On Air is the second solo studio album by English rock musician Alan Parsons. The album's chief creative force was the Alan Parsons Project's long-time guitarist, Ian Bairnson. Its concept revolves around the history of airborne exploration.
Musically, this album is somewhat different from Try Anything Once and the Alan Parsons Project albums, opting for more of a soft rock sound and a more stable band line-up rather than the funky rhythms, symphonic flares, or rotating vocalists of the past.
Concept
The album follows the history of airborne exploration, from the mythological flight of Daedalus and Icarus to escape the labyrinth of the Minotaur in "Too Close to the Sun", through Leonardo da Vinci's search to design a flying machine, or ornithopter, in long-time Project drummer Stuart Elliott's "One Day To Fly", until finally mankind's aspirations for space exploration placed on the shoulders of a single astronaut in "So Far Away" and the subsequent superpower race to put a man on the moon in "Apollo", a track backed by John F. Kennedy's famous speech of 25 May 1961.
The song "Brother Up in Heaven" remembers Ian Bairnson's cousin Erik Mounsey who was killed in a friendly fireincident above Iraq in 1994.[2] "Fall Free" is inspired by skysurferRob Harris, who died in 1995. "So Far Away" also references the Challenger tragedy in 1986 in its last verse.
Release
On Air was issued as both a stereo CD and a 5.1 channeldts mix. Included with the music CD was a CD-ROM exploring the On Air theme.