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SuggestiON-AIR - Stargazing Songs

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ATL | 14:07 UK time, Monday, 3 January 2011

Hello! Happy New Year to all you lovely people!

The Ö÷²¥´óÐã Stargazing campaign has kicked of a space fuelled New Year with Professor Brian Cox and Dara O'BriainÌýstarring longinglyÌýinto our solar systemÌýfor the next three nights on Ö÷²¥´óÐã2. Much closer to home, in Armagh Planetarium to be precise, there will be a free stargazing event this Wednesday in conjunction with the campaign.

We tell you this because we think it's pretty fascinating but it also got us thinking about (see the link) songs about stars, planets, space exploration and the like... You know? Let us know your pick by shouting us here, onÌýthe ´Ç°ùÌý and we will give y'all a shout on the show tonight...

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Rigsy (ATL Presenter)

Apart from it being one of the most euphoric songs ever put to record, this song actually sounds a bit like a star. It's spangly, shiny, full of light and out of this world. A song for the night sky and something to romanticize about. The Chems at their uplifting best.

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Paul McClean (ATL Producer)

Once again, for me, it’s the Bristol massive without the attack. Off the peerless 'Dummy' from 1994, it sounds like Beth Gibbon as the sole survivor on board a space station, running out of air, the bassline as an incessant but futile alarm. Lyrically, even Portishead have rarely been so bleak.

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Amy McGarrigle (ATL Content Assistant)

Star Wormwood is the most space influencedÌý(at leastÌý not in a Ìýromantised way) that I can think of. The lyrics include lines like "We are now asking the questions, of other worlds", "use our telescopes to peer beyond our reach", "there could be more, next to our own" etc. and wondering if we could survive on another planet. Then I got some added info, thanks to producer Paul, that 'Star Wormwood' was actually the name of a star in the Book of Revelation. Anyhow, great tune and a

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Philip Taggart - ATL Buddy

'Underneath The Stars' opens The Cure's 2008 album '4:13 Dream' in typical ethereal twinkling style. Robert Smiths vocal glitters and sparkles like the Northern Lights. Lyrics such as 'Flying here like this with you, underneath the stars, aligned for 13 billion years,' along with the added delay on vocals leads to a very psychedelic trippy sounding track.

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There will be lots of activity in the night skies in early January - eg quadrantid meteor shower (3rd Jan) and partial solar eclipse c. 9am 4th Jan

Stargazing Campaign on Ö÷²¥´óÐã 2: Tonight, Tuesday, Wednesday from 8pm

ARMAGH PLANETARIUM JAN 5th from 1pm- 9pm

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