I enjoy music. I like listening to it in the car, I like listening to it while writing or working. I’m sure that music affects you in some way and at some time. Music has an undeniable power over humans.
Lately, I’ve gotten to thinking about the music of speculative fiction, or rather, popular music with science fiction/fantasy elements. Not the music that could be defined as classical or soundtrack (everyone who hears “Darth Vader’s Theme” equates it with science fiction, as in many ways it defines SF soundtracks), but the music of the mainstream that may not be speculative in intent, but in some way includes elements (theme, subject, terms) we generally define as science fiction or fantasy.
For instance, Joni Mitchell’s “Big Yellow Taxi” contains thoughts on climate change (i.e. respecting the Earth), but includes in its lyrics a reference to an apocalyptic future.
They paved paradise and put up a parkin’ lot
With a pink hotel, a boutique, and a swingin’ hot spot
Don’t it always seem to go
That you don’t know what you got till it’s gone
They paved paradise and put up a parking lotThey took all the trees, and put ’em in a tree museum
And they charged the people a dollar and a half to see them
Don’t it always seem to go
That you don’t know what you got till it’s gone
They paved paradise, and put up a parking lot...
Every time I hear that song on the radio, I think of John Joseph Adams’ Wastelands anthology and apocalyptic fiction both in print and on screen. (As well as the movie Two Weeks Notice, but lets just gloss on past the fact I ever watched that movie.)
Or in the fantasy category, you have these lyrics from Dido’s “Hunter”:
If you were a king up there on your throne
Would you be wise enough to let me go
For this queen you think you own
Wants to be a hunter again
Wants to see the world alone again
To take a chance on life again
So let me go
Such lyrics make me think of novels by people like Kristen Britain, Michelle West, Mercedes Lackey, and others with strong female characters, or even movies like the version of King Arthur with Keira Knightley as Guinevere.
Obviously, these songs were written to talk about other things. The former is about climate change and the second about leaving a lover, but in the music has in it the element of the fantastic.
I would like to ask the Tor.com community to contribute their own thoughts on the matter. What music with lyrics reminds you of a book you have read or simply puts SF thoughts in your head? What music would you say is about science fiction or fantasy, even if the overarching theme or intent was something else?
If you need some help getting started, here are some links you should look over.
Top Ten Most Epic Songs of All Time
The Fantasy Worlds of Bad Eighties Music Videos (Part 1)
Ten Scifi Songs You Should Take to a Barren Asteroid
The Best Scifi Songs to Yell at a Karaoke Bar
These lists are by no means definitive, and there are many songs and musicians to pick from, so please, put in your two (or twenty) cents.
VIEW ALL BY · Monday June 29, 2009 09:46am EDT · amended on Monday June 29, 2009 09:47am EDT
Ok, other than that, I'd like to call out some of the 'nueva trova' musicians of Latin America, particularly Silvio Rodríguez. Silvio is a Cuban singer/songwriter who, if I was pressed into a ham-fisted comparison, would be a strange iteration of Bob Dylan—melodic guitars (although Silvio is, in my opinion, a much more masterful player than Dylan) and poetic lyrics. One particular song springs to mind, Casiopea.
Casiopea is the sad story of a lonely alien who's been sent to Earth to study our world for one million years, watching in hiding. Once his job was done, he tries to get back in touch with his people, but he gets no answer. The song paints a heartbreaking portrait of the alien, sitting on a beach, looking up at the stars, yearning for home. Beautiful and heartbreaking, the obvious similarities to the Latin American diaspora situation are not unintentional.
Monday June 29, 2009 09:52am EDT
VIEW ALL BY · Monday June 29, 2009 09:52am EDT
Another obvious choice is REM's "It's the End of the World as We Know It (and I feel fine)." Or what about T-Bone Burnett's "Humans from Earth"? I got that from the soundtrack of "Until the End of the World" a lot of which is excellently sfnal.
For one that no one will have heard of, I've always found Lloyd Cole's "Late Night, Early Town" to have a kind of melancholic cyberpunk feel.
Aaand speaking of cyberpunk, I once read an interview with William Gibson in which he mentioned Plan B's album "Cyber Chords and Sushi Stories" which is a sound-track in waiting for the Neuromancer move that should have been made around 1992.
