Playlist Notes: Novas 0.01: A Blaze Of Stars

(previously, as rationale )

(previously, as overture: Novas 0 )

(previously in Program Eleven/I: Novas 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 )

(previously in Program Eleven/II: Novas 1.1 2.2 3.3 )

So far there are nine entries in the “Program Eleven” series, each a playlist of eleven songs, and kicked off a year ago in honour of the Apollo 11 anniversary. Because I like big round numbers, naturally there would be two more, though I didn’t know what they’d be.

These final two entries turned out to be prequels filling in the story years 1978 and 1979, explaining how Susan ended up in the situation we find her in in Novas 5.3 – a singer alone, on the run from the sinister Company, haunted, and with mysterious memory gaps.

(A guiding image that came to me from the songs “Gloria” and “Shadows of the Night”, and which itself was part of finding a backstory to “Danseparc (Every Day It’s Tomorrow)”, where Susan just sort of appeared my head as an avatar of the 80s, *my* 80s, the decade as seen through wide preteen eyes, who’d been there all along… the New Wave singer with a kind of electrical halo of big-science strangeness about her. Was she an alien or a robot or a clone? Was she a spy or in space or in a nuclear war or in love or trapped inside a computer or leading a punk revolution? Why not all of those! What’s a story that can maximise all the sci-fi potentials? And there it began.)

(Look, it’s hard to explain my process here. I just go where my instinct seems to be pointing and then I stop when the songs seem to be the right ones. The music comes first. Then I play around with backstage story parameters until everything fits. Using songs as story modules is a randomiser, a bit like drawing cards, but it’s not completely random because they have to be songs I like.)

So now it’s the years 1960 to 1978, in that rock-opera continuum slightly ahead of ours where everything is a bit faster and neon-brighter and more Jim Steinman. But now it’s also sort of the Young Adult book version of that.

(You’ve also probably noticed by now that albums in the Eleven series with titles that start with “The” are inside the “System”, which is not quite strictly speaking always a VR simulation but more like a sort of Dollhouse kind of setup with both a simulated reality and a kind of cyborg-agent mode. And titles that start with “A” are fully outside the System, in the Real World of Novas. If not, then heads up, that’s a thing. I’ll explain later. There’ll be a little bit of retconning to do but not too much. The point is that spy adventure happens because there is spy music, and sometimes it works best for the story as simulated and sometimes it works best as real. The nuclear war happens in a simulation; the visit to the USSR happens for real, but it’s also kind of unreal because Susan (and later, Jack) keeps getting memory-wiped, because, cyborg. Except for The Day After Tomorrow. That one’s about the actual real world, popping a level up the stack. And The Earth Forever Turning is clearly Susan’s dream while she’s inside the System, but it’s actually also about the real Apollo 50th anniversary in 2019. It made sense at the time. Long story short, the Eleven series is broken into two sub-series, The and A. The A series happens outside of the computer. We are now in the A series at this point in time.)

BEGIN PROGRAM ELEVEN/II MODULE FOUR.

Novas 0.01: A Blaze Of Stars

Doctor goes into a room with a four-foot metal box. He pushes one of its buttons and he listens to it talk.

01 Grace Slick – All The Machines (1984, USA) SUSAN’S MOTHER

Doctor goes into a room
with a four-foot metal box
He pushes one of its buttons
and he listens to it talk

It tells him what he needs to know
about every patient he's got
Fourteen years in medical school
and the machines are doing his job

All the machines say, I'm ok
All the machines say (whirr)
All the doctors listen to what the machines have to say
All the machines say, I'm ok

Who wakes you up?
Who makes your coffee?
Who gets you to the office?
Who does the work?

Without your answering machine"
you'd never know what anyone said
Without your remote control
you might have to get out of bed!

All the machines say, we're ok
All the people use their machines every day
All the machines say, (beeps)
All the machines say, we're ok

Not much happening after dark
without electric light
Without electric blankets
your body might freeze at night
Without a giant scoreboard
how would you know who comes in first?
Without a vacuum cleaner
who'd suck up all your dirt?

You're taking me for granted

What would you do without 
your doorbell, light switch
headset, receiver,
television, telephone, 
phonograph, speakers?

