieWilson Date: 04 May 05 - 08:13 AM Considering the number of melodies mentioned in this very old thread I am surprised not to see any of these Flowers of the Forest, Banks of Sicilly or the false bride. |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: Peter T. Date: 04 May 05 - 11:01 AM One thing not discussed on this thread are moments inside melodies that give you goose bumps. Three that come to mind: In "Every Time You Go Away" by Cole Porter ("But how strange the change from major to minor") -- that change is so brilliant. "I Could Have Danced All Night" -- There is a moment just before "...I only know when he, began to dance with me," when the chord movement just takes the breath away. The Beatles have hundreds of them. Maybe my favourite is in "I'll Follow the Sun" when they go to the "B" section -- "But now the time has come, and so my love I must go, and though I lose a friend, in the end you will know, whoaoh...." or that extraordinary moment in "Ask Me Why" when the augmented pops up":"I can't believe it's happened to me-e-e-e, I can't conceive, of any more misery!" yours, Peter T. |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: JulieF Date: 04 May 05 - 11:15 AM Way,Way back someone asked who wrote Dark Island and I don't think it was answered. - Iain MCLachlan from Benbecula. It has long been my favourite tune and I would love it played at my funeral - one lone highland piper on a hill top will do nicely. It is a wonderful tune to sing , although I was never happy with any of the words so I had to write my own. J |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: Mary in Kentucky Date: 04 May 05 - 10:51 PM I know this is an old thread...but being a tune person myself, I often relate to instrumentals instead of songs with words. I often like various opera arias where I don't even understand the words. Somehow the emotion is expressed in the tune. Un Bel Di (One Fine Day from Madama Butterfly) Vissi d'Arte (from Tosca) Prelude to Act III (from Carmen, sounds like The Minstrel Boy) and then all the melancholic Scottish tunes...(the ones I like to play on the piano when the electricity goes off ;-)) Ye Banks and Braes (Bonnie Doon was mentioned above) What Ails This Heart Of Mine Rare Willie and then most of Chopin... Ballade in G (I'm Always Chasing Rainbows - the words spoiled it IMO) the second movement of Beethoven's Pathetique Sonata (I loved it before I ever heard Carl Haas use it for the theme music to his program.) and that gorgeous 18th variation on a theme of Paganinni by Rachmaninoff (was it used in a coffee commercial?) what about Max Bruch's Scottish Fantasy where he uses the Scottish folksongs "I'm a Doun for Lack o' Johnnie" and "Thro the Wood Laddie discussed at Mudcat here and here. Lonesome EJ - I love the waltz that follows Copland's Corral Nocturne. It is really "I Ride an Old Paint" with a different rhythm (my opinion). Julia - I guess you know that "Music of the Night" from Phantom is the same opening interval as in "Come to Me, Bend to Me" from Brigadoon. Peter T - you once mentioned "Humming Chorus" from Madama Butterfly. It's the same as "Bring Him Home" from Les Miz. Also, you mentioned above about moments inside melodies - how about the anticipation in Copland's Waltz - where you are waiting to start the tune/emotions and just lean into it as it finally starts! clj (from way back in '99) - if you like Scheherazade, by Rimsky-Korsakov, you'd also love all the Polovtsian Dances by Borodin, another Russian. (made into popular tunes in the musical Kismet... Stranger in Paradise, And this is My Beloved, etc.) But I still like the tunes without the words. |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: GUEST,Arne Langsetmo Date: 05 May 05 - 12:27 AM Tom Anderson's "Da Slockit Licht" Jay Ungar's "Ashokan Farewell" Dick Gaughan's rendition of "The 51st Highland Division's Farewell to Sicily" (words, Hamish Henderson, music, Pipe-Major J. Robertson) "Farewell