T H R E A D R E V I E W
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Amazing Grace
# 95
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Posted
Simon posted a summary of a mix CD that Erin had burned for him back in the day in this comment; he was himself inspired by Louise's recollection of music she played the night she heard.
I thought this topic was interesting enough for its own thread. I have definitely had my own "playlist" and have seen some other "music" comments as well. And we had what I thought was an inspiring hymn-sing in the Cafe during our vigil. So with that in mind ...
What's in your mind's ear? What are you listening to and/or singing as you process the shock and grief? Share titles, and audio clips or other links if you've got them.
(I'll start with some of mine in a separate comment to keep this post a bit shorter.)
Peace!
Charlotte
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Amazing Grace
# 95
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Posted
A small part of my mental soundtrack:
"Ain't no sunshine when she's gone"
Alison Moyet's version of "Dido's Lament"
and the Kontakion for the Dead (thank you Spike for doing it in the Cafe).
A friend had posted a link to Faure's "In Paradisum" very recently, which made me think of the Rutter Requiem our choir did last All Souls and the haunting "Lux Aeterna" at the end.
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jlg
# 98
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Posted
Before the Vigil started, I happened across Zappa's Gerry Rafferty RIP thread in All Saints and ended up listening to Baker Street a few times.
When I couldn't get into the Cafe for the Vigil, I dug up Simon's CD playlist and googled some random pieces. I ended up listening to a lot of Dido (starting with Thank You) which segued into lots of Loreena McKennitt.
Sometime in the next week I'll find a couple of hours and settle in with some vodka or Cabernet Sauvignon (her cited drinks of choice - I don't do champagne by myself) and the Verdi Requiem.
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Banner Lady
# 10505
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Posted
Well if you want something gentle and soothing DO NOT listen to this.
But if you like black humour and some gutsy blues rock try: you're only a breath away from your Personal Judgement Day
by Big tent Revival.
My family are appalled that I want the casket carried out to this at my funeral, which is probably why I want it all the more.
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Amorya
# 2652
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Posted
Song for Athene.
"Give rest, O Lord, to your handmaid, who has fallen asleep."
(Full lyrics are in the comments to the Youtube vid.)
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OliviaG
# 9881
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Posted
I mentioned during the wake that I was listening to the Emperor Concerto. I like Beethoven for tough times because for me, his music captures the human condition: one foot in the grave and one hand reaching for the stars. OliviaG
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Kelly Alves
# 2522
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Posted
I mentioned elsewhere that the Spinners' "Mighty Love" was going through my head incessantly for the couple days before we found out.
It occured to me yesterday that this one needs to be on the playlist. [ 08. January 2011, 01:58: Message edited by: Kelly Alves ]
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jlg
# 98
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Posted
Kelly, those lyrics really say it.
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tomb
# 174
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Posted
Amorya: thanks for the Tavener.
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RooK
# 1852
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Posted
Good Riddance by Green Day
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Autenrieth Road
# 10509
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Posted
After the cafe crashed midway through the wake, my software install was done and my mother wanted me to do some errands with her. So instead of waiting for the cafe to come back up (which I understand happened quickly with Pease on the job), I headed out and turned the radio on in the car. It was playing the end of the Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto #2. I will look for this on CD and listen to it all the way through. I don't know if Erin liked this kind of music, but I hope she doesn't mind if I think of it as Erin's Song.
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comet
# 10353
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Posted
quote: Originally posted by RooK: Good Riddance by Green Day
oh yes! what a perfect song.
I have been listening to Wyclef's "Knocking on Heaven's Door" which is a little maudlin but fit my mood exactly.
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ThinkČ
# 1984
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Posted
I had this on. But I have to admit I have always loved this for its black humour. (It came very close to being a Christmas number 1 in the UK one year - I was gutted when it was bumped off by some easy listening rubbish.)
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Chorister
# 473
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Posted
'Spirit of the Lord come Down' by John Harper, words posted here as a prayer for the Ship as she sails on.
But I suspect Erin would rather like the black humour ones that are running through our heads as well, such as 'Always look on the bright side of life / death' - one my brother chose for his funeral, and 'We'll all go together when we go'.
(People of a very sensitive flyffye bynnye nature probably should not click on the second link above as the words and pictures might upset.... Everyone else join in.)
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Ricardus
# 8757
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Posted
As a bellringer, there is only one possibility.
(Totally incomprehensible explanation here.)
