Planetary Radio: Space Exploration, Astronomy and Science - Planetary Radio Special Edition: The Voyager Golden Record by Twenty Thousand Hertz
Episode Date: March 18, 2022We are honored to offer you this outstanding episode of one of our favorite podcasts. Twenty Thousand Hertz reveals the stories behind the world's most recognizable and interesting sounds. Here they p...resent the Voyager Golden Record carried by those beloved spacecraft that have departed our solar system on a journey to the stars. We hope you'll enjoy it as much as we have. We'll be back with a regular episode of Planetary Radio every Wednesday.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello again, space fans. It's Matt Kaplan with a special edition of our show.
Okay, it's not actually planetary radio, but I wish it was.
20,000 Hertz is one of my favorite podcasts, and not just because I'm crazy for sound
and how it enriches and enlivens our lives.
20,000 Hertz is also one of the best produced podcasts out there.
When they came to us with this terrific episode about the Voyager Golden Record,
we said we'd be happy and honored to add it to our feed.
If you like what you hear, you can subscribe in your favorite podcast player,
maybe the one you're listening to right now.
As always, I'll be back with the regular weekly edition of Planetary Radio every Wednesday.
Here is the Voyager Golden Record from 20,000 Hertz.
As the Secretary General of the United Nations,
who represent almost all of the human inhabitants of the planet Earth,
I send greetings on behalf of the people of our planet.
You're listening to 20,000 Hertz.
I'm Dallas Taylor.
We step out of our solar system into the universe
seeking only peace and friendship,
to teach if we are called upon,
to be taught if we are fortunate.
We know full well that our planet and all its inhabitants
are but a small part of this immense universe that surrounds us,
and it is with humility and hope that we take this step.
That was Kurt Waldheim, the fourth Secretary General of the UN.
And what you just heard is the first track from the most epic album of all time.
It was made by a team of scientists, artists, and historians,
hoping that one day other intelligent lifeforms might find it.
It's the Voyager Golden Record.
It's also a time capsule, and there's actually two of them.
They're currently
over 11 billion miles away, hurtling through space at over 30,000 miles an hour. These literal
golden records are attached to the Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 space probes. These probes were
launched in the late 70s, and today they're further away from Earth than any other human-made object.
The Voyager probes could continue to explore worlds unknown for more than a billion years.
So there is a theoretical chance that alien life could find one of these probes.
In the 70s, a committee chaired by Carl Sagan curated a record to ride on each craft.
Here's Carl talking about the record on the original Cosmos television series.
A phonograph record, golden, delicate, with instructions for use.
And on this record are a sampling of pictures, sounds, greetings, and an hour and a half
of exquisite music, The Earth's greatest hits.
A gift to cross the cosmic ocean from one island of civilization to another.
Recently, Osma Records has repressed the Voyager Golden Record using the original master tapes.
Before then, no one on Earth could hear the Golden Record in context.
But now, we're going to explore it together, track by track.
Kurt Waldheim, who you heard at the beginning of the episode,
is track one of the record.
He greeted whoever might find this record on behalf of all humanity.
Here's track two, which are hellos and greetings in 55 languages.
Silema, Hemen.
Oitnis poteste, hairete.
Shalom.
Hola y saludos a todos. I think it was an amazing project.
That's Linda Salzman Sagan.
She was in charge of organizing all of these greetings.
She was married to Carl Sagan at the time the records were made.
Their son, Nick Sagan, was recorded for the English greeting when he was just six years old.
Nick gave the greeting in English, and we never told
him this. He just said, hello from the children of planet Earth, and that was his greeting.
I get choked up when I think about it. I kind of appreciate his wisdom that he made a special greeting.
So he's a very remarkable young man.
Hello from the children of planet Earth.
The greetings continue into track three.
This time, it's from more members of the United Nations.
time, it's from more members of the United Nations.
The UN greetings on this track are mixed with another sound, humpback whale songs.
And by the track's end, the whale songs are the only sounds left.
The choice of whale songs was deliberate.
Carl Sagan believed that they carried a lot of information, just like human speech.
If I imagine that the songs of the humpback whale are sung in a tonal language,
then the number of bits of information in one song
is about the same as the information content
of the Iliad or the Odyssey.