to Whiskey" (as a slow air, not a reel) "Carrickfergus" "Anachie Gordon" (particularly done by Mary Black) Joni Mitchell's "Urge For Going" "Strange Affair" (performed by June Tabor, author unknown [to me]) "Pull Down, Lads" (by John Tams and Roger Watson, perfomed by June Tabor) "Angel From Montgomery" (by John Prine, performed by Raitt and Prine) "If I Were A Feather Bed" (John McCutcheon) So many others too.... |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: GUEST,Arne Langsetmo Date: 05 May 05 - 01:39 AM "Kilkelly" (Moloney, O'Connell, and Keane) "There Were Roses" (MOK + Liz Carroll) "School Day's Over" (Ewan McColl) "I Will Arise" (done by Trapezoid) "A Mother's Dying Words To Her Daugter" (done by Critten Hollow String Band) . . . |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: GUEST,Elfcall Date: 05 May 05 - 03:39 AM Currently listening to No Nighean Donn, Gradh Mo Chridhe. by Silly Wizard |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: GUEST,Allen Date: 05 May 05 - 04:13 PM The Basque tune Martin Carthy used for the Wife of Usher's Well. |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: number 6 Date: 06 May 05 - 12:46 AM Two songs previously mentioned in this thread ... "She move through the Fair" by anyone and "Ashokan Farewell" especially by Jay Unger and Molly Mason One hanting song (not previously mentioned) that really moves me is Tecumseh Valley by Townes Van Zandt. sIx |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: fat B****rd Date: 06 May 05 - 05:06 AM Songs To Aging Children The string part of You Only Live Twice Goodnight Irene The Promenade from Pictures At An Exhibition and loads more...... |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: Uncle Jaque Date: 06 May 05 - 06:28 AM I study and collect music of the early 19th Century up to the Civil War - and there was a LOT of haunting going on back then! Some of the songs in these tattered old books (most of which I've never heard about, and a lot of them have NEVER been recorded as far as I know) will really reach deep into your chest and muckle on to your heart. One particularly poigniant one is "Mother's Lament", to the tune of "Sweet Afton": Yon spot in in the Church-yard How sad is the gloom; That Summer flings 'round it In flowers and perfume; 'Tis thy dust, my Darling Gives life to each rose; 'Tis because thou hast withered... The violet grows. Some of the ones that have survived include "Lorena" - which has a bittersweet association for me, as it brings back memories of my own "Lorena", loved and lost long ago. A little over a year ago, she died of bone cancer at the age of 54. Aren't there about 6 verses to that, Kendall? I usually keep it down to 4. Given the average American's attention span, one does well to get through the third before people start getting up and wandering off or falling asleep and tipping over. Then there's "Angel Band". As my Brother and I kept vigil by our Mother as she died, i "sang her home" with that like the old timers used to. Speaking of mothers, there's "Rock Me to Sleep, Mother" which was very popular from when it was written in 1860 through the CW. It's a beautiful song, and a shame that we don't hear it much, if at all any more. A couple of tunes that I like to do on the low "G" flute are a really old one - "Brave Wolfe", and the ghostly "Mary's Dream". After the first rousing, patriotic marches of the American Civil War, people stated getting a hard dose of reality and experienced the terrible loss and grief that any war brings. It wasn't long before we had "The Vacant Chair" "The Pickett Guard" and "Tenting Tonight", all of which can be pretty "haunting". These also represented some of the earliest "anti-war" protest songs to appear in America, albeit in a rather discrete form. Someone in the South wrote "Somebody's Darlin'", which is deeply touching, and one of my favorites. Another nomination would be "Wayfaring Stranger". There's something to