Even before it was nonsensically co-opted for Battlestar Glactica, "All along the watchtower" had a crazily apocalyptic feel to it.
Finally, for another one nobody will have heard of, but which I strongly recommend: "History Remade" by the Fembots. With a name like that... I mean, the song isn't exactly sf, but it's got the right feel. And it's a song about Toronto, so it's awesome for that.
John, thanks for the opportunity to rave about music I love.
VIEW ALL BY · Monday June 29, 2009 10:00am EDT
Van der Graaf Generator, "Pioneers Over C", all about superluminal travel (and possibly drugs).
VIEW ALL BY · Monday June 29, 2009 10:08am EDT
"Mine's a tale that can't be told
My freedom I hold dear;
How years ago in days of old
When magic filled the air;
'Twas in the darkest depths of Mordor
I met a girl so fair;
But Gollum and the evil one crept up
And slipped away with her..."
VIEW ALL BY · Monday June 29, 2009 10:11am EDT · amended on Monday June 29, 2009 10:12am EDT
The first time you hear that song you are completely confused. It starts out with implications of WW II, then maybe it is about explorers in the age of sail. Then the odd line "in the land out grandchildren knew?"
Huh?
Slowly you come to realize we are dealing with Faster-than-light travel and time dilation.
Awesome.
ETA: Ack! Demtrios beat me too it. Damn morning staff meetings. grumblegrumblegrumble.
VIEW ALL BY · Monday June 29, 2009 10:12am EDT
I was also going to mention The Flaming Lips Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots, but I see it's already been covered on one of the linked lists, so instead "Joik" off Martyn Bennett's Bothy Culture, which is a bouncy techno pirate song sung by an alien. (He may not have meant it that way, but that's how it sounds.)
Monday June 29, 2009 10:25am EDT
Science Fiction: Train's Drops of Jupiter
One minor correction: Joni Mitchell's Big Yellow Taxi was written long before climate change was considered a human problem. It's about how humans destroy nature to create their man-made world. Granted, we've learned that that *leads* to climate change, but the song wasn't written *about* climate change.
Yes, I know, I'm picky.
Monday June 29, 2009 10:34am EDT
The classic “Iron Man” tells the story of a man who travels into the future and sees the apocalypse. As he returns to the present, he is turned into steel by a magnetic field and becomes mute, so he isn’t able to warn the world about its fate. Because he is mute, he is mocked. He ends up getting his revenge on mankind by causing the destruction seen in his vision.
Monday June 29, 2009 10:34am EDT
VIEW ALL BY · Monday June 29, 2009 10:46am EDT
"Lookin' Out My Back Door" by CCR is a nice piece of urban fantasy (and Fogerty SWEARS it's not about drugs, really!).
Also, just about anything by Tom Lehrer.
Now if we're willing to go beyond individual songs, I am a huge concept album/rock opera fan. The most obvious example is Pink Floyd's The Wall.
VIEW ALL BY · Monday June 29, 2009 10:49am EDT
Monday June 29, 2009 11:07am EDT
Any band who has not just one, but a suite of albums about an intergalactic traveler/computer who plumbs the depth of human experience is pretty darn evocative of SF to me.
Monday June 29, 2009 11:09am EDT
VIEW ALL BY · Monday June 29, 2009 11:11am EDT
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HvQ2JF-glvw
VIEW ALL BY · Monday June 29, 2009 11:12am EDT
Monday June 29, 2009 11:12am EDT
Big Yellow taxi always makes me think of Silent Running.
Rush has a lot of SF&F in their repertoire. 2112, of course, and Red Barchetta{/i] goes from being about a car to a big dystopian thing.
Monday June 29, 2009 11:14am EDT
VIEW ALL BY · Monday June 29, 2009 11:17am EDT
Favorite Astrowind album: 'Somewhere The Music Had Been Played' available here at Resting Bell's website.
Monday June 29, 2009 11:26am EDT
Tekitha 'Walking Through the Darkness'.
and totally love listening to Nightmares on Wax, Baka Beyond, Enya, Morcheeba or any irish rock while reading sci-fi.