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ostiarius
# 13726
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Posted
I think this is a beautiful video. The Kievan chant has been used at clergy funerals at our church.
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Adeodatus
# 4992
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Posted
I listened to exactly that recording yesterday, ostiarius! And this. Call me kitsch, but it seemed right.
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Rossweisse
# 2349
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Posted
Johannes Brahms: Ein deutsches Requiem.
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Amorya
# 2652
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Posted
quote: Originally posted by Ricardus: As a bellringer, there is only one possibility.
(Totally incomprehensible explanation here.)
I think I'll have a go at ringing that on Monday. (I've rung Stedman before and it doesn't look any harder.)
The song I came to this thread to post is It is Well with My Soul.
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Amazing Grace
# 95
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Posted
Kel, excellent!
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Amazing Grace
# 95
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Posted
I also want to say that we sang "I want to be a child of the light" as our final hymn at our Epiphany service the night before Erin's funeral, in which it was included.
I usually think it's too twee and tend to roll my eyes, but not that time. Now I think I know why .
Charlotte
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Kelly Alves
# 2522
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Posted
I think the Green Day song is perfect, too.
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jlg
# 98
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Posted
quote: Originally posted by Amazing Grace: I also want to say that we sang "I want to be a child of the light" as our final hymn at our Epiphany service the night before Erin's funeral, in which it was included.
I usually think it's too twee and tend to roll my eyes, but not that time. Now I think I know why .
Charlotte
I had the same feeling of reassessment about that song, Amazing Grace. Erin was a consummate 'gator, and could be a tough bitch, but she was also an innocent, wondering, wandering, sometimes unhappy child when she let us get a glimpse of her faith.
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tomb
# 174
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Posted
"I Want to Walk as a Child of the LIght" was written by Kathleen Thomerson when she was loosely affiliated with the Church of the Redeemer in Houston, Texas--hence the tune name, Houston. Commentators tend to discount the hymn because of the "intensely personal" nature of the sentiments expressed in it and to damn it with faint praise. Still, it is one of only a handful of new hymns/songs from the Charismatic Movement that made it into the 1982 American Episcopal hymnal and is arguably strikingly important because of its inclusion there. It probably has a corollary in those Lutheran pietistic hymns that so annoy ELCA theologians and musicologists.
All that being said, it probably annoyed the hell out of Erin when it was visited upon her in Divine Service. That misery was probably salutary for her soul.
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comet
# 10353
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Posted
quote: Originally posted by Kelly Alves: I think the Green Day song is perfect, too.
since RooK mentioned it I've been practicing it all afternoon. I'll get it eventually. whatever the reason for the reminder, it's a lovely song. thanks, RooK.
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jlg
# 98
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Posted
quote: Originally posted by tomb: All that being said, it probably annoyed the hell out of Erin when it was visited upon her in Divine Service. That misery was probably salutary for her soul.
Maybe, maybe not, tomb. Her playlist, as evidenced by the CD burn posted by Simon, shows a lot of schmaltzy emotive sad stuff. (I suspect she made it during a bad time in her life.) The kind of schlock I like. And despite my intellectual brain telling me that Child of the Light is a stupid song, my emotional brain likes it. Just like it likes the Verdi Requiem.
None of us are one-dimensional.
OK, I'll admit that she might have rolled her eyes when that particular song hit her in Heaven.
That's an interesting thought: Do we observe our Last Rites after we die? And if so, what do we think of them?
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Gill H
# 68
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Posted
Radio 2 is currently playing the recent version of 'Somewhere Over the Rainbow' by Israel 'IZ' Kamakawiwo'ole.
I believe this was used in the TV show 'Scrubs' which I know Erin loved - Dr Cox was, shall we say, something of an inspiration.
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Eutychus
# 3081
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Posted
I don't know about Scrubs, but the version combined with 'what a wonderful world' featured on ER for Mark Greene's death. I've often thought it's one of the most mournful songs I've ever heard.
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Moo
# 107
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Posted
quote: Originally posted by Amorya: The song I came to this thread to post is It is Well with My Soul.
Here is the music.
Moo
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Beenster
# 242
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Posted
As someone who likes Tallis, I have had If ye love me playing. The words struck me as appropriate:
If ye love me Keep my commandments ..
Although I am wondering how "another comforter" will unfold.
Not sure if necessarily this is the best setting but I was attracted to the video with the number of people tramping their way up hills, down hills, through woods - all carrying lights. All journeying on.
