I am looking for symphonies and composers that can sound like this: intense, loud instrumentals, fast pace, intense choir singing, and very angry sounding:
Examples of things I am looking for.
Can't Find Title (Starts at [1:40])
Can't Find The Title (Song Starts at [0:37])
O Fortuna
Any suggestions (If you could find the names of the ones I cannot find also, I would really appreciate it)
Anything by Mozart is angry, pissed off music with a hard edge and huge, aggressive sound.
Check out Eine kleine Nactmusik. That means " a little night music" and it really is music of the night. Like a forboding Gothic cathedral lit by the evil light of a blood-red moon.
Crank this and let your fantasies of death and distruction take flight.
Well, there may be a deluge of modern classical that would be similar to those you posted. I can mention film composers such as Elfman, Silvestri, Zimmer, Poledouris and Herrmann--all of whom have composed music very similar to what you are looking for.
I keep thinking of new such suggestions every time they have been requested, and now I believe I can honestly say: I am out!
Possibly the most profoundly angst-ridden, epic, God-fearing, Earth-shattering, monster is 'Rage Over a Lost Penny' by Beethoven. For tear-inducing, powerful, music also check out the first of Webern's 'Four Pieces' for violin and piano.
Mars, Bringer of War. Gustav Holst, Planets Suite.
2nd Movement- Scherzo from Bruckners 9th Symphony (Not often suggested!)
Last Movement from Mahlers 6th Symphony (Ok it's long but really dark)
O Fortuna from Carl Orffs Carmina Burana
Of course you need to crank yer stereo up to get the maximum from them!!!
Yes, well, we all know Mahler's music is like ten or eleven PANSIES against Mozart's. Mozart is like the biggest bouquet ever made of roses with wicked long, sharp, barbed thorns everywhere. Mozart's first symphony? Most dangerous thing ever written. Nobody believes it, but even the cutest puppies have sharp teeth and claws...
Well I guess there's only a limited amount of DARK, DEPRESSIVE, LOUD, ANGRY sounding classical music around! maybe we should try and pursuade MHWLC to be more flexible!!:angry:
Haha, I have just been looking for some that match my description but very few have really met it so far. I have listened to a great deal of classical from other emotions like happiness, sadness, etc., just barely the one I am looking for now.
MHWLC, If you want some of the music you are describing, generally find Requiem Masses by several composers, Berlioz, Verdi, Dvorak etc. OK they are pretty long pieces and I always think it's sacrilage to pick movements out of these works of art. But music that deals with death and Hell, ain't gonna be light and happy pieces!!!..happy listening..
And don't forget that heretic Handel and his blasphemous Messiah...a mordant, disgusting musical rant against Christianity and all that is holy and pure.
Metalheads would love this one...
It opens with an Orff-like chorus, singing in Hebrew, invoking the Lord of the Flies himself, Beelzebub. After that, military-style percussion and post horns herald the arrival of Medusa. Medusa, sung by mezzo-soprano, presides over a firece witch's sabbath scene in which she raises Chernabog from the dead and consignes the soul of Salome to the pit. Medusa then turns into a huge scarab beetle and this is represented by a tambourine being struck with the blunt side of a machete.
After several interludes of trombones and bass drums, all performed ffff, we now come to the famous "Hallelujah" section in which a chorus of daemons blasphemize the name of the Messiah by singing in dissontant, mocking tones. This segues to a crescendo in tutti, complete with organ and a recording of a dump truck driving into a brick wall.
The names Handel, Mozart and that lord of darkness Vivaldi will live on forever...as the most brutal musicians who ever lived...or died.
Thank God for the Second Vienesse School, who rejected these composers of ill-repute and restored beauty back to music.
And don't forget that heretic Handel and his blasphemous Messiah...a mordant, disgusting musical rant against Christianity and all that is holy and pure.
Metalheads would love this one...
It opens with an Orff-like chorus, singing in Hebrew, invoking the Lord of the Flies himself, Beelzebub. After that, military-style percussion and post horns herald the arrival of Medusa. Medusa, sung by mezzo-soprano, presides over a firece witch's sabbath scene in which she raises Chernabog from the dead and consignes the soul of Salome to the pit. Medusa then turns into a huge scarab beetle and this is represented by a tambourine being struck with the blunt side of a machete.
After several interludes of trombones and bass drums, all performed ffff, we now come to the famous "Hallelujah" section in which a chorus of daemons blasphemize the name of the Messiah by singing in dissontant, mocking tones. This segues to a crescendo in tutti, complete with organ and a recording of a dump truck driving into a brick wall.
The names Handel, Mozart and that lord of darkness Vivaldi will live on forever...as the most brutal musicians who ever lived...or died.
Thank God for the Second Vienesse School, who rejected these composers of ill-repute and restored beauty back to music.
Prokofiev's 2nd symphony as a Disney's cartoon opening theme ?
Shostakovich's 4th symphony for a New Year's Eve tune ?
Schnittke's piano quintet for child birth music ?
It doesn't get more powerful, epic, angry, intense than Mahler. I refer to him as Mr. Bi-Polar. One minute you're listening to Symphony No. 2 (awesome symphony) and it all starts off all nice and pretty and then 3 minutes goes by before BAM! You're in the next movement where the strings totally decapitate you. Pretty aggressive....quite scary music indeed.
In addition to Mahler, be sure to check out Shostakovich's symphonies as well. Prokofiev is also pretty intense.
Check out # 6 in Part II of Elgar's Dream of Gerontius "Disposessed, aside thrust" wherein the demons in hell conduct a vicious fugal rant against the angels and the whole concept of Heaven. Hell's fury is made up cast out angels -and the all hate it and scorn the "goodies" that were left behind.
Pretty intense choral & orchestral music on either side of the microphones!
R-F, my friend, I'm glad to see that most of us, anyway, can enjoy a laugh every so often in this forum. I think "serious" music doens't always have to be so...serious.
I'd love to see what would happen in these fans of aggressive, "depressive" metal actually went out and bought Eine kleine Nactmusic, Carnival of the Animals or the Messiah expecting a sonic blockbuster of carnage and chaos. Would they be dissapointed? Hehehe...
Carnival of the Animals is blamed for more teen suicide than Marilyn Manson. The music is dark and brooding...and loud. It really gives me chills thinking of that morbid, death-themed Swan movement.
I was reading along this thread and getting more and more confused... and then, I started laughing and I just had to make myself stop, get a breath of air, and say thanks to all of you. Gee, these classical music types are just so-o-o stuffy and serious.
Speaking of the adjective "angry," one work that comes to mind is the Organ Concerto of Icelandic composer Jon Leifs. This is brutal work with aggressive organ playing, complete with grinding dissonances and tone clusters and shockingly loud purcussion whacks that sound like small cannons. This is a work where I really do feel a sense of anger, as opposed to just showy brutality. I guess when it premiered on Germany in the 1930s (I think that's the decade...I'll have to research the liner notes) that it started with a packed house only to end up being nearly empty as the work concluded...people were walking out in droves.
While not beautiful in a traditional sense, and not easy on the ears, it retains a primitive fascination and I like it quite a bit. There is a more lyrical middle section, though, which offers a breather between the out movements, which are quite overwhelming.
If I have a bad day at work, I like blasting this one and it delivers good catharsis.
I would also put Rued Langgaard in the powerful, epic, angry, intense category in addition to Mahler.
If you haven't heard Langgaard, then you're ears will be in for quite a treat coming March 31st when his symphonies will be together in a box set on the Da Capo label.
Again, as I said, Mahler and Langgaard personify the music you are requesting, Metalhead.
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