AnswerMug
  • Sign In
  • Sign Up
  • Help

Sign In

 
 
 
 
Connect with Facebook
 
Sign-in with Twitter

Create Account

You will use your email address to login and you will need to click on a link in an email before your account can be activated.

Passwords must be at least 6 characters in length.

Enter your password again for confirmation.

 
 
Menu
  • Questions
  • Polls
  • Blogs
  • Groups

Q&A Search

 
 
 

Trending Ten

  • When is a war not horrific?
    2
  • Why do some best laid plan embarrassments take place I was ask for a pen on the phone to write but no dice and I took them to work to please
    2
  • I swear to God if Trump keeps being president, things will become a 1984 Orwell hell full of anti-progressive killers of well-being on us!?
    1
  • If I see everything with stark green and blurry black figures in my real life what an I going through?
    5
  • When is a job loss not a job loss?
    6
  • Will Joe 6-pack get an invite to Trump’s new Ballroom?
    4
  • Are you old enough to remember the insane-scientist-looking Harvard Square freaks!?
    4
  • Did you know connection correction takes two little psychological walls to fix?
    1
  • When was the last time that someone threw you a peace sign.
    2
  • Deja Vu' living g loser morbidity pattern of though!
    6

Active Now

Shuhak

Search Results

  • Are you brave enough to listen to this song?

    'Gloomy Sunday' was written in 1933 by two Hungarians: Rezso Seress (music) and Laszlo Javor (lyrics). The song supposedly drew little (adverse) attention until 1936, when it began...  more'Gloomy Sunday' was written in 1933 by two Hungarians: Rezso Seress (music) and Laszlo Javor (lyrics). The song supposedly drew little (adverse) attention until 1936, when it began to be connected with a rash of suicides in Hungary and was allegedly banned there. American musicians and singers soon jumped at the chance to record instrumental and translated versions of the “Hungarian suicide song,” and by the end of 1936 several recordings were available to American audiences. Probably the best discussion of the song and its impact comes is Steven Stacks paper "Gloomy Sunday: did the 'Hungarian suicide song' really create a suicide epidemic?," which appeared in Omega: The Journal of Death and Dying in 2008.I WARN YOU - LISTEN AT YOUR OWN RISK!!!!  less
    Last post by HarryDemon - March 8, 2017
    848 views 0 likes
    6

Image of a burning sage smudge stick

 

Copyright ©2025  -  Privacy  -  Terms of Service  -  FAQs  -  Photo Guidelines  -  Contact Admin  -  RSS
 
Answerbag Refugees - Experience Project Refugees - About answerMug Adult - Join answerMug Adult (Muggers Only)
Share