Planet pop: NASA beams first song from Mars

Agence France-Presse

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The Black Eyed Peas' Will.i.am gets first dibs

ACTOR AND RAPPER WILL.I.AM at NASA. Image from Facebook

LOS ANGELES, United States of America – NASA transmitted the first song to be broadcast from Mars on Tuesday, August 28.

“Reach for the Stars” by Grammy award-winning US musician will.i.am (of the group Black Eyed Peas) is part of efforts to inspire young people to get interested in science.

The song was then beamed back by the Curiosity rover (that landed on the surface of the Red Planet earlier this month) to NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California.

NASA staff clapped their hands and held their arms in the air, smiling and swaying to the rhythm during the slightly less scientific use of the rover’s hi-tech equipment and communications ability.

“It seems surreal,” the US rapper and actor said explaining how NASA administrator Charles Bolden had called him to suggest beaming a song back from Mars as part of educational outreach efforts by the US space agency.

The song — with lyrics including “I know that Mars might be far, but baby it ain’t really that far” — involved a 40-piece orchestra including French horns, rather than a more modern electronically-generated sound.

Will.i.am said he didn’t “want to do a song that was done on a computer,” given that it was going to be the first piece of music broadcast back to the Earth from Mars.

“I wanted to show human collaboration and have an orchestra there and something that would be timeless, and translated in different cultures — not have like a hip hop beat or a dance beat,” he said.

“A lot of times … people in my field aren’t supposed to try to execute something classical, or orchestral, so I wanted to break that stigma,” the 37-year-old — whose real name is William James Adams — told a student audience.

The aim was to inspire young people like those at the NASA event, including some from Boyle Heights in east Los Angeles where the musician grew up, to take a greater interest in science.

NASA experts this week released more pictures taken by the US$2.5-B rover that landed at Gale Crater of Mars on August 6.

One showed a panorama in pin-sharp resolution showing individual rocks, of the landscape visible from the rover including Mount Sharp — the slopes of which Curiosity plans to drive toward in the coming weeks and months. – Agence France-Presse

Listen to “Reach for the Stars” in this YouTube video:


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