This week we have some cool bits of space music to roundup. First of all we have NASA already first and last artist in residence (air), but what is covered by SETI?
Not-for profit is the ET looking signed only multimedia artist Charles Lindsay for a three year stint as its first air, during which he will grow the program and "cross disciplinary artistic expression to explore and illuminate origin, to promote art and prevalence of life in the universe."
As you see in the image above, Lindsay's work has definitely looks like a draw. He used a camera-less, carbon-based emulsion photographic procedure. Custom ambient of soundscapes, his employer created his works-a process accompany processing that contains patterns of NASA's audio archive. Please visit his official website, some of them to hear.
As shared over at Wired, it was a good week for live music on board the international space station. In the following video, astronaut Catherine Coleman plays the flute for us in microgravity, continues a long tradition of live music in the orbit. In the past, people have taken up. everything from synths, didgeridoos. Ten days before Christmas 1965, carried out in fact, the astronauts aboard the Gemini 6 a format variant of the holiday tune "Jingle bells" with a mouth organ and bells. Anyway, here is Coleman (She whips it out around 1: 20):
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This week hear what? Well, can Luke Twyman Neverest songs before recently scored the film "All that glitters" and try the tracks right here. I interviewed Twyman in this previous space music post about his excellent solar beat space music application. It is to do good things way.
Originally posted on HSW: space music: SETI, artist in residence and an orbital flutist
Image: courtesy of SETI.
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