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Air Force Band members and guests sing the new U.S. Space Force service song during the 2022 Air, Space and Cyber Conference in National Harbor, Md., Sept. 20, 2022. (U.S. Air Force photo by Eric Dietrich)

Basically my partner was playing "Space Song" by Beach House in the car an hour ago, and as soon as I heard the lyrics "fall back into place" - I instantly recognized the song from somewhere but I can't remember where from.

I've tried looking it up and I know it was played in The Stand, Zoe, Atlanta, and Tragedy Girls - but I've seen none of those titles. I could swear I heard that song fairly recently, sometime within the last two years. It might have been from a show or movie on Netflix? I'm honestly not sure.

All I know is that the "Space Song" - specifically the part with the lyrics "fall back into place" plays during a really sad/shocking scene. I can't for the life of me remember what TV show or movie featured it, but I do remember "Space Song" played during an emotionally heavy scene. I'm pretty confident whatever I saw that featured this song was a TV series, and I also remember seeing the lyrics "fall back into place" in the subtitles as the scene was playing.

It's possible I may have heard this song in a YouTube video (like a web series) but I don't think that's the case. And it's also possible what I heard may have been a ripoff of the song "Space Song" by Beach House because I know that's something that does happen unfortunately (and if that's the case, the producers should be called out).

If anyone can help me out, I would really appreciate it! I've been trying to figure this out for the last hour or so but haven't had any luck. It seems there's no up-to-date directory of what shows or movies the song could have been featured in because I could swear it's been used somewhere within the past year or two.

Hey blog-pals, long time no speak!In celebration of the latest chapter of Atlas releasing into the wild, I wanted to write down some thoughts about each of the brand-new songs. There's so much to tell you about this collection of songs, I don't even know where to begin!

___________ (played Drums made out of Auto parts on "Mercury") - As a mechanic and an incredible drummer, my friend Jordan Hill came up with the idea of creating a drumset made entirely out of Automotive Parts! He made a video showing it off and thousands of folks were blown away! Not only is it an interesting idea, but it actually sounds incredible! So when I was writing Mercury, a song I was limiting myself to using only metallic instruments, asking Jordan to play his Auto-Parts kit was a perfect fit! I couldn't be happier with how it turned out! Visit his blog here.

1_____________ (played Brass on "Mercury") - One of my favorite people on the planet, and a frequent Sleeping At Last guest, I knew right away as I wrote the brass section for this song that Jeremy would be the guy to play/record it! He's new to playing Brass, and just like everything he does, he sounds incredible! Hear Jeremy's music here!

2____________ (played Cellos on "Earth") - Another frequent guest of mine, Melissa came out to the studio with specific instructions - don't listen to this song more than a couple times. As with all things on Earth, I wanted the cellos to be reactive, more than planned. So we sat down with the song and recorded ideas as we had them! I couldn't be more delighted with the results! Melissa's a true talent and a great sport!

As I set out to write SPACE 1, I watched as many documentaries on Space as I could, read a bunch of sci-fi and studied up on the nuances of each of the planets in our Solar System. Basically, it was a kid-in-a-candy-store situation. I had SUCH a wonderful time writing songs inspired by these gorgeous planets!

What better way to segue from the "Light" EP, than to start with the source of all light in our world? The gentle, hopeful opening represents the Sun we know from down here on Earth - warmth, life and light. As if to follow that light closer and closer up to its source, the song picks up, becoming more and more driving and electric. I wanted to explore that spectrum of gentleness and intensity. Instrumentally I chose to use as many bright instruments as possible (mandolins, glockenspiels, synths, harpsichords, etc). Lyrically, this song revolves around the lyric "Infinity times infinity" which is of course a classic kid argument. The song is about division, arguing complex beliefs and ideas with one another - adult stuff, but realizing that we're just little kids, all under the same Sun, trying to out-do each other in one way or another.

For a planet 70% metallic, it felt fitting to only use metallic instruments on this song (except for my voice, of course, which is made of human). I asked my close pal Jeremy Larson to play Brass and he did gorgeously. Then, I asked my friend Jordan Hill to play drums using the incredibly unique drum-kit he built himself, made entirely out of auto-parts. (What?!) Such a cool sound! To see his kit, watch his viral video here. I'll be posting a separate blog post about these drums soon.. it was a pretty fun collaboration!

