与鱼有缘 发表于 2006-10-29 14:38:07

忽然想起以前那首"黑色星期五"

记得当时说,不知道是真是假,有很多老外听后自杀了.(仍然怀疑中……),刚才找MP3时无意看见了这首,就听了下,感觉越听越腻……

鬼眼の狂 发表于 2006-10-29 14:39:29

他们其实就是觉得越听越腻 没意思就自杀的~

sunniex 发表于 2006-10-29 14:40:22

貌似“黑色星期五”是病毒的名字,黑色星期天(gloomy sunday)才是歌曲名。
PS:现在流传下来的都是伪黑色星期天,真的早就被销毁了。

与鱼有缘 发表于 2006-10-29 14:41:19

恩,感觉也是。 这种歌不可能不被封锁。

学了7年的菜鸟 发表于 2006-10-29 14:43:45

怪不得我越听越无聊   原来是假的


另外楼主火星了 这里好多人都听过每一个死的```````



话说回来 谁没来这里了   ??    不会真挂了吧```

注射天使lili 发表于 2006-10-29 14:58:58

那东西是一电影(梦断魂桥)的插曲。。。。。

41154321 发表于 2006-10-29 15:17:11

原帖由 sunniex 于 2006-10-29 14:40 发表
现在流传下来的都是伪黑色星期天,真的早就被销毁了。

真的?那岂不是听不到了.

kodak 发表于 2006-10-29 16:04:22

想起有人无聊听了假的后要去死...事后比较囧..

ktr58293 发表于 2006-10-29 16:31:23

真的黑色星期五那歌,很多外国人听后自杀了这情况确实是真的,
个人觉得这没什么可怀疑的,而且这也不算太离奇的事吧,毕竟说几位数的人听完一首歌后自杀这种事不可能无风就起浪。

现在网上流传下来的伪作就不必说了。
至于真作,以前在别处听几个听过该曲真作而未自杀的网友说,此歌前段还没什么,后半段则很难听,曲调压抑郁闷,让人心头很不舒服。

个人认为不太适合经历过生活苦难,负担太大的人群听…
安全起见有些危险不祥的东西人还是不要轻易涉足的好…。

&黑百合& 发表于 2006-10-29 20:47:21

这首歌原版确实很有杀伤力
不过这和当时西方社会北京有关,那时候正是大萧条时期.人们都很悲观~
至于现在的人听了害怕,我觉得完全是被这歌的背景所吓到了,在不知情的情况下听了,一般没感觉~中央台新闻频道晚上那栏目,名字忘记了
曾经有报道过这首歌~~
流传下来的歌改了很多,可以说是面目全非N个版本~沙拉布莱曼就有唱过这首歌~
而在当时,据说很多国家的电台都禁播这首歌.

别逼我放大招 发表于 2006-10-29 21:15:14

伸手求原版。

&黑百合& 发表于 2006-10-29 21:16:52

楼上的难道是有什么想不开?

qisiwole 发表于 2006-10-29 21:24:12

真正的杀人歌其实是那首……

WILLIAM BALDWIN 发表于 2006-11-1 23:54:28

真正的原版的杀伤力远比歌曲的恐怖 吓人   估计LZ这辈子没机会能听到因为听说这曲子真正的原版的乐谱早已被所某XX大学的一个保险柜里   这的确是个不该出现在这世界上的东西

AkiraMei 发表于 2006-11-2 15:56:12

美丽的天使在远方召唤你
勇敢的少年啊...

長門王道 发表于 2006-11-2 16:42:25

黑色星期天吗....
那个....
怎样的呢........

虫虫幻想 发表于 2006-11-2 18:16:01

最后的完整版现在保存在美国俄亥俄洲的一所音乐大学的保险柜里锁着,绝对的真正原版

民间流传得只有第5小部分,据说那个准备手抄这支曲子的人差点被判了终生监禁

光之魔导战士 发表于 2006-11-2 18:21:46

以前一个朋友介绍我听的 什么也没说

我听了就觉得只是一首比较抑郁的歌 没什么其他的感觉

后来无意上网一看才发现有那么一段历史 越看心里越毛

其实很多东西都是自己吓自己的 你去拿歌给那些不知道它有“杀人”之名的人听 100个听全都活着

老外心理素质不好饿。。。

虫虫幻想 发表于 2006-11-2 18:26:06

网络上的女声太甜美了,所以没什么感觉,听过匈牙利原版的就知道什么是绝望了

萧楚儿 发表于 2006-11-2 18:48:08

"Gloomy Sunday" (from Hungarian "Szomorú Vasárnap", IPA: ['sɒmɒɾuː 'vɐʃaɾnɐp]) is a song written by the Hungarian self-taught pianist and composer Rezső Seress in 1933. According to urban legend, it inspired hundreds of suicides. According to record publicists when the song was first marketed in America, it became known as the "Hungarian suicide song". There is NO substantiation for such claims of suicides, nor is it even documented where any such allegations appear in legitimate press coverage or other publications of the time. This urban legend appears to have been originally generated as a marketing gimmick by song pluggers, and, in more recent years the legend has been greatly furthered by internet exposure. However, Rezso Seress did jump to his death from a Budapest building in 1968.

The codifying of the urban legend appears in an article attributed to "D.P. MacDonald" and titled "Overture to Death", the text of which has been reproduced and disseminated countless times online. According to the website of Phespirit: "This article was stolen without permission from the 'JUSTIN AND ANJI' web site; it was originally published to augment their now defunct 'Gloomy Sunday Radio Show'. In the introduction they say:

This message was forwarded to us by a visitor to our web site. There is some good historical information on the song intermixed with some information of more dubious repute. The accounts begin to take on the feel of a satiric e-mail chain letter after a while, but then, sometimes truth is indeed stranger than fiction. The story does read a little bit like the script of a segment from Strange Universe! So take this with a grain of salt ..... The text was quoted from the Cincinatti (sic) Journal of Ceremonial Magick, vol I, no I, printed in 1976."
Numerous versions of the song have been recorded and released unaccompanied by suicides. Phil Elwood, writing in JazzWest.com, chronicles "Gloomy Sunday" in American recording history. Elwood, a long-time jazz critic, cites the following words of Michael Brooks, taken from Brooks' program notes accompanying the 10-CD set, "Lady Day" - the Complete Billie Holiday on Columbia, 1933-1944:

"‘Gloomy Sunday’ reached America in 1936 and, thanks to a brilliant publicity campaign, became known as ‘The Hungarian Suicide Song’. Supposedly after hearing it, distraught lovers were hypnotized into heading straight out of the nearest open window, in much the same fashion as investors after October, 1929; both stories are largely urban myths."

[ 本帖最后由 萧楚儿 于 2006-11-2 18:51 编辑 ]
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