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The Fall of Ancient Science
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A partial Dylan-type rap with singing in the background during the chorus and in the foreground at the end, about how Kepler and Galileo overturned the millenia-old ideas by finding that the Earth and other planets all revolve around the Sun.
pop rock folk universe cosmos alan marscher boston university profess cosmos ii science songs songs for science nerds songs in russian
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A mainly one-person band featuring strong vocals and guitar back-up, playing a variety of songs in a rock, folk, and pop blend. The songs range from science ner
Cosmos II is the pseudonym of Alan Marscher, a professor of astronomy at Boston University. Usually, he performs alone on guitar and vocals. The songs are all originals composed and copyrighted by Marscher. Some are "science nerd" songs that Cosmos II performs to science students at B.U. The majority, though, are just general songs about life, love, the pursuit of happiness and meaning, and various other random topics. Most of the songs are in English, while some are in Russian, the country where Marscher's wife, Svetlana hails from. The style is a mixture of rock, pop, and folk - what is often termed "adult contemporary." Many are humorous - e.g., "Medical Miracle" about how Viagra has revitalized a lot of middle-aged men or "Relatively Weird" about the wonders and perils of traveling around at near-light speeds. Others are philosophical, such as "All from Nothing?" about how the universe came to exist and "Elusive Truth" that asks whether absolute truth can exist. Some are just plain love songs - an example is "Together or Apart" - and others are love-is-difficult songs, like "Winter's Darkness." Laughs and tears for everyone! Marscher recorded all of the songs himself on a small digital recorder. He doesn't have loads of free time, so he hasn't worked hard enough to remove imperfections, add a drum pattern, etc. But most songs have harmony and are at least at the "demo" level of quality. Friends who have listened to them have neither gone mad nor rushed the CD to the local recycling center. More importantly to Cosmos II, Marscher can listen to them without wretching in horror over the slight mis-timings of the different tracks and other imperfections.
Song Info
Genre
Pop Indie Pop
Charts
Peak #114
Peak in subgenre #10
Author
Alan Marscher
Rights
2007 by Alan Marscher
Uploaded
April 11, 2008
Track Files
MP3
MP3 2.7 MB 128 kbps 2:58
Lyrics
1. The bodies of heaven move with constant speed on circles and on spheres So said the Greeks and all believed for about 2000 years With Earth at the center, the planets chimed songs no human ear could hear 'Til Kepler's ellipses unveiled the secrets of the music of the spheres Chorus: When you think you've seen and understood everything, think you've explained it all Next you'll find something you've never seen, and your hypotheses will fall Be satisfied with descriptions that make firm predictions, find evidence, not proof Nature leaves no inscription to aid its depiction, so you never discover full truth [background chorus, 2 times: Copernicus and Kepler, Galileo Galilei The planets revolve around the Sun, the Earth spins once each day] 2. Aristotle proposed that heavenly motions are natural, not forced And the tendency of objects on Earth is to fall to the center, of course They drop with constant velocity as they proceed to fall down But Galileo found that they accelerate all the way to the ground [chorus] Ending: [Background chorus sung in the foreground]
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