Monday June 29, 2009 11:28am EDT
Their most famous song, Through the Fire and Flames, is a prime example with these lyrics:
On a cold winter morning, in the time before the light
In flames of death's eternal reign we ride towards the fight
When the darkness has fallen down, and the times are tough all right
The sound of evil laughter falls around the world tonight
Fighting hard, fighting on for the steel, through the wastelands evermore
The scattered souls will feel the hell bodies wasted on the shores
On the blackest plains in hell's domain, we watch them as we go
In fire and pain, and once again we know
So now we fly ever free
We're free before the thunderstorm
On towards the wilderness our quest carries on
Far beyond the sundown, far beyond the moonlight
Deep inside our hearts and all our souls
VIEW ALL BY · Monday June 29, 2009 11:35am EDT
This video has it all: Handlebar mustaches, dancing girls who don't know quite what to do with nerdy music, pants featuring an American Indian on the knee, and more...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u0iuaxvkXv4
VIEW ALL BY · Monday June 29, 2009 11:38am EDT
Were you thinking Kristen Britain at all? Because those lyrics really remind me of her Green Rider series. Without giving anything away, it makes me think of Karigan and her sweetheart, almost literally.
As for music - I can't think of a particular song off the top of my head, but Moody Blues has always put me in the mood for science-fiction and fantasy!
VIEW ALL BY · Monday June 29, 2009 11:38am EDT
It's to be found in online streaming music stations like SomaFM.com's 'dronezone' channel and bluemars.org's 'cryosleep' station. A lot of it's very evocative and, quite literally, spacey. That the artists are familiar with and interested in the SF genre is a given: track titles like 'void memory one' and 'emerald nebulae' are not untypical. Notable artists in the genre are Biosphere and Steve Roach. Very chilled, and very, very science-fictional.
There's an indepth article at Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_music
Monday June 29, 2009 11:38am EDT
But rock, and I definitely include progressive rock here, is too musically conservative to say much at all about the future.
What sounds like SF to me now is Burial's first album, which has been described as the soundtrack of a near future submerged London. The best dubstep sounds like something from a third world Blade Runner, with its mix of electronics and Jamaican dub influences (and, often, sampled bits of Asian music). And it's generally smart enough to avoid lyrics, though the Spaceape's appearance on the Burial album comes off like a Jamaican William S. Burroughs.
Maybe the best SF model for musicians is J.G. Ballard, if this overview (http://www.ballardian.com/a-ballardian-burial) is anything to go by.
VIEW ALL BY · Monday June 29, 2009 11:40am EDT
VIEW ALL BY · Monday June 29, 2009 11:43am EDT
VIEW ALL BY · Monday June 29, 2009 11:46am EDT
It's a shame you've ruled out classical... there's no better music for writing about Mars than Ralph Vaughn Williams's "Sinfonia Antarctica".
Monday June 29, 2009 11:48am EDT
VIEW ALL BY · Monday June 29, 2009 11:59am EDT
Led Zeppelin got Tolkien wrong: "In the darkest depths of Mordor, there lived a girl so fair... but Gollum, the EVIL one, crept up and snuck away with her."
In all fairness, Zep did get the Vikings right in "Immigrant Song."
Monday June 29, 2009 12:06pm EDT
I got two pale hands up against the window pane
I'm shaking with the heat of my need again
It starts in my feet, reverbs up to my brain
There's nothing I can do to revert the pain
I'm looking down to the street below
There's nothing in the way they move to show
They too, know what I know
They too hunger for the beast below
VIEW ALL BY · Monday June 29, 2009 12:07pm EDT
One person pointed out that "Big Yellow Taxi" is not "about" climate change. They are correct, and I have attempted to correct this in the post.
Also, I did mean Kristen NOT Karen Britain, and have corrected that as well.
Thanks all for your diligence and kind corrections of this poor writer's mistakes.
Oh yeah, and thanks all for the discussion and suggestions - this is GREAT reading, and makes me want to spend way too much money on iTunes!
VIEW ALL BY · Monday June 29, 2009 12:19pm EDT
Ballboy has a song called "A Day in Space" which is pretty wonderful. It's more like blank verse than a song, but it's about how the singer wants to go to space. Favorite line: "Hard? Hard my arse! A couple of assault courses and a maths test, piece of piss! I've suffered worse than that. I've suffered much worse than that."
