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12Music is not a new concept, and neither is sadness -- so it should be of no surprise to anyone that {{Tear Jerker}}s can be found in classical music. Furthermore, it's not necessary for music to have lyrics in order to be sad.
13----
14* "Albinoni's" [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XMbvcp480Y4 Adagio in G minor]] (actually by 20th-century composer Remo Giazotto, but no less tearjerking for it).
15%%* Allegri's ''Miserere''.
16* Pick an "Ave Maria", any "Ave Maria" -- some particularly noteworthy examples include Verdi's (from ''[[{{Opera}} Otello]]''), Yoko Kanno's (from ''Anime/CowboyBebop''), Schubert's, Gounod's (using a Bach prelude as an accompaniment) and the [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a3SQmI1I9i0 sublimely bittersweet minor-[[{{Scales}} key]] version by Vladimir Vavilov]]. Remember the cliché slogan "You don't have to be Jewish to enjoy (whatever)"? Well, "You don't have to be Christian" to be moved to tears by [[Music/FranzSchubert Schubert]]'s "Ave". (Although technically Schubert originally wrote the music as a setting of an epic poem, only later re-setting it to fit the "Ave Maria".)
17* The [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iDSAXtsDB5k last, unfinished, fugue]] from Music/JohannSebastianBach's 'Art of Fugue'.
18%%** The Air from Orchestral Suite No. 3, better known as "Air on the G String".
19%%** Various slowed-down arrangements of the 6th and 10th movements of ''Herz und Mund und Tat und Leben'', BWV 147, popularly called called "Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring".
20* Samuel Barber's "Adagio For Strings", almost universally considered the world's saddest piece of classical music ''ever''.
21** It ''really'' doesn't help that this is '''the''' piece to play during funerals and other events of great tragedy (Franklin D. Roosevelt's funeral, 9/11, etc.). In [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y4PWdOoOQjI this performance,]] carried out on September 15, 2001 and performed by the BBC Orchestra, the audience can be openly heard sobbing in the background. At the time, with air travel suspended and hundreds of thousands of Americans stranded across the world, with a large proportion of the lost tourists in the United Kingdom, the British government and public [[SugarWiki/HeartwarmingMoments did everything they could]] to both honour the dead, and mourn alongside their American counterparts, seemingly marooned by a horrendous tragedy which had struck at the very heart of their homeland.
22** The piece is used to great effect in ''Film/{{Platoon}}''. Makes the Vietnam War feel all the more ... you know ... ''tragic''.
23** "Agnus Dei" (the choral arrangement) is used masterfully in ''VideoGame/{{Homeworld}}''.
24*** Also used well in Joss Whedon's comic ''Sugarshock''.
25*** It was also used in ''Film/TenaciousDInThePickOfDestiny'', when Jables gets his first guitar. The scene is meant to be slightly silly, but that music is still sad.
26** Samuel Barber is a master of the heart-wrenching. Besides "Adagio for Strings", there are also the lesser known but just as heart-rending 2nd movement of his Piano Concerto, as well as the Adagio from his First Symphony.
27** Barber's choral masterwork ''The Prayers of Kierkegaard'' has a soaring soprano solo, which is already beautiful enough on its own, but when the motif returns in the climax... All those voices, in perfect synchronization, and the size and the scope of the music just... wow. The moment overwhelms.
28* Music/LudwigVanBeethoven had a way with TearJerker pieces. Just to name some of the more well-known examples:
29** The second movement of his Symphony No. 7. He wrote the symphony just after he went completely deaf. Fans of ''Film/TheKingsSpeech'' will recognize this as the song played at the climax, letting you know that yes, it CAN be done!
30** His Three Equali, written for four trombones, is heart-rending for an all-brass work, even tearful if you know that it was played at his own funeral.
31** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5-MT5zeY6CU Piano Sonata No. 14 in C# minor]] (better known as the ''Moonlight'' Sonata) is one of the best-known pieces in classical music, and has been used in countless media to express sadness, longing, etc.
