Frank Sinatra, Buck Owens and Merle Haggard on the Moon
You can see most of this segment on YouTube of course but it’s fun to discover what some of the astronauts chose to listen to in outer space, even if the selection of Frank Sinatra’s “Fly Me to the Moon” is no surprise. The Sinatra standard, which was written in 1954 and first performed by Kaye Ballard (!), was originally featured on the album, “It Might As Well Be Swing,” a collaboration between Sinatra and Count Basie in 1964. And it was played by the astronauts of Apollo 10 – Thomas P. Stafford, John W. Young and Eugene A. Cernan – during their May 1969 voyage.
The cassette tape, which was compiled for the astronauts by Al Bishop, an employee of Boeing at the time, also included “Moonlight Serenade” (by Sinatra), “Going Back to Houston” by Dean Martin, and songs by the Kingston Trio. Later, Sinatra would dedicate “Fly Me to the Moon” to the Apollo 10 astronauts when he performed it on his November 1969 TV special “Sinatra.” The popular standard has also been featured in Oliver Stone’s Wall Street, Clint Eastwood’s Space Cowboys, Martin Scorsese’s The King of Comedy and others.
For the Apollo 14 mission, manned by commander Alan B. Shepard, Jr., Stuart A. Roosa and Edgar D. Mitchell, Roosa received a personalized playlist from country-western star Buck Owens, thanks to a D.J. from Houston who instigated the idea. How cool is it to send a Buck Owens song to the moon but also have him record a special introduction of it for the Apollo 14 team? “Hi, this is Buck Owens with the Buckaroos. We came down to the studio and thought we’d put together a little thing that you can take along with you on your trip. Now you know when you get back they’re probably gonna put you in the movies so the first thing we’re gonna do for you is to play a little song called “Act Naturally.” It goes like this….” “Act Naturally,” written by Johnny Russell and Voni Morrison and recorded by Owens in 1963, actually enjoyed some crossover success with younger audiences in 1965 when The Beatles recorded it with Ringo on the vocals. By the time of the Apollo 14 mission, which launched on January 31, 1971, the song was a country-western classic, one which Owens & Ringo Starr would re-record together in 1989. See the music video of it below.
The Apollo 16 crew – John W. Young, T. Kenneth Mattingly Jr., and Charles M. Duke Jr. – were also partial to country music and got a personal cassette from Merle Haggard who started his set with his 1971 hit, “Someday We’ll Look Back,” and this greeting: “This is something a little different for me. My name is Merle Haggard and this is my band The Strangers and I hope we’ll be able to do something you’ll enjoy hearing on the way to the moon and of course we hope that you come back but we want you to leave this tape THERE, ok?” I don’t know whether the astronauts did actually leave Haggard’s tape on the moon during their April 1972 mission but I’d like to think that Haggard’s music is a big hit on Mars and beyond, even if his politics were to the right of Nixon and Reagan.
This little interlude in FOR ALL MANKIND only whets your appetite for what other music was sent into space on the other missions and who listened to what. It’s also one of the rare moments in the documentary that pauses to humanize the astronauts by showing us a glimpse of their leisure time on board when they weren’t totally engaged in manning the craft. Director Al Reinert, in an interview with Austin Chronicle reporter Anne S. Lewis, said he “went to great lengths to find out what music each one took and then, while I was interviewing them, I’d play that tune. They would completely space out and the music would trigger some powerful memories – it was a great way to get into these guys’ heads that was totally emotional. My goal was to get to know them really well and get each one to relax enough to talk about what it was really like instead of all the tech stuff.” FOR ALL MANKIND is indeed an emotional experience but also such a visually dazzling one that it demands to be seen on the big screen or at least a big screen TV if you’re lucky enough to have one. It is the ultimate trip movie and surpasses Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey – even Keir Dullea’s cosmic celestial ride – because this is the real thing. Some of the footage is so fantastical you can’t believe it wasn’t created by a Hollywood special effects team. I know there are some people out there who prefer to believe the urban myth that the moon landings were actually shot on a sound stage in some remote U.S. location – the premise of Peter Hyam’s uninspired Capricorn One – but the reality is even stranger.
Yes, the Apollo program was enormously expensive. Billions of dollars were poured into it, despite public criticism in some quarters. Instead of spending money on the space race, why weren’t we trying to improve conditions on our own planet such as putting that money toward the needy or to feed people or to provide better educations for everyone or some similar humane cause? That may account for why the program ended in 1972, even though NASA’s objective to land a man on the moon was actually a directive from President John F. Kennedy who in a Sept. 12, 1962 speech vowed that the U.S. would land a spacecraft on the moon and that “it will be done before the end of this decade.”
In retrospect the space program may have had more to do with the political agendas of both the U.S. and Russia, who were fierce competitors in the space race, a situation that was neutralized by the end of the Soviet Union’s communist regime. But, whatever the motivations behind the Apollo program, I still find it hard to believe at times that we actually landed men on the moon and they returned. Anyone born after 1972 would probably find the whole idea an impossible dream, something that might happen in their future. Yet, it happened 40 years ago. And while it may not ever happen again in our lifetimes – sending missions to the moon or other planets – the amazing thing is that it happened at all.
But THE REALLY IMPORTANT QUESTION IS - What Song by a Still Living Musician Would You Take to the Moon?
4 Responses Frank Sinatra, Buck Owens and Merle Haggard on the Moon
I’m taking ONCE IN A LIFETIME by the Talking Heads. I’d be singing the last line most of the way: And you may find yourself living in a shotgun shack Once in a Lifetime. Excellent choice, Jerry. I think I would take an instrumental. Maybe Cosmic Ballad by the Moog duo Perrey-Kingsley or the theremin enhanced theme song from The Incredible Shrinking Man. Then again I think extraterrestrials need to experience the original “Louie, Louie” by Richard Berry and the Pharoahs or anything by The Ramones. Well, if conductors count the same as composers I’d say any decent version of “The Blue Danube” would be supreme. Or Wendy Carlos’ version of “Air On A G String”. But if the composer must be alive, I’d say Kraftwerk’s “Spacelab” would be the best choice. Leave a Reply |
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I agree with your amazement that the moon landing actually happened. Seems a long time ago in a very different America — and world.
I’m going to have to seek out “For All Mankind” and watch it again. I’ve seen bits but I can’t swear I’ve seen the whole thing, even though it’s been on television.
Thanks for a great post about a unique aspect of the astronauts’ inspiration!