Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

About To Launch Album Debut, Chris Hadfield Talks Recording Music In Space

The Canadian Press, 07 Aug, 2015 11:12 AM
    TORONTO — Even two months away from launch, Chris Hadfield can claim without a trace of immodesty that his upcoming debut album is out of this world.
     
    "Space Sessions: Songs from a Tin Can" will be released Oct. 9, arriving with the weighty honour of being the first album recorded at least partially off planet.
     
    The 11-song collection — buoyed by the bonus inclusion of his famous David Bowie cover, "Space Oddity" — is not intended to rocket Hadfield to musical stardom. Instead, it's another step in the retired astronaut's multimedia mission to translate the joy of space travel to the earthbound public.
     
    "To me, this is a continuation of my best efforts to share the experience, to the best of my ability," said Hadfield during a telephone interview Thursday, while relaxing at a cottage near Sarnia, Ont.
     
    "I am just as delighted with this as I am with any photograph I took or any other verbal description I've ever had of that magnificent experience."
     
    A veteran of various bands for roughly 25 years, Hadfield decided before his December 2012 mission to the International Space Station that he would like to try to record music while aboard.
     
    He perhaps did not expect that doing so would be, in some ways, an astronomical hassle.
     
    Gravity, or a lack thereof, was the main culprit. To record an early tune, he stuck an iPad on the wall with Velcro and used its ambient microphone to capture the sound.
     
    Eventually, he decided the best place to record was ensconced in his tiny sleep pod, with a microphone plugged into his iPad, floating in front of him. He was thankful to have brought a compact Canadian-made Larrivee Parlor acoustic guitar, because others might not have fit the narrow confines.
     
    Playing that guitar was, however, another matter.
     
    "It's hard to play guitar on a spaceship, because there's nothing to hold the guitar stable," he pointed out. "Almost always, the guitar slips in your hands. If you're a guitar player, I tell people to try playing while standing on your head.
     
    "The producer who was helping me, Paul Mills, said: 'Your guitar playing is a little messy,'" he added with a laugh. "I said, yeah, you come up here and play guitar."
     
    His singing voice mutated too, he explains, because sinuses don't drain mechanically like they do on Earth.
     
    "There's no gravity to pull the fluid out of your head," he said. "So you always have a full head and swollen tongue and vocal cords."
     
    Still, Hadfield's space recordings became the bedrock for the songs comprising "Space Session." Once back on Earth, Hadfield worked on the songs with Juno-winning producer Robbie Lackritz and a cast of professional musicians.
     
    Tasked with describing the record's sound, he reels off a list of mostly Canadian influences: Gordon Lightfoot, Leonard Cohen, Ian and Sylvia, Great Big Sea and the Kingston Trio.
     
    Hadfield brought some of the songs with him from Earth and finished them in orbit, while others were written completely in space. He collaborated extensively with his brother Dave, and co-wrote "Beyond the Terra" with his son, Evan.
     
    Of course, his atmosphere provided ample inspiration.
     
    "Window of My Mind" was written after Hadfield scaled the sprawling width of Canada in mere minutes, while "Space Lullaby" found Hadfield seeking connection with his three kids.
     
    Asked about "Feet Up," meanwhile, Hadfield recalls the rigours of liftoff and his first true instance of weightlessness.
     
    After 166 days in space, the sensation didn't get old. Hadfield calls the feeling a "magic trick that never ends."
     
    He listened to "Feet Up" recently and in some small way it might have brought him back.
     
    "It just brings a smile to my face," he said. "Everything that this music means to me, how it was created and what it means for my life.
     
    "For me, it was a lovely part of the entire experience."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Largest Canadian Meat Recall: $4Million Settlement In XL Foods Tainted Meat Lawsuit

    Largest Canadian Meat Recall: $4Million Settlement In XL Foods Tainted Meat Lawsuit
    The lawsuit is against XL Foods Inc., which operated a meat-packing plant in southern Alberta during a tainted beef recall in 2012.

    Largest Canadian Meat Recall: $4Million Settlement In XL Foods Tainted Meat Lawsuit

    Annual Inflation Rate Ticks Up As Cost Of Food, Especially Meat, Rises

    Annual Inflation Rate Ticks Up As Cost Of Food, Especially Meat, Rises
    Statistics Canada said Friday the consumer price index rose 1.0 per cent in June compared with a year ago, following an increase of 0.9 per cent in May.

    Annual Inflation Rate Ticks Up As Cost Of Food, Especially Meat, Rises

    Court Refuses To Stay Federal Voter Id Rule Pending Full Constitutional Fight

    Court Refuses To Stay Federal Voter Id Rule Pending Full Constitutional Fight
    TORONTO — Suspending a single provision of the Conservative government's new voter law with a federal election only months away at most is just too risky, an Ontario judge ruled Friday.

    Court Refuses To Stay Federal Voter Id Rule Pending Full Constitutional Fight

    Nexen Pipeline Spills Five Million Litres Of Emulsion Near Fort McMurray

    Nexen Pipeline Spills Five Million Litres Of Emulsion Near Fort McMurray
    CALGARY — A pipeline at Nexen's Long Lake oilsands project in northeastern Alberta has failed, spilling an estimated five million litres of bitumen, produced water and sand.

    Nexen Pipeline Spills Five Million Litres Of Emulsion Near Fort McMurray

    Police Fatally Shoot Man In Dawson Creek At Site C Open House Event

    Police Fatally Shoot Man In Dawson Creek At Site C Open House Event
    The RCMP says at about 6:30 p.m. Thursday, they were called about a man damaging property and disrupting a BC Hydro public information session concerning the Site C hydroelectric dam.

    Police Fatally Shoot Man In Dawson Creek At Site C Open House Event

    Two People Found Dead In Coquitlam Home

    Two People Found Dead In Coquitlam Home
    COQUITLAM, B.C. — Two bodies have been found in a suburban Vancouver home where police said they were investigating a suspicious death.

    Two People Found Dead In Coquitlam Home