If this record is found by Intergalactic Life,
it's possible they could understand a whale's song
just as well as they could understand human speech.
That brings us to track four, The Sounds of Earth.
This is a 12-minute sound essay that depicts the history of our planet.
The first part is known as the music of the spheres.
It's a sonic representation of the planets in our solar system rotating around the sun.
The music was composed mathematically, each planet given its own frequency.
The highest pitch you hear is Mercury.
The lowest is Jupiter.
Timothy Ferris and Ann Druin led the production of the sound essay.
They wanted to present an evolution of our planet.
So next comes the sound of thunder,
volcanoes, bubbling lava.
This is prehistoric Earth.
Each minute of the track takes us through
thousands of years of planetary development,
from the birth of life on Earth
to the modern day and beyond.
Linda also helped collect many of these sounds.
When we were going to actually record sounds,
I think Anne suggested that we try to do it in an evolutionary way.
So I went to a professor at Columbia who specialized in anthropology, and I got the sound of him striking a flint.
You know, there was a sense of wonder to it and a sense of the ridiculous and sublime.
About halfway through the track, we hear the first signs of human life.
A heartbeat.
Footsteps.
The first tools.
Then modern tools.
Transportation.
The launch of a spacecraft.
the launch of a spacecraft.
The last human sound on the track is a recording of Andruen's brain activity.
The hope was that extraterrestrials might be able to decode that data and read her thoughts.
It's an odd idea to think about whether, you know, an alien civilization could make sense of an EEG, but one doesn't know.
That's Timothy Ferris, who produced the Golden Record.
You know, when you play a piece of music for someone,
you don't know what they're going to make of it exactly.
If you're playing it for them, you hope they'll find something rewarding in it.
But I suppose that's the idea behind the Voyager record,
is that if someday, far away in space space and time you come across this thing,
we hope it's meaningful to you in some way. The track ends with the sound of a pulsar.
The pattern of this sound, plus the image of pulsars on the cover of the record,
can be used to calculate time and distance in space.
It comes together as a map of Earth's location in the galaxy.
It comes together as a map of Earth's location in the galaxy.
Timothy Ferris also led music selection for the record,
which brings us to track five.
This is the Brandenburg Concerto by J.S. Bach. I was concerned to represent some music that has strong mathematical foundations
because we might well be communicating with creatures who don't have hearing
or don't have hearing in the range or whose time scale is different
so that our rhythms might not make sense.
None of us imagined that aliens would be like us
and that they would
lounge back and listen to the music and experience it the way we do. So I was interested in finding
relationships in the music that would make sense even if you were just mathematically analyzing it.
And there are some pieces by Bach and Beethoven that are there for that purpose.
that are there for that purpose.
In addition to mathematical principles,
Timothy also wanted to find songs that could properly introduce us.
Much of the time, though,
we were just including pieces
because they were heartbreakingly beautiful
and we thought they represented our human values.
Next up is track six.
It's an Indonesian folk song called Katawang Puspawarna.
The piece is an introduction for a prince.
The lyrics name different flowers.
Each symbolize a spiritual
or philosophical state. Apparently, this was a favorite of Carl Sagan.
Carl Sagan and I were friends. We both had a particular interest in extraterrestrial
intelligence. How really would you communicate with an alien intelligence in
the distant future, was of great interest to us. And music was settled on quite early.
To make a record with music, and then we realized you could put other things in the grooves too.
And so we had natural sounds and greetings and the photos and all.
Two of my deepest interests in life had always been science and astronomy,
the universe as a whole on the one hand and music on the other.
So here was a chance to bring the two together.
Determining which songs represent humanity best is an enormous task.
Tim, Carl, and others listen together to album after album.
At one of these gatherings, they found track seven, Singunmi.
It's a percussion song from Benin, a nation in Africa.
The listening sessions themselves were great.
A lot of them were done in my apartment in New York.
At that time, I was, among other things, a music critic.
And I had thousands and thousands of LPs lining the walls.
And, you know, a good stereo, which is what people used to do in those days,
just sit and listen to music on a stereo.
