Music for "Tough Times"


When you're feeling lousy, or maybe just had a tough day, what one LP, CD, tape, etc. do you play to make you feel better? In my case it's Cowboy Junkies CD "The Caution Horses". Margo Timmins voice is at once soft and soothing, but also haunting and immediate. This is music that I can get lost in. What music do others use on occasions like this?
garfish
Really bad days, when the boss is a sack of ***, mistreating you, or laid off, or wife is really ragging, someone knifes ur back, etc etc.

 I have always turned to Metal, ALWAYS.

 FEROCITY, AGRESSION, ANGER, always sets me in a good mood.

  After a few hours of Mercyful fate, kreator, Hirax, living death, death, dark Angel, forbidden, Bathory, mayhem, zoetrope, and so on.........
i feel great, then hit the LPs’, John Denver, Donovan, Lennon, humble pie, all worries and anxiety, anger is gone.

your results may vary.
American Music Club - Mercury, Everclear, San Francisco. 

Also: Arab Strap - Live. 
Agree with Beck's Sea Change but so the latest Morning Phase. And almost anything by Brian Jonestown Massacre.
Some really interesting suggestions. I have found so much good music by following up threads in the music section. It does interest me, that an in an "interconnected world"", there is so much North American music, I simply have never heard of, I come from the UK.

My twopenny, sorry 2 cents worth:

Eric Clapton Pilgrim, not a popular album of his but some wonderful, bleak songs on there

Richard Strauss "Metamorphosen", I believe, his response, as a German/Austrian, to discovering the truth about the Concentration camps in 1945. A wonderful sad, all string piece of music
OP-

there are 2 great versions of the song 'Hard Times'.
One version is by Eric Clapton & the other Run D.M.C. both are excellent. Happy listening!
Also Mahler 3rd Symphony but you have to be willing to stick it out till the end.
Moody BLues "Seventh Sojourn" always takes me where I want to be, in good or bad times.
Peter Gabriel's "Wallflower" was a favorite of mine, and helped through many a trial and when I was feeling particularly and acutely blue. It comes from his album Security, a wonderfully strange and sensational album that plums the depths in exploring a number of topics including musical possession ("The Rhythm of the Heat"), the interface of Native American and "White" American cultures ("San Jacinto) and others. "Wallflower" is a song of courage over oppression, dignity over hypocrisy. Try it on for size when your feeling low....
If I'm upset I'm usually angry. So that equates to things most here would never listen to like Uncrowned "Remember Your Ghost", anything by Dope, Tool, Bullet For My Valentine, and so on and so forth. My music selection ranges from Yanni and Sia all the way to the previously listed so don't you judge me. :-D
This song is for tough times. Nearly 300,000 views in the week since it came out. Definitely tough times for many climate researchers.
There are so many great ones here, I think I have found some new ones to listen to in order to improve my mood when I am feeling down.
Tom Waits, Leonard Cohen, Nina Simone. They can really express their suffering, and misery loves company.
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When I'm down I seem to draw comfort from tragic or melancholy music. Some of the music of Beethoven, Brahms, Shostakovich,and Billie Holiday fill the bill then.

When I'm already in a great mood, some of the music of Beethoven, Mozart, Saint-Saens, or Ravel can help me celebrate, as can some rock, klezmer, tango, or Latin jazz.

Someone mentioned "Melissa" by the Allman Brothers. I like this song but I always become very sad and almost tearful, for a few minutes, whenever I hear it. "I Want You Back" by the Jackson Five has the opposite effect. Whatever mood I am in, hearing this song will make me fell like I've just had a double espresso and a shot of tequila, at least for the few minutes that it's playing.
If you feel lousy and you realy want to go up up... - just play:
Mozart - Symphoies no. 39 or no. 41 - Bruno Walter - Columbia symphony Orchestra
Good luck !!
To stay down: Son House. Old school blues at its best. To get up: Salsa (www.faniarecords.com)
incident on 57th street/rosalita(come out tonight), imagine it's 1974, small venue at camden county colledge nj, and this is what you see and hear, only the way bruce could do it. if that doesn't do it for you nothing can. to be 18 all over again, what a rush. the vinyl conection.
Andreas Vollenweider's "Drown in Pale Light" off the "Down to the Moon" album always seems a potent adjunct therapy for that last 2 hours or so when "Am I or am I not?" finally coming out of a 2 day migraine. Most anything by Black Sabbath for a variety of garden variety insults/broken hearts, etc;.....Procol Harum's "Whiter Shade of Pale" and Supertramp's "Take the Long Way Home" are both good for that nagging vague-existential-angst and Zappa's "Prelude to the Afternoon of a Sexually Aroused Gasmask" (Weasels Ripped My Flesh) is ideal, inserted unexpectedly into the middle of any "Romantic Interludes" type mix, for clearing the premises of various committment-nagging tragediennes...
'Everything is Beautiful' by Ray Stevens.