I better stop here or I'll be here all day :)
Ethan
VIEW ALL BY · Monday June 29, 2009 12:37pm EDT
Hendrix's "1983, a Merman I Should Be."
In the not-too-distant future (that's actually farther past now than it it was in the future then, if that makes any sense) Jimi takes a journey under the seas and then walks the outer stars. The outer stars, outer stars.
"Then they threw this in my face, they said, anyway, you know good and well it would be against the will of god, and the grace of the king!"
Monday June 29, 2009 01:09pm EDT
"Come Sail Away" by Styx
"Major Tom (Coming Home)" by Shiny Toy Gun
"Rivendell" by Rush
"Cosmic Castaway" by Electrasy
"It's My Turn to Fly" by The Urge
and the entire "A Kind of Magic" album from Queen as the unofficial "Highlander" soundtrack.
The first song that came to mind, "Thus Spake Zarathustra" from 2001: A Space Odyssey" contains no lyrics - disqualifed from this particular "greatest" list, but needed to be mentioned.
Monday June 29, 2009 01:25pm EDT
VIEW ALL BY · Monday June 29, 2009 01:38pm EDT
Monday June 29, 2009 01:55pm EDT
The Martian Boogie by Brownsville Station
and...
Much of the stuff by Parliament/Funkedelic. Just listen to Mothership Connection! There's a massive thread of weird, groovy sci-fi stuff going through most of their music- a P-Funk expanded universe with recurring elements like the Starchild, the Bop Gun, Dr. Funkenstein and his clones, etc etc.
VIEW ALL BY · Monday June 29, 2009 02:18pm EDT
I'll go more traditional here and mention Ry Cooder's UFO Has landed in the Ghetto.
Much of Bela Fleck and the Flecktones' music has SFnal elements to it with album titles like Flight of the Cosmic Hippo and UFO Tofu, not to mentions songs like Mars Needs Women, FlyingSaucer Dudes and Interlude (Return of the Ancient Ones)
Monday June 29, 2009 02:25pm EDT
-America - "Horse With No Name" (not to mention they did the last unicorn soundtrack)
-How about Arctic Fire - "Wake up" (now reminds me of Where the Wild Things Are)
-The Decembrists Crane Wife cd. - "The Shankhill Butchers" has a sort of nightmareish feel.
-The Flaming Lips - "Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots pt. 1" (Love it!)
-The Gorillaz - "Fire Coming Out of the Monkeys Head" (cool little story)
-I think Iron & Wine has a sort of fantasy feel, try "Woman King" (no sexist intention here)
-Nickle Creek - "House of Tom Bombadil"
Monday June 29, 2009 02:27pm EDT
George Clinton is another candidate for "alien among us" and I'd say that Parliment's Mothership Connection should be on this list somewhere.
Besides those, I can think of lots of bands that borrow aesthetics and imagery from fantasy and sci fi: Jethro Tull, King Crimson, Loreena McKennitt, Cruxshadows, Faith & the Muse, Mortiis, the Moors, Ordo Equilibrio, Emperor... I could continue on. I could procrastinate much of my day pulling these out of the recesses of my head.
Monday June 29, 2009 02:37pm EDT
Watcher of the skies watcher of all
His is a world alone no world is his own,
He whom life can no longer surprise,
Raising his eyes beholds a planet unknown.
Creatures shaped this planet's soil,
Now their reign has come to an end,
Has life again destroyed life,
Do they play elsewhere, do they know
more than their childhood games?
Maybe the lizard's shed its tail,
This is the end of man's long union with Earth.
Judge not this race by empty remains
Do you judge God by his creatures when they are dead?
For now, the lizard's shed it's tail
This is the end of man's long union with Earth.
From life alone to life as one,
Think not your journey's done
For though your ship be sturdy, no
Mercy has the sea,
Will you survive on the ocean of being?
Come ancient children hear what I say
This is my parting council for you on your way.
Sadly now your thoughts turn to the stars
Where we have gone you know you never can go.
Watcher of the skies watcher of all
This is your fate alone, this fate is your own.
VIEW ALL BY · Monday June 29, 2009 02:40pm EDT
VIEW ALL BY · Monday June 29, 2009 03:26pm EDT
What I've heard from The Alan Parsons Project also screams SF/F (not just the instrumental bits, either), but I haven't had the opportunity to listen to much yet.