32** The [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1FP7NosLxkw Adagio Cantabile]] of the ''Pathetique'' Sonata. Even more so if you're a ''Anime/RurouniKenshin'' fan, since this is the piano piece that plays during [[spoiler: Yumi's death]] and [[spoiler:Kenshin's first proper visit to Tomoe's grave]] in the Kyoto arc.
33** The final movement of Symphony No. 9. The whole symphony is amazing, but the final movement is one of the crowning achievements of Western classical music. (Just to make clear, this is more of a TearJerker combined with SugarWiki/AwesomeMusic. The tears one may cry aren't of sorrow, but hope and joy at the idealism of the lyrics (look up a translation, you'll see).)
34** For that matter, read Beethoven's [[http://www.all-about-beethoven.com/heiligenstadt_test.html Heiligenstadt Testament]], explaining in raw detail his feelings of near-suicidal despair when he discovered he was losing his hearing-- and his eventual resolution to [[TheDeterminator keep on composing anyway]]-- and just ''try'' to keep a dry eye.
35---> "But what a humiliation for me when someone standing next to me heard a flute in the distance and I heard nothing, or someone heard a shepherd singing and again I heard nothing. Such incidents drove me almost to despair; a little more of that and [[DrivenToSuicide I would have ended my life]] -- it was only my art that held me back."
36%%** The second movement of his Symphony No. 3, an actual funeral march.
37* Hector Berlioz's "Grande symphonie funèbre et triomphale" can make you shed buckets. It doesn't even help if you already know the event this was written for. The second movement trombone solo is a highlight.
38* Fernando de la Mora's rendition of Georges Bizet's [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oLY2AI44OYY "Je Crois Entendre Encore"]] from ''The Pearl Fishers'' is pretty much four solid minutes of pure melancholy.
39* Benjamin Britten's setting of Creator/JohnDonne's ''Holy Sonnets'' is heartwrenching, starting from "Since she whom I loved" and reaching a peak by the time it gets to [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=86dSerwbIMw "Death be not proud."]]
40* Many singers' voices go wobbly when singing "Auld Lang Syne". Another Creator/RobertBurns tearjerker is "John Anderson".
41* The motet ''Ne irascaris Domine'', by the Elizabethan composer William Byrd. Byrd was a Catholic at a time when it was illegal to be Catholic in England, and this piece expresses that anguish beautifully (the most wrenching part is perhaps the switch from polyphony to chordal harmony at "Sion deserta facta sunt"). An English translation of the Latin text:
42-->Be not angry, O Lord,\
43and remember our iniquity no more.\
44Behold, we are all your people.\
45Your holy city has become a wilderness.\
46Zion has become a wilderness,\
47Jerusalem has been made desolate.
48* Music/FryderykChopin's [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wNAyKL2GHvA "Étude Op.10 No.3 in E major - Tristesse"]] is already beautifully melancholy, and it is used to heartbreakingly bittersweet effect in the score of the series finale of ''Anime/FullmetalAlchemist2003''. Chopin himself thought it was the loveliest melody he'd ever written.
49** Three of Chopin's own works were played at his funeral, each a tear jerker in its own way - the Preludes Op.28 No.4 in E minor and No.6 in B minor, and the third movement (Funeral March) from Piano Sonata No.2 in B-flat minor. Even though the last one is a StandardSnippet for funerals and other sombre scenes in media, it is no less depressing for it.
50* Music/AaronCopland's [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xzf0rvQa4Mc "Fanfare for the Common Man".]] The power and majesty of this song attributed to the common man brings about tears not of sorrow, but of pride. Hope. The Common Man is awesome.
51** Aaron Copland wrote a lot of amazing music, but special mention must go to his opera, ''The Tender Land'', especially the Act 2 love duet between Laurie and Martin. The simplicity of the music combined with the extremely real emotion of a good signer is just ''agh''.