All the machines say, I'm ok
All the machines say (whirr)
All the doctors listen to what the machines have to say
And all the machines say, ok!

The Center for Scientific Progress, an ultra high technology medical facility which is also a front for the secret organization SKYWATCH.

I just have a thing for 1980s Grace Slick, it seems. Her warning seems even more accurate in 2020.

02 Andy Summers – 2010 (Also Sprach Zarathustra) (1984, England/USA) SKYWATCH ALPHA

Instrumental

"Are you sure you are making the right decision? I think we should stop."

Susan is a star child. SKYWATCH has obtained extraterrestrial DNA sampled from early space probes and is developing a batch of human clones with the foreign genetic material woven in. The star children will develop normally and are otherwise almost completely human. Incept year: 1960.

Andy Summers of The Police doing a guitar riff on 2001’s famous Richard Strauss theme kind of sums up the feel of 2010 the movie. And I don’t mean that in a bad way! It is a goofy action movie with heart (and a pre-Prime Suspect Helen Mirren) where 2001 was a cold, clinical, beautiful camera demo that jumpstarted the FX industry. And Jupiter explodes once in 2010 and zero times in 2001. That makes 2010 one exploding Jupiter better than 2001. Based on current astronomical calculations of the mass of Jupiter, that’s a lot of better.

03 Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark – Genetic Engineering (1983, England) SUSAN’S FATHER (Director of the Center)

Efficient, logical, sensible, and practical
Using all resources to the best of our ability
Changing, designing, adapting our mentalities
Improving our abilities for a better way of life

Babies, mother, hospital, scissors
Creature, judgement, butcher, engineer

These are the little children
The future in our hands
When all God's children on this earth
Inherit all our plans

These are the lies they tell us
But this is the only way
When all God's children on the earth
Will evermore be saved

Babies, mother, hospital, scissors
Creature, judgement, butcher, engineer

Babies, mother, hospital, scissors
Creature, judgement, butcher, engineer

These are the little children
The future in their hands
When all God's children on this earth
Inherit all our plans

These are the lies they tell us
The future's good as sold
In all the things we do and know
We really must be told

Ah, ahh-ahh, ahh-ahh, ahh-ahh

Susan has a normal childhood, as normal as can be expected for someone whose life is part of a secret scientific experiment. There is a slight hint of elevated ESP capability among the children, but nothing overly startling.

This one’s been circling in my stack for years now. Finally it has a home in the narrative.

04 Plastics – Robot (1981, Japan) SYSTEM ALPHA and THE ASTRADYNE CHORUS

IBM, IBM, IBM, IBM
NSJ, NSJ, NSJ, NSJ
TDK, TDK, TDK, TDK
FBI, FBI, FBI, FBI

You are robot
You are robot
You are robot
You are robot

EMI, EMI, EMI, EMI
RCA, RCA, RCA, RCA
NBC, NBC, NBC, NBC
CBS, CBS, CBS, CBS

You are robot
You are robot
You are robot
You are robot

IBM, IBM, IBM, IBM
NSJ, NSJ, NSJ, NSJ
TDK, TDK, TDK, TDK
FBI, FBI, FBI, FBI

You are robot
You are robot
You are robot
You are robot

EMI, EMI, EMI, EMI
RCA, RCA, RCA, RCA
NBC, NBC, NBC, NBC
CBS, CBS, CBS, CBS

You are robot
You are robot
You are robot
You are robot

There's no mass production today
There's no mass communication today
There's no mass media today
You are robot

Susan’s development is watched most carefully by the defense industries.

There’s a 1979 single version of this, but it’s rougher, and for such a minimalist song, I like the more lush tone of the 1981 album version.

Discogs social graphing time: Plastics and Susan are fairly close, because the early 80s Tokyo New Wave / technopop scene seems to have been as overlapped as, say, Trevor Horn’s circle in the UK. I think perhaps the closest link is through Chico Sato and from there to the band Crap Heads with Yukihiro Takahashi (who recorded with Susan).