And then for individual works by various artists, there's "Dream of the Archer" by Heart, "Jupiter" by Earth, Wind & Fire, and on the darker side of things "Pretzel Logic" and "Fire in the Hole"* by Steely Dan, "The Logical Song" and "Child of Vision" by Supertramp.
The Elegy suite by Chicago might not count, since it's all instrumental except for a poem recitation at the beginning, but it screams apocalyptic cautionary tale with a horn section.
Finally, realizing I'm probably the only one who will own up to this (if I'm not the only one who has heard this)...the War Suite by Gino Vannelli. I think my age, 16-bit JRPGs, and the frequency of cataclysmic wars in fantasy may be to blame for my interpretation (especially since this trips the F side of the SF/F pairing).
_____
* And that only counts because I'd swear the lyrics were based on Dragonsong if the book hadn't come out several years afterward.
VIEW ALL BY · Monday June 29, 2009 04:35pm EDT · amended on Monday June 29, 2009 04:43pm EDT
VIEW ALL BY · Monday June 29, 2009 05:20pm EDT
Other songs by Nightwish include "Wishmaster", with lyrics such as "grey Havens my destiny", and "FantasMic", a homage to Walt Disney.
Monday June 29, 2009 06:08pm EDT
Their most popular song is "Freya" which is named after a Norse Goddess(And was in the first Guitar Hero I believe).
Another popular song is "Mother, Maiden, and Crone"; which anyone that has read George R.R. Martin's "A Song of Fire and Ice" will know. The lead singer has said that this song was based on that book.
The fantasy influence is obvious when looking at the names of the songs they perform.
Monday June 29, 2009 06:24pm EDT
Liberi Fatali
Any song by Kokia
If it's a kind of cyberpunk world, then heavy metal. If it's urban werewolves, I think of rap.
-C
VIEW ALL BY · Monday June 29, 2009 06:40pm EDT
Monday June 29, 2009 08:02pm EDT
Blasting, billowing, bursting forth
With the power of ten billion butterfly sneezes
Man with his flaming pyre
Has conquered the wayward breezes
Climbing to Tranquility far above the cloud
Conceiving the heavens clear of misty shroud
I still associate The Moody Blues' Days of Future Passed with The Lord of the Rings, as I was listening to the one a lot while first reading the other 35 years ago, even though the album is a concept album about a single day rather than anything hobbity.
King Crimson has some fantastical elements -
The rusted chains of prison moons
Are shattered by the sun
I walk a road, horizons change
The tournament's begun
- from The Court of the Crimson King, for instance, plus some occasionally wacky music. Part of the climax in "Starless" reminds me of a grinding war of post-apocalyptic automated tanks, though the lyrics don't have anything to do with that. Alastair Reynolds listens to Crimson, among plenty of other things, and the machine people characters Cadence and Cascade in House of Suns were (presumably) named after the Crimson track of that name.
Also from the 60s/70s prog-rock generation, Yes seemed to have a lot of sfnal elements (though when you look at the lyrics you can't often make out what they're banging on about). Pink Floyd too, with early track titles like "Interstellar Overdrive" and "Set The Controls for the Heart of the Sun".
More recently there's Muse, with songs with names like "Starlight", "Supermassive Black Hole" and "City of Delusion".
VIEW ALL BY · Monday June 29, 2009 08:34pm EDT
The Wizard of Speed and Time
Ethan
VIEW ALL BY · Monday June 29, 2009 09:14pm EDT
glowing in the dark at the edge of town
"Atlas" by Battles is the only song I've ever heard that induces sensawunda.
Monday June 29, 2009 10:43pm EDT
A song from the album, "Forever Autumn," is included in some Moody Blues greatest-hits anthologies.
Monday June 29, 2009 10:58pm EDT
http://8tracks.com/olahungerford/end-of-the-path
Mainly mopey stuff, some of it a more epic like King Crimson and Sigur Ros.
