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WHY DO WE LOVE SAD SONGS?
Are you a sucker for a sad song? "Greensleeves."
"Yesterday" by the Beatles. For some reason, we love a melancholy
tune. But why? In this hour of To the Best of Our Knowledge, we'll
explore our love of sad music. We'll look into the effects the minor third
has on our brains and we'll delve into the saddest music ever written:
Barber's Adagio for Strings.
SEGMENT 1:
Why do we love sad songs? It's true, we do, and it's
not just "Greensleeves" and "Yesterday." There's
a language of melancholy worth exploring. The saddest music of all to
many people is Samuel Barber's "Adagio for Strings." Thomas
Larson is the author of "The Saddest Music Ever Written: The
Story of Samuel Barber's Adagio for Strings" and he tells Anne
Strainchamps how it earns that name.
SEGMENT 2:
Sad songs are just part of the story. Anyone who has
suffered a broken heart knows the satisfaction of listening to Leonard
Cohen's "Hallelujah" or Paul McCartney singing "Yesterday."
According to psychologist Meagan Curtis, the inherent sadness
of the minor third is what we hear in music. She tells Steve Paulson
that a recent study at Tufts University's Music Cognition Lab suggests
it is also what we hear in speech.
SEGMENT 3:
There are sad songs in rock, and sad songs in jazz,
but the resting place for the saddest songs is clearly in country music.
There are so many we just didn't how to choose, so we put the question
to the foremost historian of country music in America, Bill Malone.
He tells Steve Paulson a thing or two about sad country music.
Also, no matter what genre you're writing for, adding a cello can increase
the melancholy. It's true now, and it was true a couple of centuries
ago when J.S. Bach was writing his suites for unaccompanied cello. Journalist
Eric Siblin had written about rock for years, but he tells Jim
Fleming about his discovery of Bach, and how he came to write "The
Cello Suites: J.S. Bach, Pablo Casals, and the Search for a Baroque
Masterpiece."
CD copies are available at 1-800-747-7444.
Ask for program number 10-12-12-B.
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Books &
CDs:
| Thomas Larson, The Saddest
Music Ever Written: The Story of Samuel Barbers Adagio for Strings
(Pegasus Books) |
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|
Eric Siblin, The Cello Suites: J.S. Bach,
Pablo Casals, and the Search for a Baroque Masterpiece (Atlantic
Monthly Press)
|
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Websites:
Music:
- Greensleeves by Pianissimmo on Dinner
Party Music: Relaxing Piano Classics for Your Dinner Party. Amazon Digital
Music.
- Samuel Barbers Adagio for Strings
by the St. Louis Orchestra, Leonard Slatkin Conductor. Telarc Records.
- Samuel Barbers Adagio for Strings
from the Motion Picture Platoon. MGM.
- Samuel Barbers Adagio for Strings
by the Emerson String Quartet on American Originals: Ives, Barber String
Quartets. Deutsche Grammaphon.
- Everybody Hurts by REM on Automatic for
the People. Warner Bros.
Bluesy by Louis Myers on Chicago Blues Harmonicas. Paula
Records.
- I Get Along Without You Very Well by
Chet Baker on Lets Get Lost. Novus.
- Pictures From Lifes Other Side by
Hank Williams on The Unreleased Recordings of Hank Williams.
Time Life.
- Will the Angels Have a Sweetheart? by
Bill Malone and Rod Moag on Remember Me: Bill Malone and Rod Moag Play
the Music of the Bailes Brothers. Hillbilly Dreams.
- Down From Dover by Dolly Parton on The
Rose and the Briar. Columbia Records.
- Easys Getting Harder Every Day
by Iris DeMent on My Life. Warner Bros.
- Im Sorry by Joe "Papoose" Fritz
on Jook Joint: Vol. 6. Amazon Digital Music.
- Prelude to J.S. Bachs Solo Cello Suite
Nr. 1 by Pablo Casals on Great Recordings of the Century: J.S.
Suites for Cello. EMI.
- Prelude to J.S. Bachs Solo Cello Suite
Nr. 2 by Pablo Casals on Great Recordings of the Century: J.S.
Suites for Cello. EMI.
- Prelude to J.S. Bachs Solo Cello Suite
Nr. 3 by Pablo Casals on Great Recordings of the Century: J.S.
Suites for Cello. EMI.
- Prelude to J.S. Bachs Solo Cello Suite
Nr. 4 by Pablo Casals on Great Recordings of the Century: J.S.
Suites for Cello. EMI.
- Prelude to J.S. Bachs Solo Cello Suite
Nr. 5 by Pablo Casals on Great Recordings of the Century: J.S.
Suites for Cello. EMI.
- Prelude to J.S. Bachs Solo Cello Suite
Nr. 6 by Pablo Casals on Great Recordings of the Century: J.S.
Suites for Cello. EMI.
- Perfect Day by Lou Reed on Transformer.
RCA.
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Questions and comments can be
addressed to: ttbook@wpr.org
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