By the way: Did you know that Yukihiro Takahashi had an album called Neuromantic in 1981? William Gibson’s Neuromancer published in 1984 (though obviously he was writing it earlier, and so who knows exactly which way the lines of causality flux leaked). That’s what I mean about cyberpunk already being right there in the air in New Wave. Warped all our brains without even needing to read a book, and that’s before we even switched on our ZX Spectrums and got a proper head full of Bandersnatch.

05 Jane Clifton – My Machines (Australia, 1984) TEENAGE SUSAN

An LED glowing, illuminating
Any data I may require
Lines glowing in liquid crystal
Fulfil my every desire
A microchip is so reliable
I'm never really alone
The night's cool but I'm so warm
With a machine to call my own

I've got my machines
To help me through the day
My machines
My machines
Give me the information I need
I feel so secure
When my machines are there

People have problems, clumsy emotions
They try for flattery
But my friends are pure devotion
You just replace their batteries
Now you're a man and I'm a woman
I like you very much
But machines don't argue in public
And they respond to every touch

I've got my machines
To help me through the day
My machines
My machines
Give me the information I need
I feel so secure
When my machines are there

(machines)
Got my machines
My machines
(my machines)

A microchip is so reliable
I'm never really alone
The night's cool but I'm so warm
With a machine to call my own

I've got my machines
To help me through the day
My machines
I've got
My machines
Give me the information I need
My machines
My machines
My machines
My machines
My machines
My machines
My machines

Susan and the other children of SKYWATCH grow up in a bubble of experimental high technology and accelerated education. It all seems perfectly normal to them.

This song! Now I hear it again, I see why I loved it so much. Jane’s voice is just so beautiful in those luminous, sliding half-harmonies.

06 Big A – Caribbean Air Control (1978, England) JACK

Caribbean air control
Caribbean air control

Calling Uncle Zulu Baker
Calling Uncle Zulu Baker
Come in please you're overdue
We're losing you

Come in Uncle Zulu Baker
Come in Uncle Zulu Baker
Come in please you're overdue
We're losing you

This is Zulu Baker here
I'm heading out to sea
My radio is going dead
There's a blue light following me

Caribbean air control
There's something wrong up here
I can see the sea
I've dropped my landing gear

Hey mister lonely
In your flying machine
We know what you've been through
Why don't you come in through
The waves that lead you into

Bermuda Triangle
Bermuda Triangle
Bermuda Triangle

Come in Uncle Zulu Baker
Come in Uncle Zulu Baker
Come in please you're overdue
We're losing you

Caribbean air control
There's something wrong up here
I can see the sea
I've dropped my landing gear

Hey mister lonely
In your flying machine
We know what you've been through
Why don't you come in through
The waves that lead you into

Bermuda Triangle
Bermuda Triangle
Bermuda Triangle

We've got Uncle Zulu Baker

Nobody but nobody comes through
The Bermuda Triangle
Nobody but nobody comes through
The Bermuda Triangle
Nobody but nobody comes through
The Bermuda Triangle

Meanwhile, UFO sightings continue around the world, and SKYWATCH investigates.

Who the heck was Big A? Why was their A so big when Ian “Jethro Tull” Anderson only rated just the one ordinary sized A? Apparently it was someone called Alexander Everrit, but who are we kidding, this is really Trevor Horn and some other people. Also known as Chromium. Sidenote: Trevor likes UFOs. Everyone liked UFOs in 1978.

Yes, I remember this one too. I remember being confused as to pronounce the word “Caribbean” because of this song.

07 Living Links – Gathering The Forces (1985, USA) YOUNG ADULT SUSAN

Life is so comfortable
What does it all mean?
I'm not oppressed, I'm not at war
I am well fed and I am clean

But sometimes I have premonitions
That soon all of this will cease
Will you finish me at once
Or slowly carve me piece by piece?

The training is over
The message has been sent
Our dark forces are assembling
We're all awaiting orders

Too many functions
Too much exposure
I should narrow my scope
I need some kind of enclosure

I should probably be punished
I don't always walk in light
And I stumble in the darkness
I don't always do what's right

There's a glimmer of redemption
That I think that you must see
Will you put it to some use
And tell me what you'll do with me?