52* Debussy's "Clair de Lune" from the ''Suite bergamasque''. It brings more tears of beauty than sadness, though.
53%%* Any of Ludovico Einaudi's works can qualify for this. Try "Questa Notte", "Le Onde", "I Giorni" and "Primavera".
54* Variation IX, better known as ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0HqOowRwGxA Nimrod]]'' from the Enigma Variations by Edward Elgar as played at the Cenotaph on Remembrance Sundays. A truly beautiful piece that has obtained great fame over the years, and for good reason, it's hard to find someone who doesn't tear up even a little when they listen to it. Expect more tears to fall and hearts to be warmed when you consider who inspired it - the close friend of Elgar that convinced him not to give up on composing.
55** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OH0jUQTCCQI Elgar's Cello Concerto.]] Made even more heart-wrenching if you know [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacqueline_du_Pr%C3%A9 Jacqueline du Pré's story.]] It is said that Elgar himself on his death-bed hummed the main theme to a friend and said: "If ever after I'm dead you hear someone whistling this tune on the Malvern Hills, don't be alarmed. It's only me".
56%%* Fauré's Pavane in F# minor op. 50, and his ''Élégie'' Op. 24.
57* Most of Music/GeorgeGershwin's opera ''Theatre/PorgyAndBess'', but particular offenders are "My Man's Gone Now," "Bess, You Is My Woman," and the finale, "Oh, Lawd, I'm On My Way." A really great Porgy will reduce anyone to a blubbering mess with his unfailing determination to find Bess in New York.
58* "Che Faro Senza Euridice" from Gluck's ''Theatre/OrfeoEdEuridice''. A bad singer will turn it into {{Narm}}; a good one will break your heart.
59* Howard Goodall has his own share of heart-ripping pieces. One of them is his anthem set to Wendy Cope's poem ''Spared'', written to commemorate the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. Knowing [[http://www.classicfm.com/composers/goodall/guides/how-i-wrote-spared-howard-goodall/ where the composer himself was on that tragic day]] gushes even more tears.
60* Henryk Górecki's Symphony No. 3, particularly as the soloist comes to the end of her piece in the first movement... and the orchestra comes in hard.
61** Also, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=miLV0o4AhE4 the entire second movement.]] The text came from an inscription found on the walls of a Polish Gestapo prison cell, written by an 18 year old girl. "O Mama, do not cry..."
62** Let's face it, there's a reason this symphony's subtitle is "The Symphony of Sorrowful Songs."
63* Graduation songs: [[ComicStrip/{{Peanuts}} Snoopy]] once remarked that "Pomp and Circumstance" had an effect on old grads. And don't think that you have to have gone to a Japanese high school for the song in ''Manga/AzumangaDaioh'' to work on you, although that may be part empathy for Chiyo.
64* "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ii2Adi2iFRM Solveig's Song]]" from Edvard Grieg's incidental music for Ibsen's play ''Theatre/PeerGynt''. The title character is a total playboy and jerk who goes around having all these adventures while his wife, Solveig, stays at home loving him. In the play, it's more of a satire but in the music, it is one of the most touching pieces. An elderly Peer Gynt, now frail and broken from his travels, returns home to find Solveig still faithfully waiting for him.
65* Music/GeorgeFredericHandel: According to legend, certain ink smudges on G.F. Handel's original score for ''The Messiah'' were because Handel's tears were dripping onto the page. (The last page or so of "All We Like Sheep", for example.)
66* Certain hymns are likely to bring tears to the eyes of those who hear them. The best example is probably "Were You There?"[[note]] Until you realize that the tune for "Were You There?" is really just a slowed down, somber variation on "She'll Be Comin' 'Round the Mountain When She Comes". Then you'll never be able to get through the piece without giggling.[[/note]]
67* Leoš Janáček's String Quartet No. 2, called "Intimate Letters" by the composer. He wrote it for Kamila Stösslová, a married woman 40 years his junior who may have never loved him back. The [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WICGA3VLG7Y third movement]] has been interpreted as a lullaby for the son she never bore him.
