The Hungarian Suicide Song: Gloomy Sunday

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The Hungarian Suicide Song, a.k.a. Gloomy Sunday, is notorious for the sudden cause of suicide amongst many people who have listened to the song. No one really knows why this song has such an impact on a person to drive them to thoughts of suicide. Is it the chilling music? The echoing vocals? The haunting lyrics? Maybe it is the combination of all three that gives the song such power.
There have been many cases that this song is linked to suicides all around the world. A teenage girl in Vienna had drowned herself, clutching the piece of sheet music from Gloomy Sunday. A shopkeeper in Budapest killed himself and left behind a note with the lyrics written on it. A woman in London overdosed on drugs, having Gloomy Sunday playing on repeat on …show more content…

One day, his girlfriend left him and he decided to compose Gloomy Sunday for her, to get some use out of his depression he felt after her leaving. They got back together for a short while, until his girlfriend killed herself by jumping out of a window. Seress tried to commit suicide in the same fashion as his girlfriend later into his life, but was unsuccessful. He succeeded in killing himself by intentionally choking himself with a wire while in a hospital bed, recovering from injuries from his first suicide attempt. It is alarming that the composer of this “suicide song” killed himself, as well as the girlfriend who the song was intended for, but is it really linked to over 100 …show more content…

How can we identify a sad song with a happy song just by the instrumental music? It is all in cultural conditioning: “When we listen to tunes, we rely heavily on our memory for the body of music we 've heard all our life. Constantly touching base with our musical memory back catalogue helps to generate expectations of what might come next in a tune, which is an important source of enjoyment in musical listening” (NME Blog). If we hear a flat note as one of the first few notes in a song, we can usually depict it as a sadder, more mellow song. If we hear a sharp note as one of the first few notes, we usually depict it as happier, more peppy song. It mostly has to relate to what we were taught was sad and what we were taught to be

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