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I don't know if it counts as 'consoling', but for many years, when I was feeling depressed (& I don't mean just a bit fed up) I would play Stravinsky's 'Oedipus Rex'. It has some very invigorating music, & however bad I felt my problems were they weren't nearly as bad as Oedipus'.
Sorry to hear of your depression flossie - I count myself lucky to live in a time in when anti-depressants have become a lot more effective and less awful in terms of side-effects than when I first encountered them in the 70s.
My choice would be the final movement of Mahler symphony no 3 which I once described to a puzzled friend as 'Everything's Going To Be Alright'
I hope that things are getting better for you these days, flossie
I'm sure Flossie is happier now she has her gold back.
Three Little Birds by Bob Marley and the Wailers was very consoling when I was waiting for my 'O' level results, I seem to remember.
Many Americans of a certain age find the voice of Ronald Reagan consoling/reassuring: apparently, hearing him gave them a sense that life was going to get better.
The only time I've had to organise a funeral it was a humanist affair for an aged and much loved relative. As people were filing into the crematorium we had the slow movement from the Schubert String Quintet. After the eulogies and a reading we had the Sonnet and Epilogue from Britten Serenade for Tenor Horn and Strings (this had personal significance) and as people were getting ready to file out the 2nd movement of Schubert's 5th symphony, which seemed to give just the right degree of lift at the end of the proceedings.
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