68** Heck, half of what Janáček wrote could probably fit in this category. His piano compositions ''Sonata 1. X. 1905'', ''In the Mists'', and ''On an Overgrown Path'' certainly qualify. The fact that Janáček was not a happy man is the reason we don't have the third movement of the Sonata — he ripped out the score and threw it into a fire during a fit of depression immediately following its first performance.
69* The famous [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uCydQm83cJQ Largo]] from Antonín Dvořák's Symphony No. 9 in E Minor "From the New World."
70* Josef Suk was the son-in-law of the great Antonín Dvořák. Suk's early music is cheerful and energetic, mainly influenced by his happy, loving marriage to Dvořák's daughter Otilie (Otilka). So it should come as a [[MoodWhiplash shock]] that Suk's most famous composition is a work of great tragedy. In a span of 14 months, both Dvořák and Otilie died, prompting Suk to compose the ''Asrael Symphony'' (named after the Biblical Angel of Death). Suk even quotes from Dvořák's music, representing the influence the great Czech master had on him.
71** In Suk's own words: "The fearsome Angel of Death struck with his scythe a second time. Such a misfortune either destroys a man or brings to the surface all the powers dormant in him. Music saved me and after a year I began the second part of the symphony, beginning with an adagio, a tender portrait of Otilka."
72* Josquin Des Prez's motet "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AnE_xMY0OZQ Absalon, Fili Mi]]" vividly depicts the mourning of King David over the death of his son Absalom. "If only I had died instead of you! Therefore I will live no more, but go down to hell weeping."
73* Singers have been known to break down in tears while performing "Das Lied von der Erde." Composer Music/GustavMahler himself wondered if audiences would commit suicide after hearing it; he did not live to see it performed.
74** Satirist Music/TomLehrer made a joke about this on his album ''Music/ThatWasTheYearThatWas'', describing Mahler as "the writer of ''Das Lied von der Erde'' and other light classics".
75** The adagietto from Mahler's Fifth Symphony is also in this category. It was performed for the funeral of UsefulNotes/RobertKennedy, among others.
76** The Final Movement of his Ninth Symphony is already pretty sombre, but when you add the fact that many people believe the movement is his SwanSong and farewell to the world, it becomes utterly heart-wrenching.
77** Mahler's song cycle "Kindertotenlieder," or "Songs on the Death of Children," is every bit as heartbreaking as you would expect. Even worse, the piece later became HarsherInHindsight for the composer when, tragically, his own four-year-old daughter died of scarlet fever. He said to a friend, "I placed myself in the situation that a child of mine had died. When I really lost my daughter, I could not have written these songs any more."
78%%** Mahler's song "Ich bin der Welt abhanden gekommen" is similarly tear-jerking.
79* Reportedly, the tears shed during the singing of ''La Marseillaise'' (the French national anthem) during that one scene in ''Film/{{Casablanca}}'' were genuine. It is possible that most patriotic songs can become these, under the right circumstances.
80* The Intermezzo Sinfonico from the opera ''Cavalleria Rusticana'' by Pietro Mascagni. This was used very effectively in the ''Anime/RurouniKenshin'' anime, the opening credits to ''Film/RagingBull'' and the ending of ''Film/TheGodfatherPartIII''.
81* Jules Massenet's "Elegie", especially when played by [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G5pkCRA5DgA Joshua Bell]].
82* The 2nd Movement from Music/FelixMendelssohn's Violin Concerto in E minor has one of the most beautiful, heartbreaking melodies written for violin. So much so that Andrew Lloyd Webber used it for "[[Theatre/JesusChristSuperstar I Don't Know How To Love Him]]."