i was sooooo down monday evening, and this song really enlightened me to the fact things aren't so bad. it's a decent recording, too.

it just made me feel "GOOD" ---- ya know ? ?? ?
Just hit upon Kinky Friedman...some of his stuff is hilarious...especially werhe he sings about that guy hitting the hardwood floor, deep down in Texas in some bar...
Alvin and the chipmunks are pretty cheerful. I am listening to it right now and things couldn't get any better!
Social Distotion, "Somewhere Between Heaven and Hell"..

It does the body good..

Chris
For the down times, Rainy days & Mondays, The Carpenter's. Also, Rickie Lee Jones (all) seem to get me back on track. Then if that don't do it.. Some Steely Dan.
Music isn't sometimes the best treatment for Tough Times in general.
The best way to kill tough times is to grab chica and dance rumba...:-)
Jarmusch, Scorsese, Wenders, even Tarantino... amazing soundtracks. Not just best of's or "I know that..." I think this is why they make me smile. Jackie Brown is a great example of a soundtrack that when you're in a bad mood, after "Across A Hundred and Tenth Street" followed by Foxy Brown's "Letter to the Firm" not to mention just the ridiculous cover. Or Wender's "Far Away, So Close!" soundtrack. I got stranded in Europe with no money once for about a week, and it was the only thing that got me through.
"hate the boss" lousy

Ministry A Mind is a Terrible Thing to Taste.
Nitzer Ebb Lightning Man or Ebb Head
Metallica Ride the Lightning
NIN Downward Spiral

"dropped the winning touchdown" lousy

Martin Scorsese/Wim Wenders The Soul of a Man Sntrk
New Order Low Life

"girl trouble" lousy

NIN Pretty Hate Machine
Dido (both)
Kix Hot Wire
Depeche Mode "black celebration"
U2 Unforgettable Fire
Until the End of the World Soundtrack
9 1/2 Weeks Soundtrack
(I've sufferred a staggering variety of girl troubles)

"Sick as a Dog" Lousy

Amos Lee
Dvorak No. 9 "New World"
Jim Croce Greatest Hits

Soprano's Original Soundtrack, If I'm not sure what Lousiness I'm sufferring from .
This is one of the many a cool threads on this site with lots of good ideas. Music to make you feel better is about feel for me weather it be instrumental or lyrical. The singer song writers like Joni Mitchell, Dylan, Danny O'Keefe, Tom Waits, early Rod Stewart, Martin Sexton, many others write some songs I can REALLY identify with. Some come acoss with prefectly crafted insightful, poignant lyrics and music that truly take me away. On the classical side Debussey, Mozart, Brahams, Ralph Vaughn Williams,and on and on also send me. Music has rescued me many times from the neatherworld of depression. Cheers
Ditto Tudordennis: anything by Elliott Smith, one of the few musical geniuses to have walked the Earth in our time, suffered greatly, but left an amazing and definitive musical statement quite unlike others of his kind.
Like the PJ and Nick Cave references... Flaming Lips after midnight on Sundays works for me. The Harder They Come and Jackie Brown. Are soundtracks too lame? Junior Murvin and Desmond Decker always make me feel better. Bob Mould. Jayhawks. Yo La Tengo can also work wonders. Too eclectic?
Joni Mitchell--"Both Sides Now"--especially the first version from "Clouds" (1969)and her whole first album "Song to a Seagull."

Bob Dylan--"Sad-Eyed Lady of the Lowlands" from Blonde on Blonde and the whole album.

Bach-Goldberg Variations especially by Rosalyn Turek or, secondly, Murray Perahia.

Beethoven--String Quartet in F Major op 135 (he was totally deaf). Ninth Symphony--Roger Norrington--how could you not be moved.

Any Mozart piano sonata by Daniel Barenboim, but Andras
Schiff is very lyrical and Mitsuko Uchida is feminine and precise.

Debussy--String Quartet in G minor--one of the great lesser known quartets, Guarneri or Budapest.

Katie Webster--"Swamp Boogie Queen"--great Delta blues singer and piano player!

Jon