Fly Me to the Moon: Your Choice of Heavenly Music

Fly Me to the Moon:  Your Choice of Heavenly Music

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30 responses
I received this private message from Pete Foltz this morning (which I am sharing with his permission):

“Ok – the best soundtrack for circling the moon? Entrance of the Gods into Valhalla? Or Pink Floyd?”

Anyone?

Astronauts have taken a lot of music to space over the years. Here’s a post I wrote about Rusty Schweickart, who took Vaughan Williams and Alan Hovhaness, before it was cool, on Apollo 9.

https://www.facebook.com/classicrossamico/posts/pfbid0zHUr5KgGEPdnJ5H7ABpitYA3wcTNiaG3qf7dBXRSjBieKmGb583kaVuzbAjt4HVPl

What composers or pieces of music would be on your mixtape? Rusty’s sounds pretty good to me.

Comments

30 responses to “Fly Me to the Moon: Your Choice of Heavenly Music”

  1. Bruno

    Adorei conhecer seu blog, tem muito artigos bem interessantes. resultado da loteria do sonho de hoje

  2. Anonymous

    I first considered Franz Liszt “Les Preludes” – but thought better of it..

    1. Classic Ross Amico

      Pete Foltz Life as a series of preludes and all that. I see your point.

      1. Anonymous

        Classic Ross Amico i have to put one up here for Brother Roy: https://youtu.be/eX5EbnlVV6E?si=r_bj_rnj1-xRrG2m.

      2. Anonymous

        Classic Ross Amico space 1999 intro..

      3. Classic Ross Amico

        Pete Foltz It was only a matter of time… 😄

      4. Anonymous

        Classic Ross Amico come to think of it, there are lots of Preludes; but where are the References or Footnotes???? Maybe I can convince Kile to write Acknowledgements???? Has to better than John Luther Adams’ Vespers of the Blessed Earth

      5. Anonymous

        Pete Foltzhopefully season 1!

      6. Classic Ross Amico

        Kenneth Hutchins No “Fly Me to the Moon,” Ken? 😉

      7. Anonymous

        Classic Ross Amico Too obvious… and as Sinatra said on one of his TV specials “weren’t they surprised when I got there two days before they did.”

        https://youtu.be/3q6gKV2w3tc?si=MfR71k0jfB9auncx

  3. Anonymous

    “Jupiter, The Bringer of Jollity”

  4. Anonymous

    Ligeti’s Requiem and Lux Aeterna, Kubrick’s brilliant choices for 2001: A Space Odyssey. They capture the eeriness and mysteriousness of the moon perfectly. When I first saw the film in 1968, those musical selections and images hit me with a wallop and opened me up to modern music. Maybe followed up by Strauss’ The Blue Danube Waltz to capture its majesty, even though Kubrick used that for another scene. I’m always willing to follow a good curator. 🙂

    1. Classic Ross Amico

      Mather Pfeiffenberger Ligeti is definitely someone I thought of… thanks to Kubrick!

  5. Anonymous

    BEAU SOIR by Claude Debussy https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=13qUO6OF6Bk

    1. Classic Ross Amico

      Scott Marshall Never heard it for chorus before!

  6. Anonymous

    Ives “Unanswered Question” and 4th Symphony.

  7. Anonymous

    Ha, easy, the last movement from The Consolation of Apollo!

    1. Classic Ross Amico

      Kile Smith I’d thought of it! It came up when searching some of my old posts. I believe it was to coincide with Artemis I that it was performed in Trenton in 2022.

  8. Anonymous

    I’m actually partial to this song… it’s know as Moon Love.

    https://youtu.be/kDBLz3UFS0U?si=bhfCIUPVDsSLtFJr

    1. Classic Ross Amico

      Kenneth Hutchins Tchaikovsky!

  9. Anonymous

    Sanctus from Fauré’s Requiem.

    1. Classic Ross Amico

      Byron Adams Elegant choice! (BTW – Listened to Howard Ferguson’s Piano Sonata today, a recording of which I actually found in a pile on my desk!)

  10. Anonymous

    Gotecki Symphony no. 3. 2nd movement.
    Jenkins Benedictus
    And from the newage (sic) canon, Enya Aldebaran.
    And please, God, bless us all in this horrific time.

  11. Anonymous

    Siegfried finale duet, “Heil, dir Sonne”l

    1. Classic Ross Amico

      SW Paul Mack Act III of “Siegfried” will certainly give you plenty of time to get around the moon.

  12. Anonymous

    La Legende d’Eer by Xenakis.

    1. Classic Ross Amico

      Angelo Bello Xenakis, the only composer who can actually be heard in space…

  13. Anonymous

    Holst—Planets

  14. Anonymous

    I really like Pink Floyd. I would not chose Dark Side of the Moon though. Shine On You Crazy Diamond would be more appropriate aesthetically wise I think.

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