83** TearsOfJoy example: [[LohengrinAndMendelssohn Mendelssohn's "Wedding March"]] from his incidental music for ''Theatre/AMidsummerNightsDream'' is often used as the recessional music at weddings.[[note]]Though certainly, it may also wring tears of nostalgic sadness from widows and widowers remembering their own weddings and missing their deceased spouses.[[/note]]
84* Music/EnnioMorricone's ''Ballad of Sacco e Vanzetti'', as performed not just by Morricone himself, but also by Joan Baez and George Moustaki. Now also available by Lisbeth Scott over the end credits of ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolid4GunsOfThePatriots''. Yep, still a tearjerker.
85* [[Music/WolfgangAmadeusMozart Mozart]]:
86** The [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XMA6GpvJXMM slow movement]] of the Flute and Harp Concerto in C, K. 299, has a heartbreakingly beautiful and ardent main theme that is first played quietly by the strings, and then more overtly by the two soloists.
87** The [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j8e0fBlvEMQ Adagio]] to the Piano Concerto No. 23 in A K. 488. Pianist Hélène Grimaud considers this movement "an extremely deep and painful expression of longing, where you find the real Mozart."
88** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1cTN1x5BN6o "Ach, ich fühl’s",]] Pamina's lament from ''Theatre/TheMagicFlute'' when she thinks Tamino no longer loves her. It ends with the line "So wird Ruh' im Tode sein!" ("I shall find peace in death!")
89* The KingOnHisDeathbed scene [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X3scGj809zk from]] ''Theatre/BorisGodunov'' by Mussorgsky. The man is dying, and before he dies, he wants to impart some advice to his son.
90* One of the toppers - Music/PachelbelsCanon in D, when played right, or if the mood's right, ''will'' reduce people to tears. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CeI8ntXFIO0 Even if it's part of a commercial]].
91* Arvo Pärt's ''Spiegel im Spiegel''. It's been used in several movies (''Gerry'', ''Wit'', ''Heaven'' and ''Mother Night'', among others). It's only a few notes being repeated and varied upon, but it's just so beautiful, it's hard not to feel melancholy.
92** Not to mention "Cantus In Memoriam Benjamin Britten", or a number of other works by Pärt. Especially when you find out it was, according to the first victims dying slowly of AIDS, the piece of music that best described their plight. Soul-Gouging.
93* So much [[{{Opera}} Puccini]].
94** Two words: ''Madame Butterfly''. Two more: ''Theatre/LaBoheme''. Dammit, Cio-cio-san and Mimi, WHY?!
95** In ''Turandot'', Liù is arguably the most poignant character, along with Timur. Her songs "Signore Ascolta" and "Tu Che Di Gel Sei Cinta" are even more heartrending when she ultimately kills herself to protect a "hero" who doesn't deserve her.
96** The showstopper tune "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a_SbJFnKx_8 Vissi d'arte]]" from ''Tosca'', likewise. The anguish is unmistakable even if you don't know a lick of Italian.
97%%** Not to mention "Nessun dorma", or "Chrysanthemums".
98* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Qgg1IZWMdw "When I Am Laid in Earth"]] from Purcell's ''Theatre/DidoAndAeneas'' is quite a downer. While singing before committing suicide is common in opera, Dido's swan song is much more melancholy than any Wagnerian heroine's... and, unlike most opera songs, it's in English.
99* Rachmaninoff's [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dE6vin5GPWA Prelude in B minor, Op.32 No.10]]. ''Soul-crushing''.[[note]] In complete recordings of the preludes, the fact that it is followed by the bouncy [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VKzUSSXdSsU Prelude in B major, Op.32 No.11]] provides a rather sharp case of MoodWhiplash.[[/note]] Not that the rest of Rach's music is uplifting... the ''moderato'' from Piano Concerto No.2 and the ''Intermezzo'' from Piano Concerto No.3 are just as heart-rending.