Tuesday June 30, 2009 07:53am EDT
And just 'cause: Capsule's "Space Station Number 9". :-)
VIEW ALL BY · Tuesday June 30, 2009 12:28pm EDT
VIEW ALL BY · Tuesday June 30, 2009 01:58pm EDT
Van Der Graaf Generator, once again, with "Childlike Faith In Childhood's End," which takes its cue from Clarke; "After The Flood," which posits a global catastrophe driven by melting ice caps; "Lemmings (Inc. Cog)", which sees a society so completely out of control it crushes itself (METROPOLIS on steroids, you might say.)
A good deal of the music of Bill Nelson is science fictional, albeit tending towards Popular Mechanics-style retro-futurism. I have a terrible soft spot for songs such as "Train With Fins" though.
Nelson's old band, Be Bop Deluxe, also sailed the sfnal seas, especially with songs like "Electrical language," which is, well, about the Internet before there was an Internet.
Boiled In Lead have often evoked fantasy with their work, although rarely as directly as with THE GYPSY, based on the Steven Brust novel.
Michael Moorcock & Deep Fix!
Gary Numan, who pretty much built himself as cyberpunk in advance of cyberpunk, although WARRIORS evokes a weird mixture of MAD MAX and Heinlein's THE MOON IS A HARSH MISTRESS (with songs such as "This Prison Moon.")
I could probably go on for hours...
VIEW ALL BY · Tuesday June 30, 2009 02:33pm EDT
A good part of Peter Schilling's work is sfnal, even beyond "Major Tom (Coming Home)", which is a reply to Bowie's "space Oddity."
Nobody mentioned Blue Oyster Cult? Yeesh. They worked with Michael Moorcock for a while, and "Black Sword" is an Elric song. Many BOC songs have sfnal and fantasy themes.
Porcupine Tree are often off on an SF trip, especially when you consider things like "Last Chance To Evacuate Planet Earth Before It's Recycled."
Holding the progrock tack for a minute, add in Spock's Beard as well (especially the epic SNOW), The Flower Kings, Spontaneous Combustion (who few remember), Emerson Lake & Palmer (and the earlier The Nice, who threw in the odd sfnal bit such as "The Diamond hard Apples Of The Moon") who gave us TARKUS and the epic "Brain Salad Surgery" with its crazed Crimsonesque lyrics about an interstellar war, amon Duul II's TANZ DER LEMMINGE, which is wall to wall surreal SF...
XTC have often shot down the SF and fantasy roads, especially with their Dukes Of Stratosphear side-project.
Can. Atomic Rooster, Black Widow (though they did more occult and horror themed stuff.) After Crying. Aprodite's Child with the apocalyptic 666 double set.
The Groundhogs, with both THANK CHRIST FOR THE BOMB and WHO WILL SAVE THE WORLD?
Abney Park's work tends towards the happily steampunk, mixed with some goth.
I must mention Brownsville Station for their haooy little first contact track, "The Martian Boogie."
And the hits keep comin'...!
Tuesday June 30, 2009 02:53pm EDT
VIEW ALL BY · Tuesday June 30, 2009 03:33pm EDT
Tuesday June 30, 2009 03:42pm EDT
Tuesday June 30, 2009 04:35pm EDT
Panic Room's Electra City (machines supplanting us). Magenta's Man and Machine (guess) and Genetesis (bio-engineered ditto), also Broken (vampires). Arguably Renaissance's Black Flame.
Argent's Lothlorien should need no explanation. Curved Air's Elfin Boy is about what it says on the can, and Metamorphosis is about something fantastical; Phantasmagoria is about being haunted and Over and Above seems to be an OOB experience.
Steve Hillage's Solar Musick Suite has science-fantasy new-age stuff in it. Dave Greenslade's Pentateuch of the Cosmogony is written round the discovery of an alien vessel in the outer reaches or our solar system.
Mermaid Kiss's Etarlis is an album of songs set in the world of the same name, into which two people from our world have fallen. (Well, walked.)
VIEW ALL BY · Tuesday June 30, 2009 09:08pm EDT
@neko: Andrew Bird definitely has a few SF moments, though they are far more contemporary than far-flung space opera. "Tables and Chairs" features a Fight Club-like collapse of society, and the music (and title) of "Not a Robot, But a Ghost" give SF warm fuzzies, too.
Great post.