It would have been incredible to attend these listening parties.
Imagine listening to music with the greatest scientific minds,
trying to figure out
what music should be
on an intergalactic
greatest hits record.
Track eight is a Lima song.
This piece is performed
by the indigenous people
in the rainforests of the Congo.
This song is followed by Australia Bonneber and Moikoi Song.
Track 9 sounds like this.
It's followed by track 10,
El Cascabel, a mariachi song.
You have to consider the dynamic you're in.
If you're going to make a brief collection, 90 minutes, from all the music on earth,
make a brief collection, 90 minutes, from all the music on Earth, then you are automatically going to exclude almost all of the great music because there's so much of it. We could have done a Voyager
record every year over the past 40 years, and they'd all be terrific. It's not as if you're
going to run out of great music. We try to get music from all around the world, not just from the culture that had created the spacecraft.
You end up really with one piece representing each kind of thing.
The one rock track on the record is Johnny Be Good by Chuck Berry.
Here's track 11.
Go, go, go, Johnny, go, go, go.
Timothy also used some creative engineering
to get as much music as possible onto the record.
The disc is the size of record that used to be recorded
at 33 and a third revolutions per minute.
I cut the Voyager record to half speed
so that we could have twice the content.
This took our high-end response down
from around 18,000 hertz to around 12.5, somewhere in there.
I figured a little bit of high-end loss was a good trade-off for doubling the information content of the record.
This doubled space allowed for even more diversity and culture on the record,
like track 12, Maru Amengi, a traditional folk song from New Guinea.
Track 13 is Sokaku Reibo.
This Japanese folk song is played on a bamboo flute.
Its title means depicting the the Cranes in Their Nest. Next up is track 14.
It's from the Baroque period of Western European music.
This is Partita for Violin Solo No. 3 in E Major by J.S. Bach.
Music means a lot to us, and I would be surprised if something like music didn't mean a lot to at least some other intelligent species.
The fact that it is nonspecific and yet communicates something to everyone.
Track 15 moves us forward in history to the classical period.
This is from the Mozart opera, The Magic Flute.
There's something fundamental about rhythms
that it's difficult to imagine any intelligent species
not having some familiarity with.
I thought music was a good way of maybe communicating,
isn't perhaps the right word, but memorializing the human species.
Track 16 is an ancient drinking song from the country of Georgia.
It dramatizes preparing for battle. Track 16 is an ancient drinking song from the country of Georgia.
It dramatizes preparing for battle.
We're now halfway through the Voyager Golden record.
At the end of one side of a record, there are wide grooves that catch the needle.
These are known as the takeout grooves, or run-out grooves.
Popular bands sometimes used to leave secret messages hand-etched in between these grooves.
So I'd composed a dedication and cleared it with the other members, which was, to the makers of music, all worlds, all times.
When the record was completed and was sent to NASA,
there was something called a compliance officer,
whose job it is to make sure that every part going onto a spacecraft
meets exact specifications.
When the compliance officer checked the Voyager record,
here was this handwriting,
and there was nothing about that in the blueprint,
so he rejected the part.
So with the project near completion,
a simple handwritten message almost derailed the entire thing.
We'll flip the record to Side B and finish the story after the break.
11 billion miles from here, the twin Voyager spacecraft carry golden records.
These disks are time capsules, memorials of our global culture. But a tiny visual detail of the record almost stalled the entire project.
Here's Timothy Ferris again.
We went through an anxious week or two when NASA was preparing a blank disk to replace
the ones we'd worked so hard on for fear that the non-standard part might threaten
the launch.
Carl had to go to the head of NASA to get a waiver.
His argument was that this would be the sole example
of human handwriting on the spacecraft,
and that argument carried the day.
So it was with a certain amount of relief
that Carl and I and our collaborators
watched the launch of the first of the two Voyagers down at the Cape
because there were times when we weren't sure
it was going to work out at all.
Thankfully, it did work out.
So it's time to flip the record.
This song, Rockadores and Drums, is track 17.
It's from the Ancash region of Peru.
The Voyager probes were launched in 1977.
Compared to the spacecraft of today,
they used really simple technology,
so NASA engineers had to use special techniques
to reach deep space.
