Aliens:
They teach the Neanderthals to invent the Internet one minute, launch
an interstellar attack the next, and cap it all off by involving us in
various indecent acts. But whether they are threat or menace or some
combination of the two, one thing is certain — they walk among us. At
least on YouTube.
Billy Lee Riley, “Flying Saucer Rock N’Roll”
Billy
Lee Riley’s first hit was this classic vision of little green men
bearing rockabilly to the unsuspecting earthlings. He couldn’t
understand a thing they said, but that crazy beat just knocked him dead.
It all seems fairly benign as alien contact goes — though Riley’s
shriek does evoke visions of buildings disintegrating and havoc
unleashed. Maybe rock ‘n’ roll is the end of civilization after all.
Man or Astroman, “Alien Visitors”
Man
or Astroman have long been a band devoted to the eternal union of
sci-fi and surf-rock. The alien visitors will be met with wave after
wave of whammy. This is what Galactus plays when he
sends out his herald, I’m pretty sure.
Belvedere, “And You Thought the Doctor’s Probe Hurt”
Canadian
skate punks are kidnapped and have their minds tampered with before
being left on a bale of hay outside, all in only 2:15. You can get a lot
of alien encounter in fast when you’re traveling at hardcore speeds.
Brainiac, “Martian Dance Invasion”
Just
as it was obvious that aliens would dance to rockabilly with Billy Lee
in 1957, in the early 1990s it made sense for Martians to shake it to
synthpunk. Every era gets its own futuristic shimmy.
Pixies, “Motorway to Roswell”
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I
know it’s a little heterodox to say so, but “Trompe Le Monde” has
always been my favorite Pixies album. This track is one reason why. Joey
Santiago lays down that gunning surf-guitar intro and then Black
Francis is off on his cracked, heart-on-the-sleeve tribute to the
Roswell aliens and their sad fate as government curiosities. The Pixies
were a band that could sing elegies to bureaucracy.
Ella Fitzgerald, “Two Little Men in a Flying Saucer”
Usually
aliens are thought of as being forward-looking critters, but in Ella’s
version the little green guys are fuddy-duddy stick-in-the-muds
muttering about movies these days and women’s hats and get off my
space-lawn, you kids. Maybe the corny arrangement and background
vocalists glomming up Ella’s jazzy swing drove them off — or vice versa.
Aliens have peculiar tastes.
Walter Becker, “Hat Too Flat”
Becker’s
solo work makes it clear that he’s the one responsible for Steely Dan’s
sly lyrics. This lurching fuzak ode to visitors from “far Arcturus” is
horny and drily whacked-out: “Our women are slung down low to the
ground, our men are brave, studly and wise, a pleasure to behold.”
Despite their perfection, though, the visitors’ hats remain too flat; an
obscure fashion faux pas that you’d think could be easily rectified,
but isn’t. If Philip K. Dick wrote pop songs, they might sound something
like this.
Blondie, “Rapture”
Blondie
meets the alien, which is hip-hop, and is eaten by it. Which doesn’t
seem like such a bad fate, really, what with the ballerina and the goat
and all.
Parliament, “Mothership Connection”
Afrofuturist
extraterrestrial funksters return to claim the Pyramids. “Swing down,
sweet chariot, stop and let me ride” turns Christian gospel salvation
into interplanetary soul stew.
David Bowie, “Starman”
Like
George Clinton, Bowie has made a career of pretending to be from outer
space. And like “Mothership Connection,” this is a determinedly sunny,
hippie vision of outer-space visitors helping us all to get along and
get down. “Let all the children boogie.” P-funk would agree with that.
Rajesh Roshan, “Jaadoo, Jaadoo”
A
scene from “Koi … Mil Gaya,” Bollywood’s 2003 answer to “ET,” with a
cute neotenous green alien replaced by a cute neotenous blue alien, and
the Reese’s Pieces product placement replaced by Coca Cola. Plus, since
it’s Bollywood, lots of singing, dancing and mugging amid the hay bales.
Who knew that when the aliens came they’d bring vocoders?
The Wandering, “Mr. Spaceman”
The
Byrds classic performed by an alt-folk super-group, including Shannon
McNally, Amy La Vere, fife and drum blues player Sharde Thomas, the
incandescent Valerie June, and Luther Dickinson of Black Crowes fame.
The live performance is nicely ragged, with round-robin vocals and a
kazoo solo. The weird light in the back looks somewhat otherworldly, but
for the most part these are some unusually rootsy aliens.
Neil Young, “After the Gold Rush”
Young’s
warble starts with a tripped-out vision of medieval pageantry and
finishes up with a tripped-out vision of the silver spaceships coming
down to fly “Mother Natures’/Silver seed to a new home in the sun.” Are
the ships docking at Barnes and Noble to spread the SF/Fantasy section,
with its Tolkiens and Asimovs, to a brave new world?
Klaatu, “Calling Occupants of Interplanetary Craft”
Klaatu here demonstrating that Neil Young isn’t the only woozy Canadian to look up to the sky and say, whoa, man.
“In your mind you have capacities you know,” they sing, “to telepath
messages through the vast unknown.” Those capacities include some
disturbing Sgt. Pepper’s soundalike moments; a rumor that the 1973 album
was actually a Beatles project boosted sales considerably. It’s not
hard to imagine Paul closing his eyes, turning his face to the heavens
and declaring earnestly, “We are your friends … and the girl is mine.”
Queen, “Flash Gordon”
Most
of the tracks so far have been cheery about the prospects of alien
invasion, viewing extraterrestrials as either saviors or funky dance
companions. With the title track for Queen’s soundtrack to the 1980
film, though, we get our first glimpse of the bad aliens, as Ming the
Merciless toys with the earth in preparation for invasion and/or
“annihilation.” That surging heartbeat keyboard and Freddie Mercury’s
soaring “aaaah-aaaaahhhhhs!” are a pretty clear indication that Ming
won’t get away with it, though.
L. Ron Hubbard, “Windsplitter”
From
the soundtrack to L. Ron Hubbard’s mammoth novel “Battlefield Earth”
comes this camp train wreck, which sounds like it was composed and
played by a distraught ungulate. I read Hubbard’s 1,000-plus page opus
when I was a kid. I vaguely remember there were evil lumbering aliens
and a noble earthling. I presume that Hubbard meant this tune to go to
the noble earthling.
Jeff Wayne, “Horsell Commons and the Heat Ray”
From
Jeff Wayne’s hugely popular 1978 musical version of “The War of the
Worlds,” in which the Martians crawl out and slaughter the good English
townspeople … with prog.
And Hell Followed, “Great Old Ones”
H.P.
Lovecraft’s mythos is often thought of as fantasy, but his unspeakable
monsters actually technically arrived aeons ago from beyond the stars.
That makes this thrashy death tribute to the “Great Old Ones” a plea not
just for the hideous end of all things, but for alien invasion as well.
The vocalist sounds like a great old one is clawing its way out of its
throat as he screams, “the dawn of man is at an end/the dawn of man is
at an end/ Daaaagggggoooooonnnn./ Daaaagggggoooooonnnn /dead but
dreaming/dead but dreaming.” The track is from “Empire of Ash,” which I
believe is And Hell Followed’s only album. (Do not confuse them with the
slightly better-known melodic death metal band And Hell Followed With
unless you want to be dragged screaming into unspeakable geometries
beyond space.)
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