Feeling angry? Channel your frustration through these 7 furious pieces of music

Feeling angry? Channel your frustration through these 7 furious pieces of music

Conductor Domingo Hindoyan nominates the best musical depictions of anger and frustration

Gevorg Hakobyan as Scarpia and Giselle Allen as Tosca at Sydney Opera House, 2024 © Getty

Published: February 25, 2025 at 9:30 am

Read on to discover these 7 angry pieces of music....

Angry pieces... Verdi Rigoletto – ‘Cortigiani, vil razza dannata’

This aria arrives as Gilda has just been kidnapped by the Duke’s courtiers and Rigoletto turns against the Duke. Until this point, he has felt plenty of bitterness, but has held it inside – only revealing it indirectly through jokes. But this is the first time that he lets it all out, and the way that Verdi handles this outpouring is fantastic, with a real sense of aggression in the voice, and this beautiful moto perpetuo in the strings. You can feel the emotion bursting from Rigoletto and he sweeps the audience up in that emotion with him.

Quinn Kelsey sings Rigoletto’s Act II aria 'Cortigiani, vil razza dannata' at Metropolitan Opera New York

Bruckner Symphony No. 9 – Scherzo

This is not the folksy Austrian scherzo that we might expect from Bruckner. This is something really ferocious, with an anger that comes from deep inside the composer. Bruckner was very religious, and I see this music as part of a conversation with God. But whereas other movements in the symphony are more celestial, this one seems to deal with the anguish of being alive; the frustration of making mistakes here on earth, and of thinking, ‘What could I have done differently?’ Which is unsurprising, coming as it does from a musician who was totally insecure.

Karajan conducts the Scherzo from Bruckner's Symphony No. 9 in 1978

Angry pieces... Beethoven Violin Sonata No. 9, ‘Kreutzer’

It’s not surprising that Tolstoy took the ‘Kreutzer’ Sonata as a starting point for his famous novella about love, death and anger. There is so much rage in this piece of music: the moto perpetuo, the harsh chords, the violent pizzicati, the sudden contrasts, the way that Beethoven uses the half tone as a kind of dissonance. When I was young and played this on the violin, I took great pleasure in interpreting its anger. At the time, I hadn’t read the Tolstoy story. Now that I have, I think I’d play it even better.

Augustin Hadelich and Orion Weiss perform the third movement from Beethoven's 'Kreutzer' Sonata

Mahler Symphony No. 6

Often viewed as a fight against death, this is probably the most dramatic and tragic symphony ever. It’s full of sobbing melodies and the last movement is particularly famous because of its three hammer blows, which respectively represent Mahler’s problems at the Vienna Opera, his issues with Alma Mahler and the heart condition that would eventually kill him. For superstitious reasons, the third hammer stroke sometimes isn’t performed. When I conducted the piece, however, I did include it. And I’m still here.

Simon Rattle conducts the Berlin Philharmonic in Mahler's Sixth Symphony

Angry pieces... Schubert String Quartet No. 14, ‘Death and The Maiden’

Sometimes, even when we feel angry, we remain diplomatic, while on the inside we are burning. And that is exactly the kind of anger we find in the second movement of this string quartet. It describes a dialogue in which a maiden begs the figure of Death to pass her by. She is fighting against Death, but not with a hammer, or with forceful rhythms. Instead, she does it through lyrical melodies. It’s a passive kind of anger, and it’s also autobiographical given that, when Schubert wrote this piece, he already had the syphilis that would kill him. 

The Alban Berg Quartet perform Schubert's 'Death and the Maiden'

Berlioz Symphonie Fantastique – ‘Dream of a Witches’ Sabbath’

Berlioz wrote his Symphonie fantastique to express the frustration of unrequited love: the kind of frustration that drives you to take opium, have hallucinations and hate the world. The result is full of extreme effects, not least the glissando in the strings, the use of bells, the demonic-sounding clarinet and, of course, this Dies Irae motif at the climax. It’s an extravagant expression of anger and totally revolutionary for its time, written in 1830 – just two years after Schubert died.

The Fifth Movement of Berlioz's Symphonie fantastique conducted by Mariss Jansons

Angry pieces... Puccini Tosca – ‘Vissi d’arte’ 

This moment – just before Puccini's Tosca kills Scarpia – represents another type of anger: ‘Why me? I’ve been so good in life’. It’s a beautiful, lyrical piece, full of pathos. But a minute later, she kills with her own hands. It’s like those moments when you are alone at home and reflect on all the bad things that have happened to you, and the next day you emerge out of yourself and want to kill someone. But, of course, compared to Tosca, we are lucky.

Angela Gheorghiu, as Floria Tosca, performs the aria 'Vissi d'arte'

Who is Domingo Hindoyan?

Domingo Hindoyan began his music training as a violinist and member of the Venezuelan musical education programme El Sistema, before studying conducting at the Haute école de musique de Genève. He is now chief conductor of the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra and principal guest conductor of the Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra, and has worked with ensembles ranging from the Orchestre National de France to the Dresdner Philharmonie.

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