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I didn’t cry! (Elgar)

(55 Posts)
FannyCornforth Fri 05-Nov-21 18:32:47

I’ve just listened to Nimrod, from the Enigma Variations, and I didn’t shed a tear
Tell me about your tear jerkers x

Witzend Sun 07-Nov-21 20:51:59

I’m not Welsh, but hearing a good rugby crowd singing Guide Me O Thou Great Redeemer, especially in Welsh, is always a bit throat-lumpy for me.

BlueSapphire Sun 07-Nov-21 20:07:24

In Paradisum from Faure's Requiem.

You are the sunshine of my life by Stevie Wonder. Late DH once told me that's what I was to him.....

Blossoming Sun 07-Nov-21 19:47:36

‘Abide With Me’

Played at my mother’s funeral, didn’t cry then, can’t listen to it now.

Bellanonna Sun 07-Nov-21 18:18:17

Panis Angelicus
Ave Verum Corpus

Both remind me of school choir days

Bellanonna Sun 07-Nov-21 17:28:24

Many of the above.
Also Aksel Rykkvin, as a 13 year old boy soprano singing Laudate Dominum. He is now a rich baritone!

Severnsider Sun 07-Nov-21 16:15:58

Adagio - Mahler 5

Softly as I leave you, - Matt Monro - so sad

Tristan & Isolde - liebestod

Chariots of Fire - theme music

Shrub Sun 07-Nov-21 14:48:27

Bright Eyes by Simon and Garfunkle.

Cherrytree59 Sun 07-Nov-21 14:38:52

Alegrais yep that would do it for me.
In fact just being at Murrayfield thistle

Cherrytree59 Sun 07-Nov-21 14:31:02

The Bonny Banks O' Loch Lomand .

Dance with my Father.

Bridge over troubled waters

Alegrias1 Sun 07-Nov-21 14:20:06

I've got a new one... 67,000 people singing the second verse of Flower of Scotland a capella in Murrayfield for the first time in 2 years. I was quite overcome!

JackyB Sun 07-Nov-21 12:56:27

I have often been so overcome when singing in choir that I have had to stop for a while as I can't sing for sobbing. This can happen at any time during
a Bach oratorio and there's a bar - just a single bar - in Vivaldi's Gloria which takes my breath every time, whether singing or listening.

Anything to do with the end of the Cold War has me in tears, as epitomised in Billy Joel's "Leningrad"

vissos Sun 07-Nov-21 12:36:18

You'll Never Walk Alone & Abide With Me (post Hillsborough)
The Same Sun, Chris de Burgh. Played ad infinitum after my dog died in 2000.

Witzend Sun 07-Nov-21 12:35:47

They must have been a nightmare, MerylStreep - so freezing cold! The N Atlantic was surely bad enough in winter. My DF hardly talked of it, but my mother knew, and told us, of 50 foot waves, and they were in very small RN ships.

My mother had knitted him very thick woolly socks, which we used as Christmas stockings for a long time.

If ever The Cruel Sea came on TV, my father would leave the room - he was a very jolly type but evidently there were too many dreadful memories. He had served on a ship with the author, Nicholas Montserrat, and apparently told my mother that he was a sh*t!

Luckygirl Sun 07-Nov-21 12:20:47

So many make me cry.

Art Garfunkel singing Song for the Asking is my Waterloo and Fool on the Hill from the Beatles. Both were songs that OH and I used to listen to at uni, and now that he has died they open the floodgates in a big way. Such a pity as I would love to enjoy them again.

MerylStreep Sun 07-Nov-21 11:41:39

Witzend
My father was 19 yrs when he went as a signalman on the Russian convoys. I didn’t know a thing about it until I was in my 30s.

henetha Sun 07-Nov-21 11:37:31

Mahler's Fifth Symphony, Adagietto, is so melancholy yet beautiful, it always makes me cry. It was the background music to the film Death in Venice, such a wonderful film.
Also the lyrics of Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas always reduces me to tears.
For very personal reasons, Bryan Adams Everything I do, I do it for You, renders me absolutely useless for the rest of the day and I collapse in a tearful heap on the sofa. Even after all these years.

Westcoaster Sun 07-Nov-21 10:53:14

Remember Me (and I will be with you) by Christy Hennessey. Amazon music played it randomly to me a few days after DH's funeral. Beautiful lyrics, but brings a tear to my eye every time I hear it.
For similar reasons, You'll never walk alone and Abide with Me.

MaggieTulliver Sun 07-Nov-21 10:19:47

Lovely thread OP, thanks for starting.
No mentions of Bach yet, he’s my number one composer and so much of his work gives me the shivers but the opening and closing choruses of the St Matthew Passion always make me cry (just tested this!).
Also Purcell - Dido’s Farewell
Samual Barber - Adagio for Strings
Schubert - most of the songs in derbWinterreise

harrigran Sun 07-Nov-21 10:09:57

A recording of Brahms requiem performed by DD's school, they had to borrow a few fathers for the male voices as it was an all girls school.

hollysteers Sun 07-Nov-21 10:05:56

Elgar really presses the buttons doesn’t he? His Dream of Gerontius gets to me.
Mahler adagio (Death in Venice)
Can’t listen to Louis Armstrong What a Wonderful World as mum’s favourite or Bach Oratorios, late husband sang bass in them.

Witzend Sun 07-Nov-21 09:48:23

I think one reason I find Abide With Me so poignant, is because it was written by someone who knew he was dying.

As an aside, I was somehow very moved to hear it played back in about 1974, at the first military tattoo ever held in Oman, where I’d moved to with dh as a newlywed.

The military band who played it was new - like many things in Oman at the time - and not exactly note-perfect, but I was amazed to hear it at all, at an official do in a Muslim country.

I can only assume that Sultan Qaboos, who was present at the event, had become fond of it during his years at Sandhurst.
I also well remember him laughing his head off at the antics of the U.K. White Helmets motorbike team - which I believe were disbanded some years ago - such a shame, they were brilliant.

Lucca Sun 07-Nov-21 08:38:15

Witzend

When sung by proper choirs, not mucked about, I’d add,
Abide With Me
The Day Thou Gavest Lord Has Ended
and
Eternal Father Strong To Save (For Those In Peril On The Sea) because it was my father’s favourite - he spent two WW2 years on the terribly dangerous RN N Atlantic convoys, and it was played at his funeral.

For me those first two just evoke bad memories of Sunday evening services at boarding school …depressing but not “moving” !

tidyskatemum Sat 06-Nov-21 21:04:05

Always Elgar’s cello concerto. Too much choral music to mention. I saw the Mormon Tabernacle Choir in Salt Lake Cityyears ago and I was reduced to a snivelling wreck.

Fennel Sat 06-Nov-21 21:00:53

Same for me Witzend My Dad was on a RN ship trying to protect those convoys. We used to sing this hymn at school and I still well up when I hear it.
Elgar too. Nimrod, and the "Praise" chorus in his Dream of Gerontius. I was once in a choir singing this and when "Praise" broke out I burst into tears and couldn't sing

Witzend Sat 06-Nov-21 10:29:25

When sung by proper choirs, not mucked about, I’d add,
Abide With Me
The Day Thou Gavest Lord Has Ended
and
Eternal Father Strong To Save (For Those In Peril On The Sea) because it was my father’s favourite - he spent two WW2 years on the terribly dangerous RN N Atlantic convoys, and it was played at his funeral.