Music to die to


What would you like to hear as the last piece of music while passing away? Here are my choices depending on mood and time available:1.Bitches Brew and Miles Runs The Voodoo Down from 'Bitches Brew'2.Reincarnation and Mila Repa from Que Alegria by John McLaughlin Trio 3.Earth Ship,'Visions Of The Emerald Beyond' by Mahavishnu Orchestra 4.A few songs by El Camaron/Paco De Lucia duo. 5.Total silence.
Come on, people.
inna
I'd still stick with Spike Jones as above or any groovy, swinging edition of "Hit the road, Jack ".
another addition:

Pastor TJ Burnett & the Children for Christ Choir: "like a ship (without a sail)" ----remarkably uplifting, funky christian music, great choral arrangments. fantastic cut if you've never heard it (and i hate christian music generally, but this is more like christian music meets opera conducted by James Brown).
If I wanted to go the way of the dark pagan spirits, Sunn 0)))

Plumbs the depths of the bass frequencies. Trance inducing stuff.
I just read that there's a genre "Deathcore" perhaps some suitable selections. After the burial, isnt half bad at all
Gkella, interesting idea. And following this approach I would choose..how about..I don't really hate anything.
It would have to be something I hate so my time would seem slower..kind of like torture.
Maybe something from the ABBA collection.
Glen
Lil Wing, Hendrix.
Eine Kleine Nachtmusik, Budapest Chamber Orchestra.
Human Nature, Miles Davis
Round Midnight, Monk
Kind Woman, Buffalo Springfield
Sure we can. We will all be dead soon enough and nothing of us will be left. So let's enjoy the music while we are still alive!
Mozart K.618 Ave Verum Corpus. It's short, appropriate and simply beautiful.
Ummmmm....can we not turn this into a discussion on religious/metaphysical nonsense. Let's keep it on music please.
I'll add one more to my original list, if I'm still around--Morten Lauridsen's Lux Aeterna.
Not into nothingness - into another plane of existence. We are in essence immortal. The proof? Delve into your unconscious and you will know.
Well, as I have a trashed heart and need a transplant, I've actually given this some serious thought. My choice will be 'Master and Margherita' by Ennio Morricone. Can't imagine a more beautiful piece of music to fade into nothingness to. :-)
I mis-spelled the group "Tuatara". They have an album with a cut titled "Orpheus Must Die". I strongly beg to differ. The name of the CD is "East of the Sun". I will give it a listen.
Tuatera, "Breaking the Ethers", has anyone ever heard of "Tuatera"? They are my new groove.

Doesn't the correct answer depend on whether one wishes to ease or aggravate or speed or slow dying?
It is the best guitar album period!
However it is a digital recording and quite old, so I have it on Japanese red label mastersound CD.
Inna, you will love Passion, Grace & Fire. The LP I have features John McLaughlin, Al Di Meola, and Paco De Lucia. It is the best guitar album in my collection

Enjoy the music.
You were wrong. And there is at least one more - John McLaughlin himself. I read interviews with him.
I thought I was the only person on the planet who liked "Visions of the Emerald Beyond"
Ralph Vaughan Williams-Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis
Felix Mendelssohn-Fingals Cave (Hebrides Overture)
Deodato's 'Pavane for a dead princess', or Jim Hall's 'Concierto de Aranjuez' which some have dubbed as quite possibly the finest piece of music ever written.

I wonder if anyone here has ever listened to either one of these pieces?
Turn out the lights and listen to Paul Simon's "Quiet," it's the last track off the "You're the One" album and you'll have your answer. It's not necessarily a favorite, and certainly not widely known, but if it's a soundtrack for your departure that you seek, this one comes pretty close to being it.

But the audiophile Grim Reaper can't take me yet- my new Acoustic Zen Satori Shotgun cables are on order but haven't been delivered yet. I'd be so embarassed to die listening to my current cables that I could just- well you know, die!
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If I die feeling sorry for myself, I'll have Allen Toussaint's mournful "Cruel Way To Go Down" (from Southern Night). I liked Garfish's Ry Cooder suggestion. If I'm feeling more hopeful, I'll gracefully slide out on Cooder's "Think It's Going To Work Out Fine" (Bop Till You Drop). Great topic!