Space Music 128
KeelSpawn writes "CNN is running an article about "sounds in outer space", which begins: "University of Iowa astrophysicist Donald Gurnett first heard the sounds on a spacecraft in 1962 and it reminded him of music. The sounds, which resemble whistles, bird chirps and booms, would not be heard by someone in space but are picked up by sensitive radio equipment. The sounds will be blended into a performance this autumn by the Kronos Quartet when they play at Hancher Auditorium at the University of Iowa in Iowa City." The U. of Iowa has a page about the concert.
but in space... (Score:3, Funny)
no-one can hear you scream
Copyright (Score:3, Funny)
Wouldn't it infringe on this [slashdot.org]? On the other hand, I think god can afford more lawyers than John Cage's music publishers.
Uh oh (Score:5, Funny)
Tragic.
- Adam
Re:Uh oh (Score:1)
Re:Uh oh (Score:1)
Sounds (Score:3, Funny)
Sounds just like the latest "Chemical brothers" album...
2001 (Score:5, Funny)
Radio telescope music (Score:1)
Re:Radio telescope music (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Radio telescope music (Score:1)
dig that crazy space jazz... (Score:1)
-knowles
Kronos Quartet? (Score:3, Insightful)
*tries to imagine a Chemical Brothers style Klingon band*
Re:Kronos Quartet? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Kronos Quartet? (Score:3, Funny)
I don't think it's possible, although maybe someone else can help me out. Kronos Quartet was formed in 1973; I don't think that the Klingon homeworld was actually called "Kronos" in the original series. It wasn't used until after the formation of the "Kronos Quartet". But then again, I'm not a Trek expert. Anybody out there have a definitive reference on when the word "Kronos" was first used in the Star Trek mythos?
Re:Kronos Quartet? (Score:2)
Re:Kronos Quartet? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Kronos Quartet? (Score:2)
Re:Kronos Quartet? (Score:2)
The Klingon homeworld was probably named after the Kronos you mentioned. It makes sense if you think about the other races like 'Vulcan' and 'Romulan'. I think those are also related to Greek/Roman mythology. (wish I had listend in class when they talked about that...)
Really kinda makes it all blurry, doesn't it? Hehe.
Re:Kronos Quartet? (Score:1)
horrah for cellists!
Re:Kronos Quartet? (Score:1)
Re:Kronos Quartet? (Score:2)
I think you mean 'Uranus'.
If I can't hear a sound in space... (Score:1)
Space Music (Score:1)
Re:Correct me if I'm wrong... (Score:2)
The sounds on the tape were actually first heard as "sounds", when the Allied Air Forces were monitoring the airwaves for German radio signals. Turns out what they were hearing were 'whistler' waves being generated from lighting strikes in the Southern Hemisphere.
The point that Dr. Gurnett has made with transcribing the sounds is to explain that space is not nearly as "empty" as we all think, but is a very dynamic (and noisy) environment.
This is becoming even more important as we become a satellite-dependent society; the interactions of earth's magnetic field and the space plasma environment create these sounds, the northern lights, and have been known to interrupt satellite signals.
How these discoveries were made is also a fascinating subject: the first scientific discovery in outer space was the discovery of a large plasma 'belt' surrounding the earth, which was made by Dr. Gurnett's teacher and mentor at the U. of Iowa; Dr. James Van Allen.
- A former physics student at the U. of Iowa.
space music from MST3K (Score:1, Offtopic)
Episode: 303- Pod People
Transcribed by Jonathan Hogg
[SOL]
(Joel is standing by huge array of keyboards, Crow enters, holding sandwich)
Joel: Oh, hiya, Crow...
Crow: Oh hi, whatcha doing?
Joel: Oh, we were just inspired by the cool New Age music of this movie, so we decided to use the Wall O' Keyboards to make our own great new New Age music, you wanna help?
Crow: Sure, uh, what can I do?
Joel: Well, I could teach you how to play the keyboards
Crow: Will it take long?
Joel: No, of course not, come on over here. Here, check this out, okay, put your hand over here.
Crow: Okay.
Joel: Put your finger down, see?
Crow: Like that? (puts finger on a random key, a single note is heard) Oh!
Joel: Yeah, you're playing a New Age chord now, okay? Just like Yanni. Alright now, put another finger down.
