Space_Oddity Space_Oddity

Space Oddity - Definition and Overview

Related Words: Abnormality, Alien, Anomaly, Card, Case, Character, Conceit, Crackpot, Crank, Crankism, Crotchet, Curiosity, Deformity, Deviation

"Space Oddity" was David Bowie's first hit single. It is about the launch of Major Tom, a fictional astronaut who mysteriously becomes lost in Outer Space. Released in 1969 to coincide with the Apollo 11 moon landing, it appears on the album of the same title. The BBC featured the song in its television coverage of the lunar landing. Amongst the songs influences was the 1968 flight of Apollo 8, the first flight to the moon (but not the first to land), and a fear that they would not return, as many felt at the time.

The song was awarded the 1969 Ivor Novello Award, together with Peter Sarstedt's "Where Do You Go To (My Lovely)".

The song is often interpreted to be about self-destruction and estrangement from humanity. Major Tom's cryptic last message, "Though I'm past one hundred thousand miles / I'm feeling very still / And I think my spaceship knows which way to go / Tell my wife I love her very much," suggests that he is still alive and well and chooses to kill his circuit to ground control. Bowie seems to confirm this interpretation with his 1980 follow up to "Space Oddity", "Ashes to Ashes", in which Major Tom turns out to be a "junkie" hallucinating that he was an astronaut. Bowie personally connected to this as he believed he had opened his eyes as a realist instead of trusting his previous idealist views.

The song is also a powerful narrative, echoing Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey, released in 1968. The similarity in titles was due to the film, which was on Bowie's mind when he wrote it.

This narrative continues in rock music throughout the late 20th Century, both in Bowie's own work and that of others. As well as the aforementioned "Ashes to Ashes", Elton John's "Rocketman" seems to allude to Major Tom, though not by name. It tells of an unnamed astronaut who is lonely in space, who's "not the man they think I am at home". Bowie alludes to this analogy a live performance of "Space Oddity" released on the David Bowie BBC Sessions 1969-1972, in which he sings, "Oh Rocketman!" In 1983, the German pop singer Peter Schilling released his own take on the story, entitled "Major Tom."

The song is widly referenced due to its classic nature. In the 2002 movie Mr. Deeds, there is a moment in which Adam Sandler and a group of men on a helicopter break out into singing "Space Oddity". After the success of Space Ship One in 2004, it was agreed that the song should be played onboard the ship when giving space tours to wealthy sightseers. Some even believe that the 2004 video game Metal Gear Solid 3: Snake Eater references Space Oddity with its character who takes on code name Major Tom, however, the game is set in 1964, and the reference is actually to the 1963 film, The Great Escape.

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