Tuesday June 30, 2009 09:54pm EDT
New examples: Marian Call has a CD,"Got to Fly" with songs that can be dually interpreted as referring to Firefly or BSG, or referring to more real world topics. There's a nice video on You Tube that combines the song "In the Black" with Firefly/Serenity images. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xXFXzYKgBpA
VIEW ALL BY · Wednesday July 01, 2009 06:11am EDT
Wednesday July 01, 2009 06:57am EDT
VIEW ALL BY · Wednesday July 01, 2009 11:18pm EDT
Rhiannon, Fleetwood Mac
Lots of Brian Eno stuff
Deep Purple had an album called Taliesen
Bob Dylan's All Along the Watchtower
I saw Pink Floyd listed but not Dark Side of the Moon
Yes's Roundabout and lots of others
Thursday July 02, 2009 12:50pm EDT
VIEW ALL BY · Thursday July 02, 2009 01:06pm EDT
VIEW ALL BY · Thursday July 02, 2009 01:27pm EDT
"In the year 2525" - by Zager and Evans
"Carnevil Number 9" - by Emmerson, Lake and Palmer
-- Observations from an aging hippie
Thursday July 02, 2009 01:42pm EDT
I drive the very latest hover car
I don't know where you are
But I miss you so much (til then)
I met someone who looks a lot like you
She does the things you do
But she is an IBM
From Yours Truly, 2095
Thursday July 02, 2009 01:47pm EDT
VIEW ALL BY · Thursday July 02, 2009 02:23pm EDT
One of my faves from the 80s was the first album from Planet P. They scored a minor hit with "Why Me?. In fact, that whole album was scifi - time travel, habitation of the moon, rocket ships. Great album.
Thursday July 02, 2009 02:37pm EDT
Jim
Thursday July 02, 2009 04:52pm EDT
Thursday July 02, 2009 05:13pm EDT
VIEW ALL BY · Thursday July 02, 2009 05:32pm EDT
Then there are the wonderful B-52's Hallucinating Pluto, Cosmic Thing, Nude on the Moon: The B-52's Anthology, Planet Claire, and more.
And we can't forget Queensryche and their Operation: Mindcrime I & II.
VIEW ALL BY · Thursday July 02, 2009 05:55pm EDT
The band is rife with SF elements, and a better SF-related song off the same album might be "Little Neutrino."
Thursday July 02, 2009 06:09pm EDT
In the video of "Making of A Night at the Opera" Brian discusses the song and describes how he wrote it consciously as a "Science Fiction Folk Song", related to time dilation.
The clip where he discusses this, as well as some truly great clips of live performances of the song are all available on YouTube and accessible via search. The song appears to be immensely popular with the fans who come out to the live performances and is often done as an aufdience sing-along. (even very recently, as the band still tours as "Queen with Paul Rodgers" following the death of Freddie Mercury).
-Steve
Thursday July 02, 2009 11:18pm EDT
And then there's Prince's "Orion's Arms" which really evokes _The Ring_ by Daniel Keyes Moran to me.
To misquote Calvin from _Calvin and Hobbes_, there's SF EVERYwhere!
Thursday July 02, 2009 11:58pm EDT
Shaped Signs, a small German group, also do some amazingly evocative work.
Machinae Supremacy do the same, though for totally different reasons and style.
For fantasy, try Basil Poledouris' soundtrack for Conan the Barbarian. Awesome stuff.
VIEW ALL BY · Friday July 03, 2009 03:29am EDT
Hunters And Collectors' Holy Grail, which puts me very strongly in mind of Michael Moorcock's The Eternal Champion, because the situation described, and the "external environment" of the story - a dream - happen to coincide so perfectly; and Midnight Oil's Forgotten Years always puts me in mind of the Akallabeth.
Make of it what you will ...
Friday July 03, 2009 10:45am EDT
Sunday July 05, 2009 05:27am EDT
Peter Schilling - Major Tom (Coming Home), Noah Plan
Cream - Tales of Brave Ulysses
Police - Wrapped Around Your Finger, Synchronicity, King of Pain
Heather Alexander - Familiar's Promise, March of Cambreadth, others
Jefferson Airplane - Blows Against the Empire (entire album, nominated for a Hugo award)
Rush - 2112 (entire album) + others
Al Stewart - Merlin's Time
Chris DeBurgh - The Ecstasy of Flight
Styx - Castle Walls, Born for Adventure, others
Sunday July 05, 2009 11:10pm EDT
Billy Joel’s Miami 2017 (Seen the Lights Go Out On Broadway) should be on this list.
