Speaking of Science

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Archive for January 16th, 2008

Jan
16

Sing a Song of Science

Posted by jns on January 16, 2008

As so often happens, this began innocently enough.

It all started on Monday, when a friend of mine sent me a YouTube link, claiming that he had found the prefect theme song for Ars Hermeneutica’s Sun Truck project. Indeed he may have done. The song was called “Why the Sun Shines?”. Fans of the group called “They Might Be Giants” will find the song familiar, because TMBG appear to have performed the song frequently, and many versions and performance recordings exist. This one is my favorite so far.

Then, in an amazing bit of thought convergence, on Tuesday night, another friend announced that he had found the perfect theme song for the Sun Truck project!

“Oh?” I asked, innocently enough. “Does it begin with the line ‘The sun is a mass of incandescent gas…’?”

He was a bit deflated, but only a bit. Being a big fan of very alternative music, his version was a mash-up called “Shining Sun Flash”, put together from Moog Machine’s “Jumpin’ Jack Flash,” Tom Glazer’s “Why Does The Sun Shine?,” and Earth Wind & Fire’s “Shining Star”. It comes from an online album of extraterrestrially themed music called “Sounds for the Space Set“.

This did get us some more information about the song, though, the suggestion that it was originally performed by one Tom Glazer. I decided to do a little follow up to verify that and maybe look into getting permission to use the song with the Sun Truck project.

Well, a little follow up turned into the beginning of a whole project about science songs, a worthwhile topic in itself. I’ve only scratched the surface.

The song “Why Does the Sun Shine?” was indeed first performed by folk-singer Tom Glazer. The song first appearance was as part of a six-LP set of recordings known collectively as the “Singing Science Records” — or, “Ballads for the Age of Science” (Wikipedia entries for Glazer or Zaret differ on this fact).

That 6-LP series contained dozens of songs on science written by Hy Zaret* (lyrics) and Lou Singer (music), produced by Zaret in the late 1950s and early 1960s. The albums,

  • Space Songs
  • Energy & Motion Songs
  • Experiment Songs
  • Nature Songs
  • More Nature Songs

were packed with songs that had titles like:

  • Planet Minuet
  • Ultra Violet And Infra Red
  • It’s A Magnet
  • Warm Fronts, Cold Fronts
  • Why Do Leaves Change Their Color
  • How Does A Cow Make Milk

and, of course, “Why Does the Sun Shine?”. Two of the albums were performed by Tom Glazer.

I was delighted to find that all of the songs on all of the (long out of print) albums are preserved and available online, at the “Singing Science Records” page of Jef Poskanzer.

The song “Why Does the Sun Shine?” appears to have a unique cultural status. Before this week I was blissfully ignorant of its existence, but plenty of other people have enjoyed it for years. Not only that, but it has enough status that its lyrics, for reasons that are not entirely clear to me, appear on a web page served by the National Institutes of Health. At least it saves me the trouble of reproducing them here, although they fail to mention that the couplets following the ellipses are done in interrupted voice-over. But you’ll notice that if you listen to one of the recordings available.

Now, that didn’t quite exhaust the subject for me. While I was searching for information about Tom Glazer and the origins of this particular song, I turned up several fascinating articles, web pages, and databases devoted to the topic of science songs. Hey, I have to put the links somewhere!

  • The New York Times article referenced in the note below, is about a young musician named Timothy Sellers who, along with his band Artichoke, had (at that time) been working on a project to record 26 songs he wrote celebrating the lives of historic scientists, one for each letter of the alphabet. At the time of the article they had just released “26 Scientists: Volume 1, Anning to Malthus”. I admit that I haven’t yet heard any of the songs.

Science songwriting is a little-known avocation indulged in by many working scientists; in many cases their results deserve to remain little known. One sees occasional efforts shared, for example, in the pages of Physics Today. Having found several source-pages for these delightful treasures, I didn’t want to lose track of them again.

There, perhaps that will keep us busy for awhile. I fear that I’m not through with this topic.

Oh dear, it seems that I even forgot to mention Tom Lehrer!
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* There is an interesting side-controversy here about the true author of the songs, or rather, about the real Hy Zaret. The name Hy Zaret is associated with the song “Unchained Melody“, which he wrote. We’re told may be the most recorded song of the 20th century. No doubt because of its popularity, there is a person named William Stirrat who claims that he wrote the song “Unchained Melody” using the pseudonym Hy Zaret.

Wikipedia assures us that Stirrat is an impostor, but the page for Zaret notes that the false claim has gotten around. In particular, I myself quickly found that the false information had gotten as far as the New York Times, where one finds this mention:

Around the same time [late 1950s], William Stirrat, an electronics engineer, co-produced six albums of science songs for children (“Why Does the Sun Shine?” and “Vibration”). Mr. Stirrat, whose songwriting nom de plume was Hy Zaret, was better known as the person who wrote the lyrics to “Unchained Melody.”

[Michael Erard, "When You Wish Upon an Atom: The Songs of Science", New York Times, 17 May 2005.]