Introduction
Listening to all 27 tracks from the Voyager Golden Record was a surprisingly immersive experience. I treated it like a slow, reflective project. I would listen in the evenings while doing small chores, or just sitting on the couch. I would jot down my reactions. Sometimes I paused mid-track to replay a section or re-score it when something hit differently the second time. At first, I expected to enjoy the upbeat songs most, but what really stayed with me were the ones that told stories or carried strong emotion. The process made me realize how personal listening can be, even when the music is meant to represent the entire planet.
My Top 10 Selections and Why
1. “Melancholy Blues” – Louis Armstrong & His Hot Seven
This was an easy favorite. The trumpet tone, rhythm, and swing instantly lift the mood. It’s playful but emotional. I felt you could almost hear a conversation happening between the instruments. Armstrong’s phrasing feels human in the best way…hopeful, messy, joyful, and sad all at once. If aliens ever figure out “the blues,” this would help explain a lot about humanity .
2. Beethoven: String Quartet No. 13 in B-flat, Op. 130, “Cavatina”
From the first note, this piece just grabs you. The slow build of the strings feels like remembering something bittersweet. It’s soothing and nostalgic, almost therapeutic. I imagined it echoing through space, still making sense even without words. To me, it represents reflection…something we all share, no matter the century.
3. Bach: Brandenburg Concerto No. 2 in F
So lively and precise. I wrote “very fun” in my notes because it really is. It is mathematically joyful, if that’s possible. Each instrument gets a turn to shine, and the energy never drops. It shows off human coordination and creativity like a musical machine running perfectly.
4. Mozart: “The Magic Flute,” Queen of the Night Aria
I still can’t believe how Edda Moser’s voice moves like that. The jumps in pitch are unreal…a superhuman performance that somehow feels effortless. I even thought of the movie The Fifth Element; it has that same futuristic power. This track screams technical brilliance and emotional drama in equal measure.
5. “Tchakrulo” – Georgian Choir
This one hit me deep. The layered voices and rich baritone harmonies feel ancient and grounded. There’s strength in it. I feel a sense of community and endurance. The way the singers hold notes together seems to say, “We stand as one.” It’s simple and powerful at the same time.
6. “Izlel je Delyo Hagdutin” – Valya Balkanska (Bulgaria)
Her voice cuts through everything. It’s glottal, bright, and full of character. Even without knowing the language, you can feel the emotion and the landscape behind it. The folk instruments add texture that makes the song sound timeless. It’s one of those tracks that reminds you how human voice alone can carry a culture.
7. “Kinds of Flowers” – Java, Court Gamelan
This piece felt spiritual and tranquil like a meditation in sound. The metallic tones overlap and shimmer, creating something calm but alive. It doesn’t try to tell a story so much as be one. Listening to it made me think of breath and repetition. It’s the kind of sound that fills space rather than demands attention. I can imagine it resonating in a temple or through quiet air on a humid day.
8. Ugam – Azerbaijan Bagpipes
This track took a couple of listens. At first, I didn’t catch its shape, but by the end, it pulled me in. There’s a storytelling quality hidden inside the melody. It feels like a journey, that is, wandering, getting lost, then finding resolution. By the second listen, I could sense the happy ending.
9. Senegal Percussion
Instant energy! I actually pictured myself dancing while cleaning the classroom with this in the background. The beat is infectious. Music built around rhythm rather than melody. It reminds me how universal percussion is; you don’t need translation to feel the pulse. Perhaps I’ll play it for my students during cleaning time and see how the react!
10. Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony – First Movement
It’s impossible to leave this off a list about human music. Those opening notes are iconic. Instantly recognizable even to people who don’t know classical music. It stands as a symbol of what “Earth music” might sound like to the rest of the universe.
Reflection on the Process
I listened to every piece at least once, sometimes twice, rating them quickly so I wouldn’t overthink. The exercise became part music appreciation and part self-study. I noticed I’m drawn to emotionally expressive, story-driven music. Pretty much songs where you can feel the performer’s presence. Classical or folk, I rated those higher. The quieter, meditative tracks lost my attention, maybe because they don’t tell stories in the same way.
Overall, my choices lean toward human warmth, melody, and rhythm rather than abstraction or ritual. I like when music moves somewhere. Whether that’s a blues solo, a choir’s harmony, or a violin’s slow fade. This task helped me notice how I listen: through emotion first, structure second.
The Golden Record really does what it set out to do. It captures humanity in all its contradictions. Even the songs I scored lower added texture to the journey. Listening to them all made me appreciate how vast the idea of “music from Earth” truly is.
References
NASA. (n.d.). Music from Earth. https://voyager.jpl.nasa.gov/golden-record/
Taylor, D. (Host). (2019, April). Voyager golden record [Audio podcast episode]. In Twenty thousand hertz. Defacto Sound.