100** Niot to even mention his famous Prelude in C# Minor, ''The Bells of Moscow''.
101* Maurice Ravel's ''Pavane pour une infante defunte'' (Pavane for a Dead Princess). Ironically, this isn't meant to be a tear-jerker at all; its status as one is based on a misunderstanding of the title. It was meant not as an elegy for a deceased princess, but rather to evoke a dance that would have been danced by a princess from an earlier age, while she was alive ([[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hVBlFUb0g60 the pavane]] being a popular dance among nobility during the Renaissance). It was supposed to sound nostalgic, not like a funeral hymn, and evoke a very young princess -- "[[https://painting-planet.com/infanta-maria-margarita-daughter-of-king-philip-iv-king-of-spain-by-diego-velazquez/ such a little princess]] [[http://employees.oneonta.edu/farberas/arth/arth200/velazquez_lasmeninas.html as painted]] by Velázquez" -- at her first formal party; essentially, a "Pavane for a Princess of a Past Age". Ravel himself admitted that he only used the words "infante defunte" because he liked the {{rhym|esOnADime}}ing. He also intended the piece to be played extremely slowly – more slowly than almost any modern interpretation, according to his biographer Benjamin Ivry.
102* Requiems in general (after all, Masses for the dead are not going to be cheerful affairs), particularly Brahms's ''German Requiem'' (especially the first and second movements) and Mozart's (Lacrimosa, whether it's accompanied by its use in ''Film/{{Amadeus}}'' or not).
103** Also Fauré's, particularly the Pie Jesu.
104** Benjamin Britten's ''War Requiem'' is absolutely shattering. It's the traditional Requiem mass interspersed with settings of Wilfred Owen's war poetry (which is TearJerker all by itself). The ending, which features a mournful, eerie setting of Owen's Strange Meeting, segues into a quiet, gentle finale, with the last line of the poem ("Let us sleep now..." sung over the boy choir and the main choir singing "In paradisum" (Into Paradise lead them) and then Requiescat in Pace, Amen. Heartbreakingly beautiful, at the end of a tumultuous, dark, stormy work.
105* You're lying if you don't get a lump in your throat just ''listening'' to Max Richter's [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rVN1B-tUpgs "On The Nature of Daylight"]]. Context is unnecessary. It's just a rip-your-heart-out piece, through and through.
106* "God Save the Tsar!", the former Russian national anthem, is a pretty melancholy-sounding piece already, but considering all that has happened since, it becomes [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pxCcEp4aAjs heartbreaking]].
107** While we're on the Russians, the Soviet anthem is absolutely horrifying when you think of the millions of soldiers inspired to march to their deaths, the millions of civilians who lost their lives, and the war crimes committed by the [=USSR=] that were denied for decades (The Katyn massacre, the mass assaults and murders of German citizens in Eastern Germany in the weeks preceding the end of World War II, submarine attacks on Japanese civilians fleeing Sakhalin, and the downing of Korean Airlines Flight 007, to name three) and then read the bright and cheery lyrics.
108** "The Cranes," a song based on the legend that soldiers who die on the battlefield turn into white cranes.
109* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mvh4zEKG2zs "The Swan"]] from Saint-Saëns' "Carnival of the Animals" can make one shed tears from the sheer beauty of the cello's solo.
110* Music/ErikSatie's Gymnopedie No.1 is a very beautiful piece with a very nostalgic and somewhat sad atmosphere, reminiscent of the passage of seasons. Just...[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Xe2Rft62Kg listen...]]
111* Schubert's [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NrqIEwQhRMo "Litanei auf das Fest Allerseelen"]] -- especially if you know what the words mean.