that song that gets to me from time to time. More music was written in America during the CW than at any other time in our History. Most of it has since settled into the mouldy catacombs of obscurity, and a lot of it probably deserved to, frankly. But there are still some wonderful old songs still waiting to be re-discovered. |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: GUEST,Allen Date: 06 May 05 - 11:44 AM Another good one is the Galician song La Sombre Negra (Black Shadow). |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: GUEST,Nancy King at work Date: 06 May 05 - 01:31 PM Margaret's Waltz |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: GUEST,Genie too lazy to log in Date: 06 May 05 - 11:38 PM Hmm... Here's a list of songs that you folks have already mentioned that are also on my list: Lorena Ashokan Farewell Midnight On The Water I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry Angel Skye Boat Song Wayfaring Stranger Scarborough Fair Jesu Joy Of Man's Desiring El Condor Pasa The Boxer Ne Me Quitte Pas La Vie En Rose Hallelujah (Leon Dodi Li Torna A Surriento (Come Back To Sorrento) Yesterday Shenandoah Barbry Allen Sheebeg & Sheemore (Hills Of Haversham) The Minstrel Boy O Mio Bambino Caro Un Bel Di Bring Him Home Polovetzian Dance #9 (?) - Borodin (Stranger In Paradise) Tecumseh Valley Angel Band Hallelujah! (Leonard Cohen) Some that I would add are: Con Te Partiro (sung by Anrea Bocelli) To Where You Are (sung by Josh Groban) The Prayer (Andrew Lloyd-Weber) Brahms's Violin Concerto In D Minor (I think it's violin) - very moving and haunting main theme Silkie (as sung by Joan Baez) Take This Waltz (Leonard Cohen) La Paloma Blues In The Night (melody: Harold Arlen) Over the Rainbow (melody: Harold Arlen) Stormy Weather (melody: Harold Arlen It Was A Very Good Year Those Were The Days Otchee Tchornya (Dark Eyes) Rozhinkes Mit Mandlen (Yiddish lullabye) Erev Shel Shosanim (Israeli folk song and dance) Samba De Orfeo (from "Black Orpheus") Manha De Carnival (from "Black Orpheus") Windmills Of Your Mind Forbidden Games (I forgot the older melody this song is se to) Sheherezade main theme Memory (Grizabella's song from "Cats" -- Lloyd-Weber) Black Is The Colour Of My True Love's Hair Home On The Range (I don't care if it's overdone, it's beautifully hauntine) Londonderry Air (ditto) La Paloma High Barbary Farewell to Tarawathie Haul Away, Joe Rollin' Down To Old Maui Greensleeves (How could we forget?) Louie, Louie - §;-D Star Of The County Down Bridget O'Malley Blue Bayou Gulf Coast Highway (James Lee Hooker & Nanci Griffith) Spooky (Well, it IS haunting!) Sakura (Japanese "Cherry Blooms" song) In My Life (Beatles) Here, There, & Everywhere (Beatles) Blackbird (Beatles) Kiss From A Rose (Seal) The Rose (Amanda McBroom) Now Is The Hour (Maori melody learned by Allied forces in WWII) The Rebel Jesus (Jackson Browne) Anathea (as sung by Judy Collins) Lo, How a Rose E'er Blooming (Es Ist Ein' Roz' Entsprungen) Geordie (as sung by Joann Baez) Mountains O' Mourne/Bendemeer's Stream Loch Lomond Mo Mary Bridge Over Troubled Water Stardust Isle Of Innisfree (Richard Farelly) Do You Love An Apple? Tumblin' Tumbleweeds (Bob Nolan) That oughta fill up my iPod for a while. §:-D |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: Genie Date: 07 May 05 - 12:23 AM OK, now I'm 'legit'. :-) I forgot to mention The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face (Ewan McColl's original melody). |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: GUEST,Allen Date: 07 May 05 - 11:40 AM BTW, what is the tune used by Bellamy for En-Dor? |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: GUEST,carnex Date: 19 May 05 - 11:07 PM Try the theme to "Picnic at Hanging Rock" George Zamfir pan pipe. |
Subject: RE: Most haunting melodies? From: TIA Date: 20 May 05 - 12:19 AM Waves of Kilkee Comes into my head unbidden all the time |
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