By SPACE.com Staff

posted: 20 August 2010
05:01 pm ET
http://www.space.com/news/nasa-space-shuttle-astronauts-songs-contest-10
0820.html

Call it "American Idol" in space: NASA has launched a new contest that
allows the public to pick - or even create - wake-up songs for
astronauts flying on the agency's two final space shuttle missions. 

NASA opened its new "Wake-up Song Contest" website Friday to allow the
public to choose from a list of 40 previously played songs in the hopes
of having it played during the final flight of space shuttle Discovery
in November. Voting is going on now here:
https://songcontest.nasa.gov/home.aspx

Traditionally, wake-up songs are chosen by an astronaut's family and
friends. But with the new website, Earth-bound masses will choose two
songs to rouse Discovery's crew during the 11-day mission.

The songs with the most votes win, NASA officials said. Discovery's
upcoming flight will deliver a humanoid robot and storage room to the
International Space Station.

The project is modeled after NASA's "Face in Space" program which allows
the public to send photos of themselves on the final space shuttle
missions. 

Write a space song

For those with musical aspirations, it gets even more exciting. 

NASA is asking for original song submissions for the very last planned
shuttle mission aboard Endeavour, which is set to launch Feb. 26, 2011.
That 10-day mission will deliver a $1.5 billion astrophysics experiment
to the International Space Station.

Contestants must upload their musical stylings to the "Wake-up Song
Contest" website by Jan. 10. NASA folks will cull the entries, and the
surviving songs will be put to public vote. Again, the top two songs
will reach astronauts' ears.

Astronauts are awaiting your input, and your tunes, with bated breath.

"Space shuttle crews really enjoy the morning wake-up music," said Mark
Kelly, commander of Endeavour's final mission. "While we don't have the
best-quality speaker in the space shuttle, it will be interesting to
hear what the public comes up with."

Music in space

This is not the first time NASA has turned to music to reach out to the
public. 

Earlier this week, NASA teamed up with R&B singer Mary J. Blige to
encourage young women and girls to pursue careers in math and science.
In 2008, the space agency joined forces with singer Paul McCartney, of
Beatles fame, to broadcast the song "Across the Universe," into the
cosmos using the Deep Space Network.

NASA has been flying reusable space shuttles into orbit for nearly 30
years and will retire its three remaining shuttles (Discovery, Atlantis
and Endeavour) next year to make way for a new plan to send astronauts
to an asteroid by 2025.

Atlantis flew its last scheduled flight in May and will be primed as a
rescue ship for Endeavour's final flight before being formally retired. 

There is also discussion in Congress over a possible third shuttle
mission, to be flown in summer of 2011. 

Earlier this month, the Senate passed a NASA authorization bill that
would approve the extra flight. The House is expected to revisit its own
NASA bill in September.
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