depressing music
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And he wrote mostly symphonies, and K. doesn't listen to many symphonies while I do.
I know a symphony that's commonly taken (though the composer denied it) as an expression of thoughts at the prospect of nuclear war: that's a pretty damn depressing thing to face, and the music is absolutely harrowing. (Ralph Vaughan Williams's Sixth)
I also know a symphony that depicts the composer's near-fatal heart attack, and his feelings afterwards. Judging by the music, he was more dazed than anything else. (Carl Nielsen's Sixth)
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I also remember hearing about a wave of suicides following the first public performance of some piece of classical music, but I can't recall which one. If it wasn't the Pathétique, it was likely by somebody slavic.
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The story of Tchaikovsky's suicide is pretty well debunked.
A wave of suicides by morose young people followed the publication of Goethe's The Sorrows of Young Werther. The kind of societal panic we normally think of as a more recent phenomenon followed that. I can't think of an equivalent after the premiere of a work of music, though there's enough works of fiction depicting music that can kill its listeners (as well as at least two with killer jokes).