Monday Aug 19, 2024

Space Whales

From the alien dolphins in "Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy" (so long and thanks for all the fish) to the whale on the cover of the They Might be Giants album "Apollo 18," there are numerous examples of cosmic-dwelling cetaceans in science fiction and other space imaginings. Even more interestingly, these space whales' cosmic nature is often tied to their musical nature. In this episode, we ponder why this may be, and touch on some of our favorite space-whale-music examples. While we leave the details of several whale-themed musical works for other episodes (see references below), we consider instead the affordances and potential pitfalls of hearing whale vocalizations as music.

 

References 

Roger Payne, Songs of the Humpback Whale 

Roger Payne National Geographic flexidisc 

Alan Hovhaness, “And God Created Great Whales” 

George Crumb, “Vox Balaenae” 

Star Trek: The Voyage Home

Fantasia 2000 

Respighi “Pines of Rome” recording was by Pierre Monteaux and the Orchestre National de France, available at IMSLP 

Alexander Rehding and Daniel Chua, Alien Listening

Comments (2)

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Yes, that’s true! I think that’s also why the standard term for whale vocalization became ”song,” because that’s what he called it.

Monday Sep 09, 2024

R3beccaF

I didn’t realise until after listening to this that Roger Payne was the one to discover whale song and that, until 1967, we had no idea that whales sang, which makes it a space-age discovery

Tuesday Aug 27, 2024

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