The training is over
The message has been sent
Our dark forces are assembling
We're all awaiting orders

The training is over
The message has been sent
Our dark forces are assembling
We're all awaiting orders

We're all awaiting orders
We're all awaiting orders
We're all awaiting orders
We're all awaiting orders

We're all awaiting orders
We're all awaiting orders
We're all awaiting orders
We're all awaiting orders

We're all awaiting orders
We're all awaiting orders
We're all awaiting orders
We're all awaiting orders

Susan as a teenager begins to feel bored and starts to question her purpose in life. She is already working as a programmer on an advanced cybernetic mind-machine simulation and control system. The implications of what she is building, and who the Center really work for, start to worry her.

I love Living Links for their extremely uncool goofiness.

08 Alien – Four Minute Warning (1980, England) THE GRADUATING CLASS OF 1978

There are four minutes to go
You have four minutes

Hooray!

Three minutes to go
You have three minutes

Like a child we travel headlong through our time
Fly away to darkness and Jack Frost he doesn't care
What did he say? Can it be true? What does it mean?
Will I need a gun? Where do I go? Will I survive?

Two minutes to go
You have two minutes

Voices rushing through and we've heard them all before
Trying to believe in the program never screened
What did he say? Am I still here? What does it mean?
Can it be real? Can it be true? I'm asking you

Lead's gonna fly and there's not gonna be a tomorrow
Lead's gonna fly and there's not gonna be a tomorrow
Next minute dying, there's not gonna be a tomorrow
Lead's gonna fly and there's not gonna be a tomorrow

Lead's gonna fly and there's not gonna be a tomorrow
Lead's gonna fly and there's not gonna be a tomorrow
Next minute dying, there's not gonna be a tomorrow
Lead's gonna fly and there's not gonna be a tomorrow

Fifteen seconds

Five, four, three, two, one

The crisis strikes when she turns 18 and discovers that her loving parents and her privileged, exciting yet sheltered life at the Center are part of a secret military project and everything she does – even perhaps her very existence – has been a weapon.

I don’t know how or when I heard this one, but I did. There sure were lots of “four minute warning” songs in the 80s! I think this one is the best of them.

09 Karla DeVito – We Accelerate (1986, USA) SUSAN and THE NOVAS

Daddy loves you
But he's frightened of what you know
When he was your age
He went out with the boys
Kicked up his heels and made noise

Now kids are different
Faster than the speed of sound
Those can't be children
Who stand up to the crowd
Throw up their fists and talk loud

Don't look at age
Look into our eyes
Enter our minds
But don't analyze
Just visualize

We keep the foot on the gas
We keep our eyes on the road
Keep our hands on the wheel
We carry heavy loads
So you wanna know where the children are?
Trying to survive!
We accelerate
We accelerate

Watch the kite soar
Into the glow of the nuclear war
Why aren't you sleeping?
Get the world off your mind
Take a deep breath and unwind

But don't look back now
Cause somebody's coming up from behind
No time for sleeping
Stay ahead of the pack
Learn to stand tall and fight back

When did it change?
When did childhood die?
Enter our minds
But don't analyze
Just visualize

We keep the foot on the gas
We keep our eyes on the road
Keep our hands on the wheel
We carry heavy loads
So you wanna know where the children are?
Trying to survive!
We accelerate
We accelerate

Moral evolution hurries
Dying minds comprise the jury
Shouting, Guilty, Guilty, Guilty, Guilty
Guilty!

Oh, we accelerate

We keep the foot on the gas
We keep our eyes on the road
Keep our hands on the wheel
We carry heavy loads
So you wanna know where the children are?
Trying to survive!
We accelerate
We accelerate

Oh, we accelerate
We accelerate
Oh, we accelerate
We accelerate
We accelerate
We accelerate
Oh, we accelerate

Susan and a group of the other SKYWATCH children break out of the Center and after a desperate car chase against military forces, escape into the urban underground.

I don’t know this one from the 80s, but it feels like this must have been written as a film final credits theme for some kind of car-racing-teens-in-trouble with postapocalyptic overtones thriller that somehow never got made? Some kind of followup to The Breakfast Club by way of The Terminator by way of Bat Out Of Hell? I don’t know but I think I would watch that movie. But as far as I know, all there is is this song.

