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Why It’s So Challenging to Land Upright on the Moon

Two spacecraft have ended up askew on the lunar surface this year. It is easier to tip over in the weaker gravity on the moon than you may imagine.

The Odysseus lander on the moon’s surface, shown at a tilt.

By Kenneth Chang

When the robotic lander Odysseus last month became the first American-built spacecraft to touch down on the moon in more than 50 years, it toppled over at an angle. That limited the amount of science it could do at the lunar surface, because its antennas and solar panels were not pointed in the correct directions.

Just a month earlier, another spacecraft, the Smart Lander for Investigating Moon, or SLIM, sent by the Japanese space agency, had also tipped during landing, ending up on its head .

Why is there a sudden epidemic of spacecraft rolling on the moon like Olympic gymnasts performing floor routines? Is it really that difficult to land upright there?

On the internet and elsewhere, people pointed to the height of the Odysseus lander — 14 feet from the bottom of the landing feet to the solar arrays at the top — as a contributing factor for its off-kilter touchdown.

Had Intuitive Machines, the maker of Odysseus, made an obvious error in building the spacecraft that way?

The company’s officials provide an engineering rationale for the tall, skinny design, but those internet commenters do have a point.

Something tall falls over more easily than an object that is short and squat. And on the moon, where the pull of gravity is just one-sixth as strong as on Earth, the propensity to tip over is even greater.

This is not a new realization. A half-century ago, Apollo astronauts had firsthand experience as they hopped around on the moon, and sometimes tumbled to the ground.

On the social media site X last week, Philip Metzger, a former NASA engineer who is now a planetary scientist at the University of Central Florida, explained the math and the physics of why it is more difficult to remain standing on the moon.

“I’ve actually gone through calculations, and it’s really scary,” Dr. Metzger said. “The side motion that can tip a lander of that size is only a few meters per second in lunar gravity.” (One meter per second is, in everyday American units, a bit more than two miles per hour.)

There are two parts to this question of stability.

The first is static stability. If something is standing at much of an angle, it will fall over if the center of gravity is to the outside of the landing legs.

Here, it turns out the maximum angle of leaning is the same on Earth as it is on the moon. It would be the same on any world, large or small, because gravity cancels out of the equation.

However, the answer changes if the spacecraft is still moving. Odysseus was supposed to land vertically with zero horizontal velocity, but because of problems with the navigation system, it was still moving sideways when it hit the ground.

“Intuition that’s based on Earth is now a liability,” Dr. Metzger said.

He gave the example of trying to push over the refrigerator in your kitchen. “It’s so heavy that a slight push is not going to push it over,” Dr. Metzger said.

But you replace it with a piece of Styrofoam in the shape of a refrigerator, mimicking the weight of a real refrigerator in lunar gravity, “then a very light push will push it over,” Dr. Metzger said.

Assuming the spacecraft remains in one piece, it would rotate at the point of contact where the landing foot touches the ground.

Dr. Metzger’s calculations suggested that for a spacecraft like Odysseus, the landing legs need to be splayed about two and a half times as wide on the moon as on the Earth to counteract the same amount of sideways motion.

If, for example, six feet wide were enough for landing on Earth at the maximum horizontal speed, then the legs would have to be 15 feet apart in order not to tip on the moon at the same sideways speed.

For simplicity of design, the landing legs of Odysseus did not fold up, and the diameter of the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket that lifted it to space limited how wide the landing legs could spread out.

“So, on the moon, you have to design to keep the sideways velocities very low at touchdown, much lower than you would if landing the vehicle in Earth’s gravity,” Dr. Metzger wrote on X.

I too wondered about the shape of the lander when I visited the Intuitive Machines headquarters and factory in Houston in February last year.

“Why so tall?” I asked.

Steve Altemus, the chief executive of Intuitive Machines, replied that it had to do with the tanks that hold the spacecraft’s liquid methane and liquid oxygen propellants.

The oxygen weighs twice as much as the methane, so if the oxygen tank were placed next to the methane tank, the lander would have been unbalanced. Instead, the two tanks were stacked on top of each other.

“That created the height,” Mr. Altemus said.

Scott Manley, who provides commentary about rockets on X and YouTube , noted that Mr. Altemus had led the development of a shorter, squatter lander when he was at NASA a decade ago.

That test lander, named Morpheus, also used methane and oxygen propellants, but the tanks were configured in pairs to keep the weight in balance. It was never meant to fly to space.

