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Astronaut’s ‘Space Oddity’ music video goes viral

Astronaut’s ‘Space Oddity’ music video goes viral

May 13, 2013 | 11:48 PM

A handout video grabbed image made available by Nasa showing CSA (Canadian Space Agency) astronaut Chris Hadfield performing aboard the International Space Station a revised version of David Bowie’s song Space Oddity.

Reuters/Cape Canaveral, Florida

A music video shot aboard the International Space Station went viral yesterday, turning an astronaut into an overnight music sensation with his zero-gravity version of David Bowie’s hit “Space Oddity.”

As the first Canadian to command the space station, a $100mn project of 15 nations, Chris Hadfield had already earned himself a place in the history books.

But as he prepared to return home yesterday after more than five months in orbit, Hadfield released a poignant “cyberspace” rendition of Bowie’s song, which was first released in 1969 just ahead of the Apollo 11 moon landing.

The video, with its familiar refrain “Ground Control to Major Tom,” had more than 1.5mn hits on YouTube early yesterday afternoon and was being touted as the first music video ever filmed in space.

Complete with re-worked lyrics and high quality footage that Hadfield and his crew mates shot aboard the orbital outpost, the video shows the astronaut singing about the impending end of his space mission while floating in mid-air above the blue Earth.

“Though I’ve flown 100,000 miles, I’m feeling very still and before too long I know it’s time to go,” the astronaut croons.

Hadfield, Nasa astronaut Tom Marshburn and Russian cosmonaut Roman Romanenko, actually have racked up many millions of miles as they circled about 250 miles (402km) above the planet over the past 5-1/2 months.

Hadfield’s singing and acoustic guitar playing is accompanied by stunning video of the space station flying around the planet, a guitar free-floating and an eerie shot of a spacesuit at night.

The video, which was put together with the help of Hadfield’s son Evan and with the support of David Bowie, ends with a Soyuz capsule parachuting to Earth.

The music video caps a public outreach campaign Hadfield has conducted since before he blasted off for the station in December 2012, sharing comments and photographs on Twitter and other social media outlets.

The music video is not Hadfield’s first public performance. He is the lead vocalist and bass guitar player in the Houston-based all-astronaut rock band, Max Q.

 

Space tourism won’t hurt environment: Branson

British billionaire Richard Branson said yesterday that rocket-powered space tourism flights by his firm Virgin Galactic would have only a minor impact on climate change.

More than 500 people have already reserved seats - and paid deposits on the $200,000 ticket price - for a minutes-long suborbital flight on the SpaceShipTwo (SS2) set to begin by the end of this year.

“We have reduced the (carbon emission) cost of somebody going into space from something like two weeks of New York’s electricity supply... to less than the cost of a economy round-trip from Singapore to London,” Branson told reporters in Singapore.

 

 

 

May 13, 2013 | 11:48 PM