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Gill H
# 68
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Posted
quote: Originally posted by Eutychus: I don't know about Scrubs, but the version combined with 'what a wonderful world' featured on ER for Mark Greene's death. I've often thought it's one of the most mournful songs I've ever heard.
Ah, maybe I'm getting my hospital programmes mixed up then. I don't follow either.
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PeteC
# 10422
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Posted
I lit a candle this morning at church, and was at peace during my prayer in the Blessed Sacrament Chapel.
Then when I went to the service, the opening hymn was this:
quote: Here in this place, new light is streaming Now is the darkness vanished away, See, in this space, our fears and our dreamings, Brought here to you in the light of this day. Gather us in the lost and forsaken Gather us in the blind and the lame; Call to us now, and we shall awaken We shall arise at the sound of our name.
I wept a bit. And it has stayed with me all day
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Eutychus
# 3081
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Posted
Obscure but appropriate?
Omaha return by Rolfe Kent from the soundtrack to About Schmidt
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QLib
# 43
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Posted
This thread is a real comfort. 'Scrubs' theme here.
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morningstar
# 15860
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Posted
quote: Originally posted by Ricardus: As a bellringer, there is only one possibility.
(Totally incomprehensible explanation here.)
Incomprehensible? Maybe but also very apposite. I love the bit that says: "Erin can be used as a 'stepping stone' to move the band on towards Stedman" Stedman, apparently, being "very useful for ringers learning to hunt"
What could be a better preparation for what's needed on the Ship right now? (pace Rook). [ 10. January 2011, 18:30: Message edited by: morningstar ]
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Squibs
# 14408
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Posted
Casimir Pulaski Day
"Oh the glory that the Lord has made And the complications you could do without When I kissed you on the mouth..."
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Lesedi
# 5234
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Posted
I've not been around in quite a while so my grief for Erin is limited, not nearly what it is for others on this board. I'm more aware of the corporate grief at a variety of levels.
All that said, two songs are rumbling around my brain. The first is Roseanne Cash's Will You Remember Me. They used it at the funeral of her father, Johnny Cash.
The second is Warren Zevon's Keep Me in Your Heart. It is part of his final cd.
Cherie
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Nunzia
# 4766
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Posted
I keep hearing, Everything in Heaven Comes Apart by Martyn Joseph and Steward Henderson. It's not very Erin-specific;I always think of it when somebody dies.
But also, One Last Drink.
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Janine
# 3337
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Posted
Comfort music...
Deep Enough To Dream
Nearer, My God, To Thee
Mistaken
Untitled Hymn
Amazing Grace
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dolphy
# 862
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Posted
I posted this on another thread for Erin but this is one song that we shared together when Miss Molly passed on, and it speaks volumes for Erin also x
For a Friend
Another song Erin and I shared is another one by Sarah McLachlan. This song she sent to me on an email when we were talking about my Dad who was, at that time, very seriously ill and who passed away only a few weeks later. I am sure that Erin would not mind me posting here the first line from that email:
"Dear dolphy, I want to give you this song because I feel it might help you to come to terms with the grief you are feeling at this point in your life."
She went on to write much more in the email but, once again, I will not share those private moments with you all.
She signed the email as follows:
"With all my love and prayers, Erin. P.S. If you ever post in hell that I can be a fluffy bunny, I will flame your dolphin tuna stinking butt!"
Well Erin, you never said anything about posting here. God bless you, dearest Croc! and I never thought I'd be sharing this song you gave to me in memory of you....
Hold On [ 11. January 2011, 15:34: Message edited by: dolphy ]
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comet
# 10353
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Posted
quote: Originally posted by dolphy: She signed the email as follows:
"With all my love and prayers, Erin. P.S. If you ever post in hell that I can be a fluffy bunny, I will flame your dolphin tuna stinking butt!"[/URL]
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dolphy
# 862
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Posted
and
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Kelly Alves
# 2522
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Posted
...and a great sig it is, Dolphy.
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Mr Curly
# 5518
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Posted
I've been listening to The Unforgettable Fire frequently lately. Not sure how it started, but it has suited my mood - from Erin's passing, and other events.
If I get to plan my funeral, there will be no singing. But a song by Tiddas, Waving Goodbye, will be played. I was unable to find a link to this melancholy masterpiece to introduce it to you all.
mr curly
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Janine
# 3337
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Posted
See You Later Alligator, in the purity of its original form... hee...
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