This article is about music from all genres with themes of outer space. For the contemplative music genre, see Space music.
Space-themed music is any music, from any genre or style, with lyrics or titles relating to outer space or spaceflight.
Songs or other musical forms influenced by the concept of outer space have appeared in music throughout history, both in instrumental and vocal pieces with lyrics. As early as Ancient Greece, Pythagoras believed in something called the "harmony of the spheres". He believed that since planets and the stars all moved in the universe according to mathematical equations that these mathematical equations could be translated into musical notes and thus produce a symphony.[1] This idea was explored further throughout Western history under the theories of Musica universalis.[citation needed] Some more recent and widely different examples are The Planets by Gustav Holst,[contradictory] and the song "Space Oddity" by David Bowie. Outer space also appears as a theme in "Space Age" retro pop music, such as Stereolab's Space-Age Bachelor Pad Music.
Music about outer space attracts enthusiastic listeners from all walks of life. Some have created web pages to share their interests. NASA, JPL, and the US government's Centennial of Flight Commission have webpages showcasing and discussing music about outer space.[2][3][4] One useful example of such a web-based list is by astronomer Andrew Fraknoi; see under External Links, below, "A Catalog of Music Inspired by Serious Astronomy."
Music about outer space
In 1777, Joseph Haydn's opera "Il mondo della luna"("The world on the moon") premiered.
Author and classical music critic David Hurwitz describes Joseph Haydn's choral and chamber orchestra piece, The Creation, composed in 1798, as space music, both in the sense of the sound of the music, ("a genuine piece of 'space music' featuring softly pulsating high violins and winds above low cellos and basses, with nothing at all in the middle ... The space music gradually drifts towards a return to the movement's opening gesture ... "); and in the manner of its composition, relating that Haydn conceived The Creation after discussing music and astronomy with William Herschel, oboist and astronomer (discoverer of the planet Uranus).[5]
1875 saw the premiere of the opera~féerie spectacle "Le voyage dans la Lune"("A trip to the moon") by Jacques Offenbach.
The Tornados reached the top of the charts in both the US and the UK with their instrumental "Telstar" in December 1962.
In 1966 Barry Gray wrote several space music pieces for the science-fiction film Thunderbirds Are Go.
In 1969, David Bowie released the single "Space Oddity". The single peaked at 15 on the US charts, becoming Bowie's first success. The song describes the story of a fictional astronaut known as "Major Tom" whose spaceship has an electrical fault. Major Tom is mentioned or referenced in several of Bowie's songs including, "Ashes to Ashes", "Hallo Spaceboy" and "Blackstar".
Again in 1972, Hawkwind recorded and released the song "Space is Deep" and then performed their Space Ritual, which was an opera about a crew of astronauts dreaming in hibernation.
Also in 1972 Tangerine Dream released their double album Zeit, featuring space-related track titles such as "Birth of Liquid Plejades" and "Nebulous Dawn", as well as cover art depicting a solar eclipse. It is considered one of the first (possibly the first) dark ambient albums.
Eduard Artemyev has made space-themed music, for example for the space film Solaris (1972), although his best known and successfully covered space-themed sounding piece might be the theme song for non-space film Siberiade (1979).
In 1973, Montrose released "Space Station #5" as a single from their self-titled debut album. The song was covered by Iron Maiden in 1992. For Montrose's followup album in 1974, Paper Money, they recorded "Spaceage Sacrifice" and the instrumental "Starliner". Montrose's first lead singer, Sammy Hagar, went on to record the title track of his album Marching to Mars, which was released in 1997.
In 1975, the song "'39" was released on the album A Night at the Opera by Queen. The song relates the voyage of 20 volunteers to another star system. While the volunteers perceive the trip as being only a year, 100 years pass on Earth as a consequence of time dilation as described by Einstein's theory of special relativity, and, consequently, return to find their loved ones either no longer alive or of advanced age.[7] The song was written and sung by Brian May, who went on to complete his PhD in astrophysics in 2008,[8] with backing vocals sung by Freddie Mercury and Roger Taylor. In 1983, Brian May's solo Star Fleet Project featured Eddie Van Halen. The song "Star Fleet" was a cover version of the ending theme song from the children's sci-fi television series Star Fleet.
The Japanese musician Isao Tomita has produced many albums with space-based themes, such as The Planets (1976), his version of Holst's suite; Kosmos (1978); Bermuda Triangle (1979); Dawn Chorus (Canon of the Three Stars) (1984); Space Walk – Impressions Of An Astronaut (compilation, 1984); Mind of the Universe – Live at Linz (1985); Back to the Earth – Live in New York (1988); and Nasca Fantasy (supporting Kodo, 1994).
Jean-Michel Jarre's 1986 album Rendez-Vous finished with "Last Rendez-Vous (Ron's Piece)", which was intended to have had a saxophone part played by astronaut Ron McNair, while aboard the Space Shuttle Challenger. This would have been the first piece of music recorded in space. However, the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster ended this possibility. The track was subsequently dedicated to McNair and the rest of the Challenger crew. In 1983, Jarre had recorded "Moon Machine". This was also released in 1986, but as a 12" singleB-side. In 2000, Jarre's Métamorphoses album contained the tracks "Hey Gagarin" and "Miss Moon". His Electronica 1: The Time Machine album of 2015 contained the track "Zero Gravity", which was recorded with Tangerine Dream, and "Stardust", a collaboration with Armin Van Buuren.
Europe's single "The Final Countdown" was also released in 1986. The lyrics are about a fictional interplanetary trip to Venus.
In 1987, David Bowie's Major Tom character, Lou Reed's "Satellite of Love" and Elton John's "Rocket Man" were mentioned in Def Leppard's "Rocket". This song also features samples of dialogue from the Apollo 11 mission. The same year, the music video of MARRS's "Pump Up the Volume" featured footage from the launch of Apollo 6, moonwalkers during the Apollo program, the Mercury 7 astronauts, cosmonauts of the Soviet space program, and CGI footage of the Voyager space probes.
Tasmin Archer's "Sleeping Satellite" single was released in 1992. In 2021, Archer stated that the song "isn’t a criticism of man’s arrogance in leaving Earth, but more about the lack of further space exploration that might have led to a better understanding of ecological issues."[10]
In 2016, Avenged Sevenfold released their album, The Stage, a concept album about space, the universe, the human race, and artificial intelligence. The song "Exist" contains a spoken word section written and performed by astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson.
During the 1970s, IMAX's OMNIMAX (now IMAX Dome) film system was conceived to operate on planetarium screens. More recently, some planetariums have re-branded themselves as "dome theaters," with broader offerings including wide-screen or "wraparound" films, fulldome video, and laser shows that combine music with laser-drawn patterns.
Music made with sounds of outer space
Energy sources in the atmosphere, such as lightning, can produce sounds (sferics, tweeks, and whistlers) in the very low frequency (VLF) radio band.
[13][14]
Alexander Kosovichev, a Stanford scientist whose researches into the Sun's oscillations (and who uploaded the sounds to the net) encouraged Stephen Taylor (see below) to create his album.
Terry Riley, along with the Kronos Quartet, in their album Sun Rings, which used "sounds of the planets recorded by the Voyager mission on its journey to deep space" .[18]
Stephen Taylor, in the album The Heart of the Sun.[19]
Robert Schroeder's album Galaxie Cygnus-A used interstellar noise from the distant galaxy in the title[20][21][22]
Billy Yfantis, used sounds recorded on Mars in the track "Landing" (Album: Entering the Solar System).[23]