In an interview, Mr. Manley said that design would have worked for the Intuitive Machines lander as well but would have made the spacecraft heavier and more complex.

If the spacecraft needed two methane tanks and two oxygen tanks, the spacecraft structure would have needed to be bigger and heavier. The tanks would have been heavier too.

“You’ve got more surface area, so that’s more surface to insulate,” Mr. Manley said. He added that it would also have needed “more plumbing and more valves, more things to go wrong.”

For the landing site in the south pole region, the height of Odysseus offered another advantage. At the bottom of the moon, sunlight shines at low angles, producing long shadows. If Odysseus had remained upright, the solar arrays at the top of the spacecraft would have remained out of shadows longer, generating more power for the mission.

During the visit to Intuitive Machines, Tim Crain, the company’s chief technology officer, said the spacecraft had been designed to stay upright when landing even on a slope of 10 degrees or more. The navigation software was programmed to look for a spot where the slope was five degrees or less.

Because the laser instruments on Odysseus for measuring altitude were not working during descent, the spacecraft landed faster than planned on a 12-degree slope. That exceeded its design limits. Odysseus skidded along the surface, broke one of its six legs and tipped to its side.

If the laser instruments had been operating, “We would have nailed the landing,” Mr. Altemus said during a news conference last week

The same concerns will apply for SpaceX’s humongous Starship, which will take two NASA astronauts to the moon’s surface as soon as 2026.

Starship, as tall as a 16-story building, will have to come down perfectly vertically and avoid significant slopes. But those should be solvable engineering challenges, Dr. Metzger said.

“It removes some of the margin of error in your dynamic stability, but it doesn’t remove all the margin of error,” Dr. Metzger said of a tall lander. “The amount of margin that you have left is manageable as long as your other systems on the spacecraft are functioning.”

An earlier version of this article misstated the relative weights of oxygen and methane. Oxygen is twice as heavy as methane, not the reverse.

How we handle corrections

Kenneth Chang has been at The Times since 2000, writing about physics, geology, chemistry, and the planets. Before becoming a science writer, he was a graduate student whose research involved the control of chaos. More about Kenneth Chang

What’s Up in Space and Astronomy

Keep track of things going on in our solar system and all around the universe..

Never miss an eclipse, a meteor shower, a rocket launch or any other 2024 event  that’s out of this world with  our space and astronomy calendar .

Voyager 1, the 46-year-old first craft in interstellar space which flew by Jupiter and Saturn in its youth, may have gone dark .

Two spacecraft have ended up askew on the moon this year, illustrating that it’s not so easy to land upright on the lunar surface. Here is why .

In 2022, NASA crashed a $325 million spacecraft into an asteroid named Dimorphos to change its orbit. The impact might have also changed Dimorphos’s shape .

What do you call a galaxy without stars? In addition to dark matter and dark energy, we now have dark galaxies  — collections of stars so sparse and faint that they are all but invisible.

Is Pluto a planet? And what is a planet, anyway? Test your knowledge here .

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We can't go driving, in an automobile There aint no motorcycles, poppin' up on their wheels We can't go flying, to a tropical land But come on darling grab my hand Cause we can go wandering under the moon (Ba-da-ba-ba-da-da-da-da-da-da) The stars are brighter now after the doom (Ba-da-ba-ba-da-da-da-da-da-da) Phones and tablets they won't, be back soon So we can go wandering under the moon There ain't no movies, on a silver screen There ain't no television, playing scene after scene There ain't no metro, with a rock and roll band But come on darling grab my hand Cause we can go wandering under the moon (Ba-da-ba-ba-da-da-da-da-da-da) The stars are brighter now after the doom (Ba-da-ba-ba-da-da-da-da-da-da) Cellphones and tablets they won't, be back soon So we can go wandering under the moon Cause we can go wandering under the moon The stars are brighter now after the doom Them phones and tablets they won't, be back soon So we can go wandering under the moon

we can go wandering under the moon

J. R. R. Tolkien

Roads go ever on.

