ivocaliban
Explorer
wolf70 said:Maybe I will try Edvard Grieg's "Death of Ase" from Peer Gynt Suite (though I know three of them have performed it, because I was conducting).
Nice choice!
wolf70 said:Maybe I will try Edvard Grieg's "Death of Ase" from Peer Gynt Suite (though I know three of them have performed it, because I was conducting).
Cthulhu's Librarian said:I've always pictured elven funerals taking place in a sacred grove of trees, with the body washed and dressed in white silk robes, and buried in a hole in the ground in a fetal position. A sapling is then planted over top of the body, where it will be able to gain nourishment from the body as it decomposes, helping the tree to grow. The tree is then named after the elf, as "Glorfindal's Tree" (or whatever the elf's name was) and it becomes part of the sacred grove, and is believed to contain the spirit of the dead elf. If the tree dies, it is considered a sign that the spirit has not been absorbed into the tree, so the groves are carefully tended and watched by druids who devote their entire lives to making sure that the trees always receive nourishment and only the strongest saplings are used during funerals. The type of sapling used during a funeral depends on the elfs life choices-an oak for a mighty warrior, a white birch for a cleric, a maple for a wizard, a pine for a druid, etc.
wolf70 said:GREAT IDEA! I don't have that one, but am sure I have some other appropriate funerary music. This really appeals to me as a musician and music teacher. I like the use of music to enhance the game, but my players, most of whom are musicians or at least avid music listeners recognize much of it and associate it with the movie it is from, or a performance they heard or performed in instead of the game.
Hmmm... off to find some obscure funeral music. Maybe I will try Edvard Grieg's "Death of Ase" from Peer Gynt Suite (though I know three of them have performed it, because I was conducting).
DM

(Dungeons & Dragons)
Rulebook featuring "high magic" options, including a host of new spells.