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About the songs on "Kiss Me Like That"...


It’s not hard to understand why virtually every civilization has venerated the sun and moon: both are such inextricable parts of our existence. The stars and planets are believed by some to hold magical power over humanity. Personally, I find the sky mysterious and magical enough as it is, without resorting to the supernatural.

Of the songs we recorded for this album, six are originals that I wrote sometime in the last seven years. I wrote three of them in English ("Kiss Me Like That", "Love in outer space", and "Winter Eclipse"), and one each in Spanish ("Cuando sale la luna"), Portuguese ("Mundos escondidos"), and French ("Le tournesol").


It was not always a conscious decision on my part to write about astronomical or sky-related themes, but my love for these subjects has surely crept into my subconscious writing process over the years... The rest of the songs are either great jazz standards like "Stardust", "Skylark", "They all laughed", "Moonlight saving time", and "Blue moon"; or beautiful folk/pop tunes: Sting's "Valparaiso" and James Taylor's "Sweet Baby James."

Here is a bit of background on each of the 13 songs on this album...

I wrote the refrain of "Kiss Me Like That" first, out of a mnemonic we teach our astronomy students to help them remember the order (from hotter to colder) of stars and brown dwarfs as they are categorized: O, B, A, F, G, K, M, L, T. What started out as a refrain turned into a song about a relationship gone south, and the forces that bring people together and pull them apart. (The image on the right shows stars of different types - the bluer ones are 'O' or 'B' stars. They're very hot! The red ones are 'M' stars, and they're a lot less hot...)

I wrote "Le Tournesol" (The Sunflower) from our sun’s point of view, as it reaches out to reassure a sunflower that it will chase the blues away. I loved the idea of the sun becoming smitten by a flower, and trying to console it by sweeping away the rain and erasing its nightmares. "Cuando sale la luna" (When the moon comes out) speaks of a sultry evening when the smells of the night enter through open windows. This song celebrates the mystical beauty of our lonely satellite, and the magical way it can change our perception of the night.

Rodgers and Hart’s "Blue moon" evokes the charming notion that our moon might mirror our feelings. Every few years, because the lunar and solar calendars are not quite synchronized, there’s a 13th full moon. Some say this is where “once in a blue moon” comes from. Others swear a blue moon only occurs extremely rarely, for example when volcanic dust makes the moon seem bluish. It’s a lovely song, no matter which meaning we choose for it…

The moon holds sway over the night like nothing else, and sometimes it is a companion on an otherwise lonely night. Both the solitary cowboy in James Taylor’s "Sweet Baby James" and the sad gypsy in Hoagy Carmichael’s "Skylark" sing to the moon.

And when the moon gets swallowed up by Earth’s shadow, as in "Winter Eclipse", it is a truly breathtaking sight. I wrote this song remembering a delightful but freezing winter’s evening spent with a special friend, shivering in a couple of garden lawn chairs as we watched a lunar eclipse over several hours. He kept making hot toddies to warm us up. It was a magical if slightly surreal night. (Left: the moon in eclipse).

"Moonlight saving time", a rarely performed showtune by Irving Kahal and Harry Richman, puts forward the cheeky idea that we ought to be able to extend the moonlit night for the benefit of lovers everywhere.



The Arecibo message

"Love In Outer Space" is about a girl who’s tired of what the boys on Earth have to offer, so she’s casting a wider net. What gives her hope? She's a die hard fan of SETI, the Search for Extra Terrestrial Intelligence! If intelligent beings exist elsewhere, they might use radio waves to communicate over long distances, and some say they'd choose a frequency close to the hydrogen line.


I was born in the 1970s, and some pretty cool things happened during that decade. A message with a diagram of our Solar System was beamed into outer space from the Arecibo observatory, the world’s largest radio telescope carved out of a hill in Puerto Rico. The Pioneer spacecraft flew past Mars and Jupiter, sending back amazing pictures and carrying a plaque with anatomically correct drawings of humans. (Interestingly, NASA got a lot of flack for sending naked pictures into space!)

After all this, does our girl finally find Love In Outer Space? Alas, no. Thus far, ET hasn't answered. But in the late 60s, a mysteriously repetitive signal was discovered by astronomer Jocelyn Bell Burnell. It was half-jokingly given the designation 'LGM' - Little Green Men. What she had discovered turned out to be even stranger than ET: pulsars. Her mystery signal was caused by an incredibly dense star made of neutrons, which rotated about once per second.


My song ends with sounds from outer space: an even quicker pulsar that rotates many times per second, the Vela pulsar. (The sound sample is courtesy of the Jodrell Bank Observatory in Manchester, UK, and you can check out their website here). Overlaid with that is a steady morse code pulse, beating out our position from the Sun...
The Pioneer Plaque... I've added a few modesty leaves



The Magellanic Clouds seen from Australia at dawn
In the late nineties, I spent a year in Melbourne, Australia. The natural beauty of the country, the kindness of the people, and the utterly foreign night sky all contributed to my sense of wonder about the place. For the first time in my life, I saw not just one, but two galaxies with my own naked eyes: the Magellanic Clouds.


"Mundos Escondidos" (Hidden worlds) talks of a late-night stroll, after a recent rainfall had dampened the streets. The stars came out and I couldn't help but be amazed by how very old the light from these galaxies is by the time it reaches us. I wrote this one in Portuguese in honour of Magellan himself, the great Portuguese explorer whose crew was the first to circumnavigate the globe.

Another song for the Southern Hemisphere: Sting’s "Valparaiso" tells of the Southern Cross and chasing Sirius (the Dog Star) across the sky. For centuries, mariners navigated by the stars, and here they’ll guide this sailor’s true love to safety 'round the Cape Horn.

The Gershwin brothers’ "They All Laughed" pokes fun at those who mocked great discoverers. I love the way this song celebrates the dreamers and the visionaries who have helped open our minds. As Yeats wrote, “Mock mockers after that…”

This album is for anyone who has ever been stopped in their tracks by the majesty of sunrise, the haunting beauty of the moon, or the twinkle of a star. I hope this collection of songs will put a smile on your face. May you never lose your sense of wonder at the universe.


All photos on this page are courtesy of NASA in accordance with their public use policy.