Crow: Okay. (presses another random key, a second note plays with first one, and persists throughout the rest of the scene)
Joel: See, now you're playing a Yanni lick, now hold it down for an hour...
Crow: Yeah?
Joel: Now hold it down...until you get a record contract from Wyndham Hill!
Crow: OH, hey cool! Servo, check it out, it's my new New Age Yanni lick! Uh, Joel, hold down my new New Age Yanni lick, I gotta put my sandwich down.
Joel: Okay, got it. (holds it)
Crow: This music's kind of dull, isn't it?
Joel: Yeah, but it's a good way to make a lot of money without a big initial investment. (lights dim, "music" swells, Cambot zooms in on Tom Servo)
Tom: (clears throat loudly) Okay... (in laid back DJ voice) And now, "Music From Some Guys In Space." Tonight on "Music From Some Guys In Space," more fine new New Age music and sounds from super-progressive Bay Area New Age keyboardist, Joel Robinson. Joel will be accompanied on the Wall O' Keyboards by veteran minimalist Crow T. Robot. We invite you to sit back and enjoy more repetitive New Age music, as we cruise the spaceways. Come along, fellow travelers, and enjoy "Music...From...Some Guys...In Space.
(Movie sign lights and claxons begin, we can see that Crow has fallen asleep)
Joel: Hey, we got movie sign, you guys!
Tom (Shatner voice): It's...Movie Sign...next time...on...Emergency 911! A duck...with an arrow through it's neck...
Joel: Tom, you're stuck in Shatner mode! Come on, snap out of it! Crow, wake up!
(all scream, head into theater)
(cut)
Re:space music from MST3K (Score:2)
From the above, here's Tom's Music from Some Guys in Space intro [mst3k.org], in MP3 format.
Schwab
Re:space music from MST3K (Score:2)
Biblical references (Score:2, Insightful)
I never really understood what it ment until one day I found out that the stars actually make music. How? Well I assume you of you know that stars don't just release visable light they also release UV/IR and
Just thought I'd give a different prospective.
[hobbyspace.com]
Nathaniel Brown
Re:Biblical references (Score:1)
Re:Biblical references (Score:1)
If a tree falls....... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:If a tree falls....... (Score:1)
Re:If a tree falls....... (Score:1)
If there is no gravity in space, what holds the earth in orbit around the sun, and the moon in orbit around the earth?
Re:If a tree falls....... (Score:1)
Blimey.
So why to planets still orbit stars, eh?
Re:If a tree falls....... (Score:1)
Basically everything in orbit is perpetually falling towards the earth, but because it's got a large sideways vector, it keeps 'missing'.
It _seems_ to be zero gravity, because the object are in free-fall. Microgravity exists because everything is falling at the same rate.
Re:If a tree falls....... (Score:2)
And there was I thinking that it only kept missing because it got distracted at an important stage and forgot to hit the ground...
Re:If a tree falls....... (Score:1)
Plus, gravity is relative. Something with a spin or under acceleration would certainly allow things to "fall", would it not?
A tree in space is always falling... (Score:2)
btw, IANAPhysicist... ^^;
Re:A tree in space is always falling... (Score:2)
Source of Some Space Sounds (Score:4, Informative)
For live sounds, check out NASA's Online VLF Receiver [spaceweather.com]
These sounds were incorporated into a song by totally badass producer Si Begg:
S.I. Futures - Ionic Funk
Re:Source of Some Space Sounds (Score:1)
The starfields are alive with the sound of music.. (Score:1)
Re:The starfields are alive with the sound of musi (Score:1, Funny)
Hmmmm (Score:1)
For budding djs (Score:5, Informative)
Ale
Re:For budding djs (Score:1)
Hmmm:
Mix Masta Fattie Europa?
Grand Master Meteorite?
DJ Jazzy Solar Flare?
Dr (of Funk) Spock?
DJ Don't worry, we saw it 3 days after it went by?
/gets thrown of stage dragged outside screaming it wasn't me, it was that Charlie Sheen movie!/
Re:For budding djs (Score:1)
B(if)tek (Score:1)
Australia electronic duo from Canberra called B(if)tek have an album called 2020 [hmv.com.au]. The following quote appears:
There's a key difference in their works (Score:4, Funny)
This song: 4 minutes (right ascension) and 33 light-seconds
Cosmic arrangements? (Score:1)
So...if I understand correctly, the cosmic noises recorded by Mr. Gurnett will be translated into musical arrangements?
