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"Floating in Heaven" is a song by astrophysicist and guitarist Brian May (of Queen), and singer and bassist Graham Gouldman (of 10cc). It was released on 12 July 2022 [1] [2] on digital streaming platforms including a music video on the official Queen YouTube channel, [3] the full song [1] and instrumental [4] released under the Graham Gouldman - Topic channel.
The song was published in 1947, and was further popularized in the 1948 movie Romance on the High Seas, where it was sung by Doris Day accompanied by the Page Cavanaugh Trio. [1] The lyrics deal with a person who is through with love and therefore metaphorically wants to throw everything away in a box into the sea.
This song became one of the first two songs sung in space: this happened on August 12, 1962, on board the spacecraft "Vostok 3 and 4" when the first Ukrainian Soviet cosmonaut Pavlo Popovych from Ukraine, who had previously been fond of opera singing, performed it at the special request of Serhiy Korolyov, a prominent Soviet rocket engineer and ...
"Fracture" by Edison's Children (Neil Armstrong's son's band) from their 11/11/2011 released album about an Alien Abduction "In The Last Waking Moments...", [14] [15] the opening song performed at the NASA Concert Celebration for 50th Anniversary of Neil Armstrong & Apollo 11 starring Rick Armstrong on bass & guitar [16] [17]
NASA astronaut Catherine Coleman plays a flute aboard the International Space Station in 2011.. Music in space is music played in or broadcast from a spacecraft in outer space. [1] [failed verification] The first ever song that was performed in space was a Ukrainian song “Watching the sky...” [2] (“Дивлюсь я на небо”) sung on 12 August 1962 by Pavlo Popovych, cosmonaut ...
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In 1960, Peggy Lee released the song on the album Pretty Eyes, [18] then made it more popular when she performed it in front of a large television audience on The Ed Sullivan Show. [3] As the song's popularity increased, it became better known as "Fly Me to the Moon", [19] and in 1963 Peggy Lee convinced Bart Howard to make the name change ...