There are a few famous funeral dirges. "Funeral March" by Chopin is the one commonly heard on Cartoons. A number of funeral marches are heard in Purcell's "Funeral Music for Queen Mary." Handel's "Dead March" is also used a lot at funerals. Thomas Attwood wrote a march titled "Dirge" for Admiral Nelson's funeral.
I hope one of these is the one you're looking for. You can hear samples of all of these at Amazon, CD Universe, etc.
Funeral Dirge for the Rotting Sun was created in 2003.
"What is a sentence with dirge in it" is a sentence with dirge in it. A dirge is solemn music intended to express mourning and grief, such as might be played at a funeral.
An elegy is a poem meant for a funeral, it is a sad poetry about the deceased and is usually saved for the viewing or funeral. A dirge is funeral music, the type of music that would be played during the funeral or while the casket is being carried to the burial site.
A dirge is a funeral hymn.
The music that they played at the part sounded more like a funeral dirge.
Its called a Dirge
A dirge is a song or a poem that mourns the death of a loved one. An example of a sentence using dirge is: At his mother's funeral he sang a dirge that he composed to express his grief at her death.
A Dirge. Or "Taps" played on the bugle or Trumpet.
The dirges played by the organist could be heard by the crowd on the sidewalk.
A dirge is a song or hymn of mourning composed or performed as a memorial to a dead person. 1. a funeral song or tune, or one expressing mourning in commemoration of the dead. 2. any composition resembling such a song or tune in character, as a poem of lament for the dead or solemn, mournful music: Tennyson's dirge for the Duke of Wellington. 3. a mournful sound resembling a dirge: The autumn wind sang the dirge of summer. 4. Ecclesiastical. the office of the dead, or the funeral service as sung.
A dirge was a lament for the dead, especially when it was part of a funeral. Nowadays the word is used to refer to mournful song, piece of music or poem, or one which just sounds dreadful and appears to go on or a very long time.
Funeral songs are called dirges. I suppose (If I am understanding the question properly) that it would be dirge-writing.