The Voyagers are accidentally interstellar.
They used a sophisticated technique to fly past the giant planets, Jupiter, Saturn, on
out to Uranus and Neptune, in such a way that they were able to accelerate to ever higher
velocities.
And so their velocities exceed the escape velocity of the solar system.
That means they'll leave the sun and our planets behind forever
and drift in the Milky Way galaxy.
Because they're going to last so long in space,
a billion years is the lower bound on their likely lifetime,
it seemed appropriate to put some kind of time capsule aboard the craft.
Each probe travels in a completely different direction.
Their billion-year journey is likely to be lonely.
It's fun to imagine a lonely spacecraft drifting through space to track 18,
Melancholy Blues, performed by Louis Armstrong in the Hot 7. Next is track 19, Mugam, by Azerbaijani musician Kamil Jalalov.
Both Voyagers are now interstellar.
That means they've completely left our solar system.
They're the first and only human-made objects to do so.
The Voyagers will fly on for a billion years,
but unfortunately, they won't function for that long.
Soon, scientists may have to start shutting down instruments to try and save power.
They still send data back to Earth each day
but eventually the probes will go dark
and become hunks of metal hurtling through the void.
The Voyagers themselves will die
but their mission won't.
So back to the music.
Trek 20 is from a ballet.
Igor Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring.
By the way, when this premiered in Paris in 1913,
people rioted.
This was not what they expected from a ballet.
The next piece, track 21,
is Prelude and Fugue No. 1
from Bach's well-tempered Clavier.
And coming up next is track 22.
An epic symphony for an epic journey.
This is Beethoven's Symphony No. 5. This music sounds familiar to us,
but we really have no idea what aliens might make of it.
If they can hear like we do at all,
they might only be able to hear the higher frequencies.
Or maybe the lower frequencies. Or maybe they'll interpret
the grooves of the record in a totally different way, and they won't hear music at all.
It seems like miscommunication is a big possibility. Could we anger aliens with the
golden record? Track 23 is a Zale A. Dejo Heydutin.
This Bulgarian folk song is about an unkillable rebel hero.
Could aliens interpret this as a threat?
I never took that part of it very seriously, the idea that we'd somehow be
threatening someone. There is just nothing in the history of human species or any other
relatively intelligent species to suggest anything of the sort. So I saw no reason to
get into such considerations in making the Voyager record. The Voyager record is truly a message of peace.
Much of the music is friendly and joyful.
Next up is track 24.
It's a Navajo night chant called the Yibbushy Dance.
Track 25 is The Fairy Round by British composer Anthony Holborn.
Track 26 is from the Solomon Islands. Its name, Nara Naratana Kukuku, which translates to the cry of the megapode bird.
If he had to do it all over again,
Timothy says he would still use a record over newer digital technology.
People say, well, with digital technology,
we could include so much more information, but more isn't necessarily better. A 12-hour feature
film is not necessarily better than a two-hour feature film. So just shoveling large amounts of
data into a time capsule does not necessarily create a work of art. With the Voyager record,
we were interested in creating a work of art.
There's also the question of durability.
Remember, these records are supposed to last
one billion years.
They're not vinyl records
like you'd find at home on your shelf.
The Voyager golden records are made of copper
and plated in gold.
If I were doing the Voyager record today,
I would use exactly the same technology
because I can warrant that the information on that disc will last for a very long time.
There is no digital medium that would give me the same assurance.
So the technology of making the record, I would have done the same.
That would probably be a little harder to do today than it was in the 70s
when that was the universal
industry standard. Track 27, Wedding Song, is a Peruvian folk song. The woman singing the song
laments about marrying too young. It's a haunting melody.
Track 28 is Louis Chui.
The title means flowing streams in Mandarin. It captures the feeling of ever-moving water.
The Voyager craft will flow through space almost endlessly,
and possibly long after we're gone.
I have no way to estimate the odds
that the record would ever be encountered
by an alien civilization.
There's so many variables.
We don't yet know at what rate intelligence emerges
on planets that have life.
I imagine that life itself
is fairly widespread in the universe.
Another big variable is we don't know how long intelligence typically lasts.
