Galaxy Song

"Galaxy Song"
Single by Monty Python
from the album Monty Python's The Meaning of Life
Released 1983
Genre
Label CBS / MCA
Writer(s)

"Galaxy Song" is a Monty Python song written by Eric Idle and John Du Prez.[1]

The song first appeared in the 1983 film Monty Python's The Meaning of Life and was later released on the album Monty Python Sings. In 2014 the song was featured in the live stage show Monty Python Live (mostly).

Premise and synopsis

The song originally debuted during the comedy sketch "Live Organ Transplants". The paramedic (John Cleese), upon failing to persuade Mrs. Brown (Terry Jones) to donate her liver, opens the refrigerator doors to reveal a man wearing a pink morning suit (Eric Idle). The man accompanies Mrs. Brown through outer space singing various statistics about the galaxy. The upshot of the song (which follows a synthesized instrumental montage that, in the movie, is accompanied by a computer-animated picture of a woman being impregnated) is that in the grand scheme of the universe, the likelihood of Mrs. Brown's existence was almost zero, but that she should "pray that there's intelligent life somewhere up in space, 'cause there's bugger all down here on Earth." The singer returns to the refrigerator, at which point Mrs. Brown admits that the singer convinced her to hand over her liver.

Accuracy of astronomical figures

The lyrics include a number of astronomical facts and figures, which may have accurately reflected the known values at the time the song was written. Some of these have changed as improved technology has allowed scientists to make more accurate measurements.[2]

Remake

In 1984 Jim Post on his album Crooner From Outer Space sang a Remake called "Galaxy/Lighten Up".[14]

In 1999, Clint Black recorded a remake of "The Galaxy Song" on his album D'lectrified, as well as the "Outside Intro (To Galaxy Song)", which he co-wrote and sang with Idle.

In late 2012, an updated version of "The Galaxy Song" aired on BBC Two in a trailer for Wonders of Life, hosted by Prof. Brian Cox.[15] It was called "The Galaxy DNA Song" by Idle.[16]

In 2014, the song was performed in the stage show Monty Python Live (mostly). Idle emerges from a refrigerator and begins singing to an elderly woman (Carol Cleveland). At one point, they start dancing on stage as a clip shows them dancing among the stars with the galaxy in the background. After the song ends, the show cuts to a clip of Cox at Cambridge discussing the various scientific inaccuracies within the song. He is knocked over by Stephen Hawking going by in his motorized chair. Hawking tells Cox not to be so pedantic, and then starts to sing the song himself. During September 2014, Hawking's cover for the song was released as a single.

References

  1. Monty Python Sings CD booklet. 1989 Virgin Records
  2. Kohlmiller, Paul (December 2003). "A study of the Galaxy Song by Eric Idle". Ephemeris. San Jose Astronomical Association.
  3. "NASA IMAGE satellite,Ask the Space Scientist Archive". NASA.
  4. "What is Earth's mean orbital speed?". WhatIs.com.
  5. Pool, Jerry. "Earth's Speed". AOL. Archived from the original on 19 September 2003.
  6. "The Speed of Light". University of Virginia.
  7. Elert, Glenn. "Period of the Sun's Orbit around the Galaxy (Cosmic Year)". hypertextbook.com.
  8. "Ready Reference". justforkidsonly.com.
  9. 1 2 "Milky Way Galaxy". University of Oregon.
  10. "Milky Way twice as thick as thought". earthtimes.org.
  11. Eric Idle Galaxy Song from Not The Messiah finale at Hollywood Bowl 8-2-08 on YouTube
  12. Wood, John Alex (4 August 2008). "6 or 16 thousand light years thick?". pythonline.com. Archived from the original on 15 August 2008.
  13. "speed of light". everything2.com.
  14. https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=bjEOpfCcujE
  15. Wonders of Life Trailer - BBC Two on YouTube
  16. Idle, Eric (29 October 2012). "Eric Idle on 'Galaxy Song,' the New Biological Version". The Nerdist.
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