Title

Re:sound #131: The Space Show
Produced
Various

Presented

TCF / WBEZ 91.5, USA, 2010
Collection
Re:sound
Tags
Environment, Nature, Science, Technology
Space
59 30

Story

This hour: a one way mission to mars, a Russian cosmonaut's favorite music, the Voyager golden record, the sound of the northern lights, and more.

One Way Ticket to Mars
by Roman Mars (Re:sound premiere, 2010)
Now that air travel is commonplace and even trips to the moon are a little passé, we’ve set our sights (and our space program) on Mars, which presents some very thorny problems. But there is one man who is not daunted by these obstacles, and one producer who is not daunted by telling his tale.

LBJ and the Helium Filled Astronaut
by Larry Massett (NPR's Lost and Found Sound, 1999)
Producer Larry Massett shares a beloved and oft-bootlegged piece of found sound. It's a rare recording of the President of the United States from 1964, speaking on the phone with an unexpectedly squeaky-voiced former astronaut.

Vyacheslav Mescherin's Orchestra of Elecro-Musical Instruments
by Charles Maynes (Podstantsiya, 2004)
It was the closest thing to Muzak in Russia. This is the story of the rise, fall, and sudden resurgence of the music that dominated television and radio airwaves and whose spacey sounds made it the favorite of the USSR's cosmonauts. 

Star for Sale
by Patrick Holland, Gretchen Miller, and Russell Stapleton (City Nights, ABC, 2009)
A man visits a star auction and learns that not everything is for sale.

Carl Sagan and Ann Druyan’s Ultimate Mix Tape
by Jad Abumrad and Robert Krulwich (Radiolab, 2006)
Back in the 1970s, NASA undertook a project to put together all kinds of different sounds, music, and languages on a record that they would then launch into space, hopefully to be found by another life form. But of all the languages and all the music and all the sounds in the entire world, what does one select to represent an entire planet? Author Ann Druyan and astrophysicist Carl Sagan were among the people tasked with making this momentous decision.

Listening to the Northern Lights
by Barrett Golding (NPR's Lost and Found Sound, 1999)
Field recordist Steve McGreevey captures the solar sounds of space weather and the northern lights (a.k.a. Natural Radio).

Producer

This episode of Re:sound was produced by Delaney Hall.

Extra

Listen to more stories by Roman Mars.
Hear more from Lost and Found Sound.
Listen to more City Nights vignettes.
Hear more remixes from Symphony of Science.

Featured Music:

SETI, "Beacon 5," Pharos (Instinct Records, 1995)
Sending Letters to the Sea, "Shifting Structures," Sending Letters to the Sea (MG Records) 
Billy Gomberg + offthesky, "Eyelids," Flyover Sound (Experimedia, 2010)
Concert Silence, "Untitled III," 9.22.07 (Infraction)
Concert Silence, "Untitled I," 9.22.07 (Infraction) 
Billy Gomberg + offthesky, "Saen," Flyover Sound (Experimedia, 2010)
Melodium, "In a Complete Solitune," There is Something in the Universe

 

Comments

Listening to "One Way Ticket to Mars", I was reminded of Andrew Basiago and his knowledge of Mars. Details at ProjectPegasus.Net
Posted by James from St. Charles, IL at 07/09/2011