Jonathan Coulton’s Skullcrusher Mountain is fun and Aimee Mann’s Lost in Space is melancholic.
I don’t think Donovan’s Atlantis has been mentioned.
If The Killers’s Spaceman was cited I missed it, but it’s late and I’m tired so I think I’ll stop here.
Monday July 06, 2009 03:09pm EDT
"Ladytron" by Roxy Music has a very 70s space age vibe too; actually a lot of early Roxy does, like "In Every Dream Home A Heartache" or "Out of the Blue." Probably the Eno influence, though I think Bryan Ferry liked science fiction.
And for some reason, "Seven Seas of Rhye" by Queen is about a fantasy world Freddie Mercury and his sister made up, but it always makes me think of Greek mythology-- Theseus and the minotaur and so on. Maybe the reference to challenging a titan.
Of course, Kraftwerk, too. The Man-Machine is essentially a piece of science fiction (what if robots made music?).
Moving forward to something a little more of my time, Goldfrapp always sounded to me like the soundtrack to the coolest science fiction film that never existed, very eerie and melancholy, and I like writing to it. (Sidenote: I always thought "Lovely Head" would make a great Bond theme, and in looking up the album it appears I wasn't far off, as it was inspired by Shirley Bassey.) "Pilots" is the only song that I can think of as having specifically SF undertones, though.
Monday July 06, 2009 05:15pm EDT
#76 mike51 - as I read through the comments I was thinking I would be the first to remember "Children of the Sun" but you beat me to it; I'll just add that it was by Billy Thorpe, and yep, pretty much his one hit.
VIEW ALL BY · Tuesday July 07, 2009 11:15am EDT
Tales of Mystery and Imagination and I, Robot by the Alan Parsons Project.
Audion, Sequencer, Electronic Realizations and The Jupiter Menace by Larry Fast/Synergy.
Some Vangelis and Synergy material turned up on Carl Sagan's Cosmos series.
VIEW ALL BY · Tuesday July 07, 2009 05:23pm EDT · amended on Tuesday July 07, 2009 05:28pm EDT
Speaking of which-- somebody else has already mentioned Blue Oyster Cult. My favorite Espers song is their cover of "Flaming Telepaths", which I think comes from one of the BOC albums that was written with or inspired by Michael Moorcock.
And I second Abney Park, too. Great sfnal stuff-- what could you expect from a band that lives in a time-traveling zeppelin?
VIEW ALL BY · Friday July 10, 2009 12:34pm EDT
"Pax Deorum" by Enya
"Bloodletting" by Concrete Blonde
A lot of Tori Amos, though not explicitly sfnal in the lyrics, is very evocative of the feel if you ask me. And of course, there's the fact that she name-checks Neil Gaiman all the time ("If you need me me and Neil'll be/Hanging out with the Dream King/Neil says hi by the way")
Depeche Mode, same thing.
VIEW ALL BY · Monday July 13, 2009 02:02am EDT
Along with many fine suggestions from above:
- Sonic Youth's _Daydream Nation_ album is pretty much the soundtrack to Gibson's _Neuromancer_ and _Count Zero_.
- Frank Black (ex Pixies) is frequently sfnal if you listen for it, and on 'Big Red' namechecks Kim Stanley Robinson's Mars books. I always get a bit of a shiver when he sings about how they're going to "pain that green map blue".
VIEW ALL BY · Monday July 13, 2009 03:04am EDT
VIEW ALL BY · Saturday July 18, 2009 04:17pm EDT
#63 gallegosart: Thanks for noting that "Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots pt. 1" is not the only SFnal song the Flaming Lips created. "One More Robot/Sympathy 3000-21" and "In the Morning of the Magicians" both call to mind many Asimov stories and novels, and "All We Have Is Now" is about a man's future self coming back to warn him of the coming apocalypse.
I recently started listening to sHEAVY, a metal band with songs like "The Time Machine," "Invasion of the Micronauts," etc. They also have a long quotation from Asimov on their home page.
VIEW ALL BY · Thursday July 23, 2009 11:09pm EDT
also. I'm going to ninth The Flaming Lips because they rule.