10 Joe Camilleri – Angel Dove (1989, Australia) SUSAN’S FATHER

I have dreamed, oh I have dreamed
Saying peace, but there is no peace
How can we stand when we are so small?
Reaching out my hand just to break my fall

Everybody wants so much love
Have mercy on the young, angel dove
Be the fire of love
Amongst these children, my God
Have mercy on the young, angel

Primitive mind and a tender heart
Giving love for hate, that's how it starts
Refusing to fight fire with fire
Lifting up the children a little higher

Everybody wants so much love
Have mercy on the young, angel dove
Be the fire of love
Amongst these children, my God
Have mercy on the young, angel dove

Be the fire of love
Amongst these children, my God
Have mercy on the young, angel dove

Love, love, love
To the near and the far
There'll be peace on earth
With forgiving hearts

Let us not just with word and tongue
But with deed and truth let love be done
Be not silent to me

Everybody wants so much love
Have mercy on the young, angel dove
Be the fire of love
Amongst these children, my God
Have mercy on the young, angel

Be the fire of love
Amongst these children, my God
Have mercy on the young, angel

Be the fire of love
Amongst these children, my God
Have mercy on the young, angel dove

Love, love, love

Peace on earth
Love, love, love
To the near and the far
Peace on earth
With forgiving hearts

Love, love, love
To the near and the far
Peace on earth
With forgiving hearts

The SKYWATCH children will find it hard to survive in the city on their own, though they have strong courage. And perhaps other forces not of this world are also watching.

Okay, so, you may not believe this, but the woman singing backup on this 1989 Amnesty International charity single is Lin van Hek, who did the 1984 Terminator soundtrack song “Intimacy” (yah, yah, yah) as an absolutely terrifying German cyborg. (No really, you have to see this video if you haven’t). And then she turns around and does this beautiful, uplifting spiritual hymn to world peace.

This is what Australians are capable of. Do not underestimate Australians.

(Lin does poetry and art now. It turns out, like many other artists who were briefly scary cyborgs in the 1980s, that she always was a bit of a hippie.)

11 Nena – Kino (At The Movies) (1984, Germany) SUSAN

I see a movie every Saturday night
I take a chance when they turn off the lights
A blaze of stars out of Hollywood
Me and Bogart, trenchcoat and hat
That's okay

Would you like it hot with Marilyn?
Or better yet, with James Dean?
I'm waiting for that happy end
Arm in arm with Cary Grant
That's okay

So late at night, I'm watching the movie
So late at night comes the midnight show
So late at night, I'm watching the movie
I never, never say no

In the first rows, one to ten
Sit the movie-crazies, pale and thin
Back of me, bathed in the light
They all think the monster is nice
Okay!

All the night, the flashing long knives
The day before, came the zombies!
Oh my God! The Devil too?!
I saw it all, oh what can I do??
That's okay

So late at night, I'm watching the movie
So late at night comes the midnight show
So late at night, I'm watching the movie

So late at night, I'm watching the movie
So late at night comes the midnight show
So late at night, I'm watching the movie
I never, never say no

So late at night, I'm watching the movie
So late at night comes the midnight show
So late at night, I'm watching the movie

So late at night, I'm watching the movie
So late at night comes the midnight show
So late at night, I'm watching the movie


Susan reflects on the uncertainty of life but is determined to accept whatever comes next, now that she has her freedom.

No, I’m not going to do 99 Luftballoons. Stop asking for 99 Luftballoons. Due to constant radio airplay for all of the actual 1980s and about 1000 megaton-years of cinematic and televisual 1980s-derived-retro-product the ozone layer is now choked with 99 trillion Luftballoons. It has become a major ecological tragedy. We all need to work together to reduce global output of Luftballoons before it is too late. A Luftballoon is for life, not just for that one throwaway scene where you need to establish “it is the 1980s and people are, like, worried about nuclear war or something. Luftballoons!”

Fortunately Nena did do other songs. In the same year, even!

Also: Gabriele Susanne “Nena” Kerner is an Honorary Susan.

(next in Program Eleven/II: Novas 0.02)