Melancholy Mixtape / January 2025
Six moments of classical music that impart warmth and comfort amid winter's bitter chill.
Welcome to our latest Melancholy Mixtape, a series here at Shades of Blue that weaves together moments of melancholy classical music to help you cultivate calm, connection, and healing throughout the month. (If you're new around here, head over here to check out previous installments.)
Every January, as a new year begins to unspool its days around us, I'm reminded of how much I love the contrasts winter offers. Although the season is synonymous with frigid temperatures and cavernous nights, it's also a time to savor the comforting warmth of a blanket and witness the sun's ethereal dance of reflection across snow and ice, where gentle midwinter rays take on a blinding radiance.
So for this month's Melancholy Mixtape, I've assembled six musical moments that play upon those juxtapositions, allowing us the opportunity to slow down and stoke our hearts' fires amid winter's bitter chill.
Regardless of how you consume this Melancholy Mixtape — getting to know each work one by one here on Substack, or listening to them all at once on YouTube, Spotify, or Idagio — I hope you enjoy these selections.
Johann Sebastian Bach / Cello Suite No. 1, IV. Sarabande
Yo-Yo Ma, cello
Bach transforms the slow and stately French dance known as the sarabande into an expression of improvisatory prayer — each broken chord voiced across the cello's strings evokes a tender yearning, every trill a quiver of quiet ecstasy.
(And for a visual dose of Vitamin D, be sure to also check out Ma playing this work in the Great Smoky Mountains.)
Edward Elgar / Sea Pictures, I. Sea Slumber Song
Janet Baker, mezzo-soprano London Symphony Orchestra John Barbirolli, conductor (Follow along with the English poem by Roden Noel.)
Under moonlit skies, the boundless sea beckons the world to sleep with her tranquil nocturne, sung over a bed of heaving waves:
Sea-sound, like violins, To slumber woos and wins, I murmur my soft slumber-song, Leave woes, and wails, and sins. Ocean's shadowy might Breathes good night, Good night …
Claude Debussy / Children's Corner, IV. The Snow Is Dancing (La neige danse)
Isata Kanneh-Mason, piano
In his mesmerizing sonic snowglobe, Debussy traces the balletic, windswept adventure of shimmering snowflakes as they journey from sky to earth.
Erich Wolfgang Korngold / Violin Concerto, II. Romanze
Baiba Skride, violin Gothenburg Symphony Santtu-Matias Rouvali, conductor
A sweet sentimentality pervades the love song at the heart of Korngold's Violin Concerto, where the soloist's glistening voice caresses the ear with a tale of longing and hope.
Ned Rorem / Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening
Susan Graham, mezzo-soprano Malcolm Martineau, piano (Follow along with the English poem by Robert Frost.)
Traveling through the darkest of nights, surrounded by icy lakes and downy flakes, the speaker of Robert Frost's immortal poem can't help being taken aback by the beauty of the wintry landscape. But this moment of wondrous awe must, of course, be fleeting, since ...
The woods are lovely, dark and deep, But I have promises to keep, And miles to go before I sleep, And miles to go before I sleep.
Jean-Philippe Rameau / Les Boréades, Act IV, "Entrance of the Muses, Zephyrs, Seasons, Hours, and Arts"
MusicAeterna Teodor Currentzis, conductor
With spacious sonorities and a cascading waterfall of melody, it's impossible to conceive how this music is more than 350 years old — an interlude from Rameau's final opera, Les Boréades, in which a caravan of mythical creatures assemble to reflect on the power of art and the certainty of time's passing.
Want to share your experience with one of the works in this month's mixtape? I'd love to hear about it! Leave a comment below or reply to this email. (And if you enjoyed your time here today, would you ever so kindly tap that little heart below? 👇🏼)
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I adore the Korngold. I read somewhere that if it sounds to you like film soundtracks, it's because every composer of film soundtracks is just trying to reproduce Korngold
I’m so bewildered that I never knew about Korngold (and, gasp, Kings Row!!)… so you sent me into a deep rabbit hole there! What a pivotal influence!! I also really loved Sea Pictures… “isles in elfin light”! Ahhh and I needed that vitamin D from Yo-Yo Ma in the dappled light of the Smokys!