A look at the music that humanity has sent into space.

By Jon Powell

Published: Saturday, 10 February 2024 at 09:23 AM


As the needle touches down on a vinyl record, so has music itself touched down on other worlds beyond Earth.

Whether the melodies have been transmitted from Earth’s surface or launched aboard spacecraft into space, it can be said that music has twinkled the stars.

Radio signals have been leaving our planet for years, and even now, someone, somewhere, may be playing the PopMaster quiz on a distant world – and still getting it wrong.

It’s a comforting thought to consider that vastly superior alien life may not be able to name that Number One hit from the 1980s.

Thomas Pesquet plays saxophone in the Cupola module on the International Space Station, 31 May 2017. Credit: ESA/NASA

Music in the Apollo era

The crew of Apollo 10 managed to make their own ‘music’ in space.

As the astronauts rounded the far side of the Moon in 1969, they reported whistling sounds to NASA officials back on Earth.

These notes turned out to be the result of crossed wires in the communication system between the lunar module and the command module.

However, in a test-run for Apollo 11’s actual playing of the track on the lunar surface later, Frank Sinatra’s ‘Fly Me to the Moon’ made its first trek with Apollo 10.