Named after the goddess of love, I had to write a love song. Sung from the perspective of an Astronomer (myself being the most novice one ever,) I wrote this as a long song for my wife. Side note: I noticed that this song goes really well with being on a train. It represents the most lighthearted part of this collection of songs.

Thankfully, I have my upcoming "Land" EP to execute further inspiration from the one planet we all know best. Made up of primarily Piano, Cello and Voice, which I have decided are the most Earthly of all of the instruments. My friend Melissa Bach played Cello gorgeously throughout this song. Melissa's been a part of many Sleeping At Last recordings, including: Emphasis, Goes On and On, as well as the entire Storyboards album.

An instrumental! I treated this one as if I were given an opportunity to score the Apollo 11 Mission. After watching hours of footage, I wrote this piece of music imagining as best I could as to what music for an adventure like this might sound like. I had a lot of fun doing it... and if you listen closely, you can hear (in sequence from launch, Moon-landing to the return back to Earth) NASA audio from that Apollo 11 mission scattered throughout the song.

The red planet, named after the god of war. I really didn't think I wanted to write a song about war, but somehow the words and stories spilled out of my head. This story follows a few young soldiers, off to war, and consequently returning home only to fight an entirely different, internal war within themselves. A darker song, to be sure.

I want to add a spoken title to a reading (with music) made in Garageband, but can't find a way to insert space before the recording. Obviously I could slide all the tracks along, but I have made many volume changes throughout, and these don't move with the recordings. Is there some way to add a section to the beginning that moves everything to the right, to allow me to insert my title?

In addition to HangTime's advice I'd like to point out the "Arrangement Track". (see also the GB help section on Arrangement Track). In the arrangement track you can label parts of your song with names like "chorus", "intro", and then drag these parts around and arrange them freely, with all the timing and automation you added. So you just could add a second arrengement region "Spoken Intro" at the end of your song and then drag it to the beginning.

The first humpback whale recordings thus serve as a strange and delicate document, not only of the songs themselves, but also of a particular moment in human culture. The dramatic shift in attitude to the whale-loving one we now take for granted resulted from changes not in how humans think about whales but in how they think about each other. And at the center of this shift was the question of communication.

We're the mighty watchful eye,

Guardians beyond the blue,

The invisible front line,

Warfighters brave and true.

Boldly reaching into space,

There's no limit to our sky.

Standing guard both night and day,

We're the Space Force from on high.

Laika, the first living creature sent into space, died aboard Sputnik II in November 1957. The Soviet dog inspired the song "Sputniks and Mutniks" by Ray Anderson and the Homefolks. OFF/AFP/Getty Images  3____________

Especially music. At the time Sputnik launched, Jerry Engler was living in Rochester, N.Y., and working for Kodak. He was also something of a local celebrity with his rockabilly music. He says that while a lot of people were fearful of Russian spacecraft, he was excited.

"You have the rockabilly artists who are essentially having a great deal of fun and basically swapping out hot rods for spacecraft," says Bill Geerhart, who runs a Web site and the Atomic Platters record label, both devoted to Cold War music. "And then you have the country songs which are by and large very nationalistic and, in some cases, paranoid."

And many were scared of what the Russians might launch next and that the U.S. was falling behind in the space race. But some songwriters took a just-you-wait attitude toward the Russians, like "Satellite Baby" by blues pianist Roosevelt Sykes:

Back in 2013, astronaut Chris Hadfield performed a cover of one of Bowie's most famous songs, "Space Oddity," from aboard the International Space Station. The ISS was a fitting venue for a performance of the space-themed song, but there's a lot more behind "Space Oddity" than most people know.

In England, it was always presumed that it was written about the space landing, because it kind of came to prominence around the same time. But it actually wasn't. It was written because of going to see the film 2001, which I found amazing. I was out of my gourd anyway, I was very stoned when I went to see it, several times, and it was really a revelation to me. It got the song flowing. 5376163bf9

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