Category Archives: space music

Let’s Go to the Carnival

The Carnival of Space

This week’s Carnival of Space, #188, is up for all to enjoy. If you’ve never read or heard of the Carnival of Space, it’s a weekly event hosted by a different blogger — a sort of romp down the cosmic carnival midway. This week, the Carnival is hosted by AARTScope Blog and features entries from nearly a dozen science writers scattered around the Web, including one of my own entries.  This week’s host also did something rather cool — he has embedded QR codes for each bloggers so that folks who want to explore these entries from their mobile devices can simply scan the code and have the entry right there! Very neat idea and I’ve now embedded a QR code in my own page — over there in the left column. Here’s AARTScope’s QR code for you to use if you’re catching ME on mobile.

So, check out the Carnival — it’s a great way to catch some new views of the cosmos from readers you might not have seen yet.

On the skygazing front, there’s a good chance you can catch Jupiter and Venus together in the western sky over the next few nights. If you’ve got clear weather, step out about 35 or 40 minutes after sunset and look west. The bright starlike object will be Jupiter. The dimmer one closer to the horizon just below Jupiter will be Mercury.  The folks at Sky&Telescope.com have a nice little graphic that you can use as reference.

The western view the next few nights, courtesy of Sky&Telescope.com
Mark C. Petersen, aka Geodesium, in concert.

Finally, while you’re browsing around, check out my March 13, 2011 episode of 365 Days of Astronomy. This month, in response to queries about the music that appears behind my podcasts for 365 Days, I decided to do a segment about space music. It features cosmic sounds I’ve spent much of my adult life hearing around the house because it’s composed by my husband, Mark C. Petersen!

Check it out, and read more here!

Space Music Release

More Celebration

From time to time I mention Mr. SpaceMusic. While he does a LOT more than space music (show production and bookkeeping, to name a few other tasks he’s good at), he’s been a space music composer for lo these many years. In fact, he’s been doing it since we were both in college back in the Dark Ages. And so it seems that every few years he produces a new album of music of the genre that I’m referring to as “space” but used to be better known as “that stuff you play in the planetarium” and then morphed into “ambient” and “new age” and “spa music” and who knows what it’ll be called next. Whatever it is, it’s really, really nice.
Well, today Mr. SpaceMusic and I are celebrating the release of his 8th Geodesium album of music, called A Gentle Rain of Starlight. You can hop on over to his website and listen to samples, plus a full version of the title cut.

Album cover for Mr. Space Musics latest album
Album cover for Mr. Space Music's latest album

These albums usually come together after Mr. SpaceMusic has done a soundtrack for a project. This one is no different. It is the music from our just-released set of shows called Seasonal Stargazing. After he finished the soundtrack mixes, we started work on the “listening mixes,” which allow him to bring some of the lovelier bits and pieces “front and center” for the listener. These may or may not be obvious in the actual soundtracks, since (in theory) you’re supposed to be paying a wee bit more attention to the actual narrations, along with the music. But, for the purist, the music can stand on its own, too.

It was my job to listen critically and make suggestions about what tracks should be brought up louder, or quieted down, or whatever they needed. We went through a few versions of what we jokingly call “peer review” (it’s a pun) before the final mix emerged. It’s a nice break from writing (I also wrote the liner notes and a lot of the online material about the album), and I think the whole project turned out really well. I hope other folks enjoy it, too. If you’re a fan of the genre (whatever it’s called these days), go check it out!