On Wednesday, October 10, 2012 12:17:52 AM UTC+1, Dave Moore wrote:
> I don't recall much more about the story -- it was over 50 years ago, and I
> was very young :-)
>
> What I remember, there were no aliens involved, just one lonely marooned
> spaceman sitting and gazing at a distant Sun, thinking of Earth, which he
> would never see again. Sad ending.
>
> What really sticks in my mind was the mention of "St Louis Blues" as an
> example of the music on Earth. I didn't know the number when I read the
> story, but was prompted to find out more, and that led me to an interest in
> jazz, for which I am grateful.
>
> I'm just curious about the story, and its author, and would like to read it
> again.
>
> So, any further help would be much appreciated.
Can we get a read on /how/ distant the Sun is? It's nearer on
Venus, of course, although whether you can see it depends on the
clouds, and, of course, on whether the author knows what Venus has
turned out to be actually like. If it's a visible disc, Mars
is possible, if a little chilly, which opens up Ray Bradbury
as author, and a visit or two by Roger Zelazny - whom I mention
just because he throws in details of cultural art like that.
Then there's the asteroids, and, for the gas giants, you're more
likely to be on a moon than "on" the planet itself. And on Pluto
you're basically looking at a star slightly brighter than the others.
And so to Proxima Centauri...
The music of "Saint Louis Blues" was published in 1914, which
lets in most of the possible sci-fi authors. I suppose that it
isn't going to be useful to consider which star systems it could
have possibly been transmitted to by radio by any given date,
at the speed of light. And I think we didn't send out space probes
with long-playing records on until the Voyagers in 1977.
<
http://voyager.jpl.nasa.gov/spacecraft/music.html> has the track
listing, which includes "Melancholy Blues" (aren't they always...
well, that probably isn't a unique observation), performed by
"Louis Armstrong and his Hot Seven" in 1927, and of course
"Blue (Da Ba Dee)" by Eiffel 65. Or not.