Most achingly-beautiful music


Ultimately, we listen to music to be moved, for example, to be elated, exulted, calmed or pained. Which are the 3 most affecting pieces of music do you find the most affecting?
hungryear
Several years back on this thread, someone mentioned "Terrapin Station" by the Grateful Dead.

I happened to be re-visting this work for the first time in a while. It had caught my attention years ago and I hear why. It is a most interesting piece. Lots of progressive rock and classical elements (the Dead really did that?) with quite poetic lyrics. Very unique + very enjoyable. Achingly beautiful? Well, yes I suppose so in the Dead's typical low key manner though.....
Allegri's Miserere performed by The Tallis Scholars (listening to it as I write this) certainly fits the bill. 'The Great Bear and Pleides' from Britten's Peter Grimes (and much more from that work too). 'Marche Funebre' from Beethoven's 3rd. John Dowland's 'In Darkness let me Dwelle'.

For me 'achingly beautiful' describes classical, choral and opera, but in a different way, Van Morrison's Astral Weeks, Tom Wait's 'Alice' and some Joni Mitchell stuff (try 'A Case of You' from her album 'Blue').
1) Maurice Ravel's "Daphnis and Chloé", especially the second set (lever du jour/ pantomime/ danse générale) takes longing, yearning, tension and release to an extreme. Choose a recording where they did not leave out the choir! The Furtwaengler recording from March 1944 (label: Archipel) carries more energy than all the others I have heard. I can compare its unbelievable crescendos only to, er, an erotic encounter. Furtwaengler teaches everybody a thing about interpretation and even makes you forget the permanent coughs from the audience and the heavy overdrive of the recording equipment at the climaxes when the concert hall seems to come down. But do yourself a favour and buy a good contemporary recording, too, e.g. Kent Nagano's. Daphnis and Chloé makes you want to put flowers onto Ravel's grave. Quelle beauté! Quelle tendresse! Merci, monsieur Ravel!

2) Max Reger's very short song (or lied) "Aeolsharfe" (aeolian harp) opus 75 no. 11, sung by Fischer-Dieskau. A tiny little gem, German romantic sentiment triple concentrated.

3) The third ache generator is a tie between a) "Wind on Water" by Robert Fripp and Brian Eno (album "Evening Star") with its unforgettable, inspired e-guitar line; b) "Mirage" for cello, keyboards and e-guitar by Terje Rypdal and David Darling (album "Eos", label ECM) which is an idyll with focused energy and plenty of space; c) "Mannelig", an ancient Swedish song, sung by the great Lena Willemark on the album "Nordan"; d) "O sacrum convivium" for mixed choir by Olivier Messiaen (e.g. on the label Catalyst) with one final 45-second "aleluia" that floors even an agnostic like me; and e) some recurring moments of LaMonte Young's special version of the Raga Sundara, regrettably not published yet. Awesome and deeply moving just with its beauty.

Sorry for writing so much, but these are the gems from my 20 years of collecting music. Sharing them is important to me.
try..Vassilis Tsabropoulos[piano] either solo or with Anja Lechner[cello]
on the album "chants,hymns and dances". preview a song at.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XbYkHjSERsI
Lately, Patricia Barber's "Persephone" from Mythologies has been slaying me -- there's ache for you.

I've noticed that folks hereabouts are mixed on Barber, and on this album in particular. I think it's a flat out masterpiece. Just another one of those cases where I can't get my mind around what the "opposition" is thinking -- an apt seasonal sentiment.