112** More than that, Schubert's ''Winterreise'' is one of the most depressing pieces of music ever written, especially if you know the words. It may rank only behind Górecki's Third Symphony in terms of sheer, devastating effect. In the final song of ''Winterreise'', "Der Leiermann", the singer describes an old organ-grinder, wandering through the world alone playing music while holding an empty begging-bowl and being shunned by the people around him. Still he keeps on playing. The singer wonders if he is meant to go with the organ-grinder and if the organ-grinder will ever play one of his songs. The kicker? This is the very last song Schubert ever composed, and he finished revising the proofs on his deathbed. This is what was going through Schubert's mind about his own music when he died.
113** His Fantasie in F minor, D.940 for four hands shows that music doesn't need lyrics to be packed full of emotion.
114** Not to mention his last three piano sonatas. Actually, almost everything in Schubert's late works qualifies for this -- even the ones that sound happy the first time you hear them.
115* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uSizRAWZJhI Träumerei]] from Music/RobertSchumann's Scenes From Childhood. It's impossible to listen to without thinking of lost opportunities and past mistakes.
116* Shostakovich wrote much tear-jerking music, but special mention should go to his String Quartet No.15 in E-flat minor - six movements, played without break, all in minor keys and all marked ''Adagio'' or, in one case, ''Adagio molto''. A very depressing work, not least because Shostakovich wrote it while his health was failing, at a time when he knew death was not far off.
117** Several of his 24 Preludes and Fugues, Op.87 also fall under this category; perhaps most notable are those in B-flat minor, F minor, C minor, and G minor. Even though the first three all have fugues which end on extended major resolutions (even the preludes in F minor and C minor resolve into major, the only ones in the set to do so), the bleakness of what has come before simply makes the major resolutions more poignant, particularly in the B-flat minor fugue (the slowest of the four).
118* The Sibelius violin concerto. Ida Haendel played it with the Montreal Symphony, and tears were running down her face. The composer himself said that it was his favourite rendition.
119** His Romance, Op. 24, No. 9 can bring one to tears purely for the beauty of the melody, never mind emotions.
120** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FXS2DabqBI8 "The Swan of Tuonela".]]
121** One word: ''Finlandia''.
122* Friedrich Silcher's [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B1cKNcf1mpk arrangement]] of Ludwig Uhland's 1825 poem "Der gute Kamerad" ("The Good Comrade") is one of the saddest laments around. Notably, it has been played at the funerals of Germany's soldiers pretty much continuously since it's composition, remaining a constant in Germany's armies through the Imperial period, the Weimar Republic, the Third Reich, the DDR, and the modern Federal Republic. It is also played in the Austrian armed forces and fire brigades, the Chilean Army, the Swiss Armed Forces and the French Foreign Legion. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Usbp9FEXJWM A version without words.]]
123%%* "Vltava" ("The Moldau") from Bedřich Smetana's ''Má vlast'' qualifies.
124* The final trio from ''[[{{Opera}} Der Rosenkavalier]]'' by Richard Strauss. It was performed at the composer's funeral, and the sopranos couldn't make it through without stopping to cry.
125** On the topic of Strauss, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ICR5uVAx5yg "Allerseelen"]] is absolutely heart-wrenching... especially after translating the text.
126** Continuing the Straussian theme: [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qqXOHIjXX2E "Metamorphosen"]]. A gut-wrenching 30 minute-long elegy for the destruction of German culture during the Second World War.
127* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mta3-sGMi5Q The Fire Bird Suite, Finale]] by Stravinsky is [[TearJerker Tear-Jerking]] SugarWiki/AwesomeMusic. The first part tugs at the heartstrings, but once the 7/4 meter kicks in, even the normally stone-hearted will be sobbing.
128* Music/PyotrIlyichTchaikovsky's Symphony No.5 in E minor, second movement, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-TtQRWwW_Ww the French Horn solo.]]
129** Also the Piano Trio in A minor, which Tchaikovsky wrote after the death of his friend Nikolai Rubinstein. The solemn first movement is followed by a theme and eleven variations covering a broad spectrum of emotions, each variation depicting a memory of Rubinstein. After a brief pause, the A major finale picks up the theme from the variations in a very bright, upbeat style - only for things to suddenly turn ''very'' dark about seven minutes in, with the key reverting back to A minor as the musicians return to the theme from the first movement, the music becoming ever more heart-wrenching until finally it ends with a quiet funeral march.