A powerful species, technologically powerful species like ours,
might still be here in 100,000 years, or it might not.
You then get to the question of how many of those intelligent species
get involved in space exploration
or wire up a whole part of the galaxy so that they would even be able to detect something like Voyager.
We don't know that either.
The Voyager probe would be pretty easy to pick up.
It doesn't look like a space rock.
Discovering that it's out there in the first place, though, is pretty much a random chance.
The next track, track 29,
Jihad Kahan Ho from India.
The voyagers will travel huge scales
of time and distance,
truly entering the unknown.
Carl Sagan talks about this in his book, Pale Blue Dot.
Quote, perhaps no one in 5 billion years
will ever come upon them.
In that time, the evolution of the sun
will have burned the earth to a crisp
or reduced it to a whirl of atoms.
Far from home, untouched by these remote events,
the Voyagers, bearing the memories of a world that is no more,
will fly on.
We're nearing the end of the record.
This is the second to the last track, track 30.
I think my very first suggestion was the track
Dark Was the Night, Cold Was the Ground,
a field recording from decades
ago in the American South.
The song is about enduring a cold night
with nowhere to sleep.
Everything on the Voyager project was both personal and universal.
We're trying to represent the whole human species.
The first meeting we ever had on the Voyager record,
I proposed two goals.
The first, that we try to be as inclusive as possible.
And second, that we make a good record.
that we try to be as inclusive as possible.
And second, that we make a good record.
The final track, track 31,
is Beethoven's String Quartet No. 13, Cavatina.
This record is about humans.
It could be our first introduction to alien life,
or it could become the only remaining evidence of our existence,
or it might just be for us.
You know, Einstein said,
imagination is more important than knowledge.
There's a certain wonderfulness that this project was wrapped up in.
The Voyager record says about humanity that however limited or small or primitive we may be or have been when we made the record, we had the imagination and the intellect to
think about scales of time and
space far beyond our own. The Voyager Golden Record will circle our galaxy essentially forever.
That means there's plenty of time for it to be found, if there's anyone out there to find it.
Its message may not be understood, but its intent may be.
The Voyager spacecraft itself is a message to the cosmos.
It simply says, we are, and games sound incredible. Find out more at DeFacto Sound, a sound design team dedicated to making television, film, and games sound incredible.
Find out more
at defactosound.com.
This episode was written
and produced by Lee MacDonald.
And me, Dallas Taylor.
With help from Sam Sneebly.
It was sound designed
and mixed by Nick Spradlin.
Thanks to science writer
Timothy Ferris.
Timothy was the lead producer
on the Voyager Golden Record.
You can find him online at timothyferris.com.
Thanks also to artist and writer Linda Salzman Sagan.
We absolutely couldn't have made this episode without Osmer Records.
They recently repressed the Golden Record from the original master tapes.
For 40 years before that, no one on earth could listen to it.
It also comes with an incredible book that
I keep right here in my own studio. It outlines the history of the project in much greater detail
than we had time for. It also includes all of the photos that were on the record. So go buy it at
osmarecords.com. That's O-Z-M-A records.com. If you want to learn more about any of these tracks
on the Golden Record, we've also posted a detailed track listing on our website. Also, if you're a teacher and you want to use this episode or any
of our episodes in your classroom, we'd be delighted. Our mission is to make the world
sound better and to help everyone understand sound in a deeper way. The non-Golden Record
music in this episode was from our friends at Musicbed. Find out more at musicbed.com. Lastly, what would you include on a contemporary Golden Record? Let us know what
music and sounds you'd choose on Facebook, Twitter, or by writing hi at 20k.org. Thanks for listening. That story came from 20,000 Hertz,
a podcast that reveals the stories behind the world's most recognizable and interesting sounds.
They've done several other fascinating episodes related to space.
In one, they take a deep dive into space communication systems.
In another, they tour the solar system, exploring the sounds of other planets,
as we've done now and then on Planetary Radio.
As I said, it's one of my favorite podcasts,
and we're grateful to them for allowing us to share their story
of the Voyager Golden Record with you. Subscribe to 20,000 Hertz right here in your podcast player
at Astra.