(No news this week; Mandos take the news, it's all miserable.)
Essentially what it says on the tin: songs which weren't written with a scifi story in mind, but are clearly perfect fits. Here are the ones that spring to my mind:
To The Moon and Back, by Savage Garden
Sample lyrics:
Mama never loved her much and
Daddy never keeps in touch
That's why she shies away from human affection, but
Somewhere in a private place
She packs her bags for outer space
And now she's waiting for the right kind of pilot to come
And she'll say to him...
I would fly you to the moon and back
If you'll be, if you'll be my baby
I've got a ticket for a world where we belong
So would you be my baby?
I heard this on the radio yesterday morning and immediately had the idea for this thread. It connected itself instantly to Anne McCaffrey's Ship Who Sang/Brain & Brawn series (which are about spaceships with two 'crew' - a human captain, and a severely physically disabled 'shell person' acting as the ship's computer). In particular, my mind got hung up on The Ship Who Searched, and Tia/AH-1033, who very much fits the 'abandoned child' motif of the song, as well as literally hunting for the right human partner to fly to the stars with.
Carried by Honor, by Heather Dale
Sample lyrics:
When I was a child I thought about nothing
But valour and glory and victory's might
I started with little and built from it something
I thought I would need when the time came to fight
I forged my sword from the steel of my kingdom
I crafted my shield from the love of my kin
I'm carried by honour and dreams of a future
Made real with each battle I win.
Okay, it was sort of inevitable that this would jump straight to the Honor Harrington books, given the title... but it fits alarmingly well with the theme of the books - family, friendship, fighting to secure the future. The connection really clicked for me when I remembered that Queen Empress Elizabeth of the Star Empire of Manticore was given the name 'Soul of Steel' by the treecats... 'from the steel of my kingdom', indeed.
(This song was an exclusive reward for backers of the Queens of Avalon musical; it's mighty hard to find anything about it online.)
Say Something, by A Great Big World/Christina Aguilera
Sample lyrics:
And I am feeling so small
It was over my head
I know nothing at all
And I will stumble and fall
I'm still learning to love
Just starting to crawl
Say something, I'm giving up on you
I'm sorry that I couldn't get to you
Anywhere, I would've followed you
Say something, I'm giving up on you
From the first time I heard it, this was a perfect fit for a very specific scifi story that as far as I know doesn't exist. It's essentially the Downer Ending version of The Martian - a desperate scramble to rescue a stranded crew/ship, where all of humanity's efforts just... aren't enough.
Even more specifically, I'm imagining an AU film where NASA noticed the damage to the space shuttle Columbia... once it was already in orbit. There is an article about how, through sheer fluke, it would have been just possible to save the crew - provided everything went right. Well, in my film, it didn't, because space is actually hard.
(I mean, in theory you could use it if they managed to save most of the crew but not the one we've been focussing on - a la Armageddon. Maybe that's more viable?)
Hello, by Adele
Sample lyrics:
Hello, can you hear me?
I'm in California dreaming about who we used to be
When we were younger and free
I've forgotten how it felt before the world fell at our feet
There's such a difference between us
And a million miles
Hello from the other side
I must've called a thousand times
To tell you I'm sorry
For everything that I've done
But when I call you never
Seem to be home
Hello from the outside...
"A million miles". That's about three times the distance from the Earth to the Moon - or just about exactly the distance to Lagrange points 1 and 2, the points on the line between the sun and earth where satellites can be placed 'stationary' in space.
This is very clearly a song from someone who's living on orbit, at one of the Lagrange points, and radioing back to Earth (from their California-themed holodeck or something, or maybe they're on California Orbital). "The world fell at our feet". "Hello from the outside." And that's clearly the plot of one of those classic SF novels - a Heinlein, maybe? Or a Bradbury? I'm not sure which story it is, but I'm positive there's a story which fits this song perfectly.
(Alternately, 'a million miles is the difference between failure and a new chance', but the song doesn't fit that story. It's still a charming expression, though.)
So that's mine. What're yours?
hS