Due to both physical and musical reasons, I imagine this could be harder to do than one would think:
- Pulsar (Tuba) - Very short bursts of high powered notes, to be played in rapid succession. Only usable once every 4 bars due to gravity-instigated rotation.
- Supernova (Drums) - Hit the toms at maximum velocity, ad contentum. The cymbals could beautifully symbolize the dispersal of particles. Not to be overused though, it's not like a supernova explosion is a common thing!
- General Cosmic Radiation (Double Bass) - Constant, virtually monotonous humming, with an ostinato peak here and there to imply that space is NOT just a pile of chaos...maybe the use of a didgeredoo player would be best here, but there is none in the quartet, I presume?
- Nebulae (Piano) - Play occasional notes in the upper register to illustrate the formation of dust and gas clouds. Start with a light, shattered touch, then gradually play with more structure, showing the Newtonian need for atoms to cling together.
Enough already. Maybe someone wants to finish this list? Little Green Men? How about the Star Trek factor?
FWIW: Not so "Groundbreaking". (Score:1)
1/f noise? (Score:1)
Re:1/f noise? (Score:1)
Everyone has forgotten Dr. Fiorella Terenzi? (Score:2)
She also sang two songs on Thomas Dolby's soundtrack to "The Gate to the Mind's Eye". (one of my fav soundtracks, and the best of the "Mind's Eye" series), The cuts are "Quantum Mechanic" and "N.E.O. (Near Earth Objects)".
You can check her music out at MP3.com, url:
http://artists.mp3s.com/artists/164/dr_fiorella_t
And, to be a little "sexist" here, she is really hot! She also has her own website...URL:
http://www.fiorella.com/ [fiorella.com]
ttyl
Farrell
Re:Everyone has forgotten Dr. Fiorella Terenzi? (Score:1)
Re:Everyone has forgotten Dr. Fiorella Terenzi? (Score:2)
ttyl
Farrell
Score one for bad SF (Score:2)
Now stop nagging (Score:1)
Cosmic Arrangements? (Score:1)
Due to both physical and musical reasons, I imagine this could be harder to do than one would think:
- Pulsar (Tuba) - Very short bursts of high powered notes, to be played in rapid succession. Only usable once every 4 bars due to gravity-instigated rotation.
- Supernova (Drums) - Hit the toms at maximum velocity, ad contentum. The cymbals could beautifully symbolize the dispersal of particles. Not to be overused though, it's not like a supernova explosion is a common thing!
- General Cosmic Radiation (Double Bass) - Constant, virtually monotonous humming, with an ostinato peak here and there to imply that space is NOT just a pile of chaos...maybe the use of a didgeredoo player would be best here, but there is none in the quartet, I presume?
- Nebulae (Piano) - Play occasional notes in the upper register to illustrate the formation of dust and gas clouds. Start with a light, shattered touch, then gradually play with more structure, showing the Newtonian need for atoms to cling together.
Enough already. Maybe someone wants to finish this list? Little Green Men? How about the Star Trek factor?
Plato - way ahead of his time (Score:2, Interesting)
Re: (Score:1)
An old version... (Score:1)
Ahh, so the movies use sensitive radios... (Score:2)
Terry Riley (Score:2)
I found out about the concert this weekend checking out Terry Riley's web site. I'm not a huge fan, but was just surfing through.
Apparently he is going to be interpreting some of this stuff and performing at the concert. Just a heads up for any Terry Riley fans.
Since I live in Iowa City, I might have to drag myself down there.
Re:Terry Riley (Score:1)
Doh, I guess that was stated in the second link.
Sorry for being redundant.
Isao Tomita (Score:1)
Most spooky and impressive is the intro track which gives the album its name. This is a transposed recording of the radio wave noise as the sun rises over the horizon at dawn. The pops, whistles and chirps sound pretty much exactly like a real dawn bird chorus.
Cool sounding stuff (Score:1, Informative)
Didn't Stanley Jordan do this with an iBook? (Score:1)
Anywho, it was lots of fun to go to a Jazz concert and hear a little spacey music.
Peas out.
Pink Floyd is space music (Score:1)
Pink Floyd. Still first in space!
Gurnett and Pseudorandom Behavior Story (Score:1)
So it doesn't surprise me he finds meaningful patterns in supposedly random data.