Beatles to Be Beamed Across the Universe
Songs will be converted into digital data and sent on a 431 light year-journey towards Polaris, the North Star, in an attempt to introduce the Fab Four's music to alien ears
The songs of the Beatles have always enjoyed a global appeal. Now one of their best-loved recordings is to be beamed into the galaxy in an attempt to introduce the Fab Four's music to alien ears.
Nasa will broadcast the song, Across the Universe, through the transmitters of its deep space communications network on Monday - the 40th anniversary of its recording at London's Abbey Road studios.
The music will be converted into digital data and sent on a 431 light year-journey towards Polaris, the North Star, in a stunt that also commemorates the space agency's 50th anniversary.
The former Beatle Sir Paul McCartney, who co-wrote the song with John Lennon and played an extraterrestrial concert from Earth to the crew of the international space station in 2005, said he was excited by the project. "Well done Nasa," he said. "Send my love to the aliens."
Whether there is anything out there to hear the broadcast is another matter. But according to Briton Martin Lewis, a Los Angeles-based former producer of Beatles DVDs who came up with the idea, it would be fun trying to collect the royalties.
"We don't know if there's life out there, but I'd like to think the US government wouldn't be spending taxpayers' money on this if there was no hope," he said.
Lewis said he chose the 1968 song, which the group never released as a single, because its title and lyrics represent a spirit of friendship and harmony.
"It never had the highest profile and is a bit of a forgotten classic," he said. "But it has universal appeal. It transcends ages, borders, language and other barriers."
Other Beatles favorites, such as Here Comes the Sun, Ticket to Ride and A Hard Day's Night, have been played in space as wake-up music to astronauts aboard the space station and on shuttle missions.
But this is the first time any music has been transmitted deep into the cosmos. Nasa will encrypt the song and beam it into space from its Madrid transmitter on Monday at the start of a 2.5 quadrillion-mile trip (that's 23 zeros for anyone without a large capacity calculator) to Polaris, where it will finally arrive in the year 2439.
February 4 has also been declared Across the Universe Day by Beatles fans across the world, who are urged to play their own recording of the song at the same time as Nasa begins its own broadcast, 7pm in the US, midnight in the UK and 1am Tuesday in Spain.
"I see that this is the beginning of the new age in which we will communicate with billions of planets across the universe," said Yoko Ono, Lennon's widow, who has given her backing to the project.
Nasa will broadcast the song, Across the Universe, through the transmitters of its deep space communications network on Monday - the 40th anniversary of its recording at London's Abbey Road studios.
The music will be converted into digital data and sent on a 431 light year-journey towards Polaris, the North Star, in a stunt that also commemorates the space agency's 50th anniversary.
The former Beatle Sir Paul McCartney, who co-wrote the song with John Lennon and played an extraterrestrial concert from Earth to the crew of the international space station in 2005, said he was excited by the project. "Well done Nasa," he said. "Send my love to the aliens."
Whether there is anything out there to hear the broadcast is another matter. But according to Briton Martin Lewis, a Los Angeles-based former producer of Beatles DVDs who came up with the idea, it would be fun trying to collect the royalties.
"We don't know if there's life out there, but I'd like to think the US government wouldn't be spending taxpayers' money on this if there was no hope," he said.
Lewis said he chose the 1968 song, which the group never released as a single, because its title and lyrics represent a spirit of friendship and harmony.
"It never had the highest profile and is a bit of a forgotten classic," he said. "But it has universal appeal. It transcends ages, borders, language and other barriers."
Other Beatles favorites, such as Here Comes the Sun, Ticket to Ride and A Hard Day's Night, have been played in space as wake-up music to astronauts aboard the space station and on shuttle missions.
But this is the first time any music has been transmitted deep into the cosmos. Nasa will encrypt the song and beam it into space from its Madrid transmitter on Monday at the start of a 2.5 quadrillion-mile trip (that's 23 zeros for anyone without a large capacity calculator) to Polaris, where it will finally arrive in the year 2439.
February 4 has also been declared Across the Universe Day by Beatles fans across the world, who are urged to play their own recording of the song at the same time as Nasa begins its own broadcast, 7pm in the US, midnight in the UK and 1am Tuesday in Spain.
"I see that this is the beginning of the new age in which we will communicate with billions of planets across the universe," said Yoko Ono, Lennon's widow, who has given her backing to the project.

Use the feedback form below to submit your comments.

Use the form below to email this article to your friends.

- The Legend Of Beatles
- The Beatles - A Strong Impact
- Beatles History
- Michael Jackson to Sell the Beatles?
- My Review Of The Beatles Revolver
- The Beatles are the Most Creative Band of All Time
- John Lennon's childhood home opens to public
- Imagine: Lennon's Piano on a Peace Tour
- We Can Work It Out - Everyone's a Winner As Peace is Declared in Apple v Apple
- Must They Be Mashed Up?
- Beatles Cleared to Sue Record Companies
- Billy Preston, Keyboard Player With the Beatles, Dies at 59
- Beatles Songs Pay Off Debt for Jackson
- Paul McCartney
- How Beatles lost a hard day's fight with Lee Marvin
- The Beatles 10 Best Love Songs
- The Beatles Video Vault
- Namesake of Beatles "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds" Passes Away