130** And the Marche Slave, Serenade Melancolique, the finale of the ''Pathetique'' Symphony in B minor... there are plenty of Tchaikovsky pieces which qualify as Tear Jerkers.
131* Frank Ticheli's [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YIIKdBYfmlo "An American Elegy"]], written in honor of the Columbine victims and their survivors.
132* Ralph Vaughan Williams's "Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis", considering the [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lD5TG8z3-SM hymn]] it was based on. Used to sublime effect in ''Film/MasterAndCommander''.
133%%** And whilst on the subject of RVW, try "The Lark Ascending".
134%%* "Va pensiero", from Verdi's opera ''Nabucco''.
135%%* Music/RichardWagner's sublime "Träume."
136* Listen to [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0xn_Qo_WXMg this.]] It is "Sleep," composed by Eric Whitacre, and performed by Polyphony under the direction of Stephen Layton. Try not to cry. Tell us how you did.
137** Kicked up a notch when you hear the piece [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YDH5R_BgheI as it was originally written]]: an adaptation of Creator/RobertFrost's "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening".
138** Try his [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OIpQoY5nLnQ "When David Heard"]] on for size. There are surely few, if any, other songs that capture human mourning so well.
139* Karl Jenkins's [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eGbHnJCDMyE Benedictus]] from his mass ''The Armed Man.'' The entire mass has a rather depressing atmosphere, but this is the penultimate and (arguably) most iconic movement. The Benedictus contains a solo cello part that is notated unusually in treble clef (cello normal reads bass or tenor). The cello is designed to be a middle to low range instrument, but its high register produces a forlorn sound that no other instrument is capable of. The [[EtherealChoir choir]] eventually enters with the Latin text, matching the cellist's melody. Although the solo is relatively short and simplistic, the movement represents the toll that years of war and violence take on the human mind; all of the pain and suffering comes crashing down at once.
140** The solo goes all the way up to a high A (also the highest note in the entire mass). This note is so high that the cellist only has about ''an inch'' of fingerboard left.
141** Some performances even go so far as to place the cellist further away from the rest of the section or [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IfRIHt1kYDE up in a balcony]]. This gives the cello a more distant, angelic sound.
142** Jenkins later said in an [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lZFtVY5Rvbo interview with Classic FM]] that he never expected the Benedictus to cause so much anguish.
143* Jenkins' ''Cantata Memoria'' is also an incredibly depressing work. It is a somber elegy for the victims of the 1966 Aberfan Disaster. 144 people, including ''116 children,'' were killed when a pile of refuse from coal mining flooded the small village of Aberfan following a heavy rainstorm. In the cantata, we hear the destruction of Aberfan, the Welsh folk song Myfanwy, a funeral march where the choir ''sings the names of the victims,'' the choir calling out the National Coal Board for failing to prevent the tragedy, a somber lament with a high, screeching violin solo and finally remembering and honoring the fallen children.
144* Michael Daugherty's {{cantata}} ''Letters from Lincoln'' contains a movement entitled "Letter to Mrs. Bixby." As the name suggests it is a setting of Lincoln's famous Bixby letter (with some extraneous text omitted). The short letter was addressed to a woman named Lydia Parker Bixby, who lost ''five sons'' during the Civil War. The letter is well-known for its consoling, yet empathetic message and there's something particularly charming about hearing the letter set to music.
145* Michel Colombier's ''Emmanuel'', written as a tribute to the composer's late son of the same name, who died in infancy. It's best known for its usage in [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VLaPLw9DRrQ a tremendously moving sign-off bumper]] for French TV channel Antenne 2 (now France 2), animated by Jean-Michel Folon.

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