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The world was young, the mountains… No stain yet on the Moon was seen… No words were laid on stream or st… When Durin woke and walked alone. He named the nameless hills and de…

Ho! Ho! Ho! To the bottle I go To heal my heart and drown my woe. Rain may fall and wind may blow, And many miles be still to go But under a tall tree I will lie,

The Man in the Moon had silver sh… And his beard was of silver thread… He was girt with pure gold and ina… With gold about his head. Clad in silken robe in his great w…

we can go wandering under the moon

All that is gold does not glitter, Not all those who wander are lost; The old that is strong does not wi… Deep roots are not reached by the… From the ashes a fire shall be wok…

we can go wandering under the moon

Three Rings for the Elven-kings u… Seven for the Dwarf-lords in thei… Nine for Mortal Men doomed to die… One for the Dark Lord on his dark… In the Land of Mordor where the…

You and me—we know that land And often have been there In the long old days, old nursery… A dark child and a fair. Was it down the paths of firelight…

“The leaves were long, the grass w… The hemlock-umbels tall and fair, And in the glade a light was seen Of stars in shadow shimmering. Tinuviel was dancing there

I am off down the road Where the fairy lanterns glowed And the little pretty flitter-mice… A slender band of gray It runs creepily away

In western lands beneath the Sun The flowers may rise in Spring, The trees may bud, the waters run, The merry finches sing. Or there maybe 'tis cloudless nigh…

An Elven-maid there was of old, A shining star by day: Her mantle white was hemmed with g… Her shoes of silver-grey. A star was bound upon her brows,

We knew that land once, You and I… and once we wandered there in the long days now long gone by, a dark child and a fair. Was it on the paths of firelight t…

I sang of leaves, of leaves of gol… emptyand leaves of gold there grew… Of wind I sang, a wind there came emptyand in the branches blew. Beyond the Sun, beyond the Moon,

In unknown days my fathers’ sires Came, and from son to son took roo… Among the orchards and the river-m… And the long grasses of the fragra… Many a summer saw they kindle yell…

I know a window in a western tower That opens on celestial seas, And wind that has been blowing rou… Comes to nestle in its tossing dra… It is a white tower builded in the…

we can go wandering under the moon

Eärendil was a mariner that tarried in Arvernien; he built a boat of timber felled in Nimbrethil to journey in; her sails he wove of silver fair,

Station Eleven : The Virtue of Being an Artist and Answering Death with Beauty

Avatar for Alisa Ruddell

Alisa Ruddell

** Spoiler Alert: This article contains spoilers for Station Eleven **

Beauty Worth Surviving For, Beauty That Feeds You

At the heart of the ten-episode series Station Eleven is a conflict between two instincts about the world as it is—between the affirmation of Life as a whole ( the good and the bad together ), and the negation of Life in protest of its dark and painful underbelly ( better to let it all burn).  

Maybe joy is still possible after suffering (as long as there’s a hand to grab, folks to join you on the chorus, and a backup trombone).

Affirmation wins: the victor of Station Eleven is neither its devastating global pandemic nor its pyromaniac prophet of nihilism, but the artists— the writers, painters, actors, singers, musicians, composers, and costume designers who find fragments of beauty in the post-apocalyptic mess, and reassemble the world, piece by piece.

This artistic affirmation of Life, while rooted in memory, isn’t about preserving the past behind glass, but about making meaning in the present. According to philosopher Marshall McLuhan, “Art is not a retrieval system of precious moments of past cultures. Art has a live, ongoing function.” Although meaningful “in itself” and not for its utility, art was never meant for mere display, as in a gallery. Museums that house historical “prestige objects ” are quite modern inventions: they are cemeteries for dead liturgical things we cannot meaningfully use—the places where art goes to be looked upon as it lies “in state” (the Museum of Civilization in Station Eleven represents this backward-looking, preservative attitude). 

But living art that is still in circulation is meant for something other than observation and nostalgia; it invites participation in a higher purpose as an organ of perception, helping people to see and celebrate reality. The word “art” comes from a root that means “ to fit together .” In the words of Orthodox icon carver Jonathan Pageau ,

You don’t ‘make art,’ you use art to make things . . . Art is the skill, art is the capacity you have mastered to make an object. So then that object needs to have a function in the world. It needs to be integrated within a purpose.

Art—as both a beautiful, purposeful object and the living skill of fitting pieces together—is what makes the story of Station Eleven so profoundly hopeful. Art is the way these characters take their suffering and work with it, kneading it like dough, until it yields under their skilled hands and becomes something nourishing, shareable, and communally enriching, something that is “worth surviving for,” that “would feed you,” in the words of main actor Mackenzie Davis . Artists take the world’s dark underbelly and manage somehow to rearrange the pieces into the makings of a festival. 

This is true of the Traveling Symphony within the story, and it’s also true of Station Eleven ’s creators, cast, and crew who crafted this pandemic tale during a real-world pandemic that surprised and interrupted their plans. The “meta” nature of their endeavor—of answering death with beauty —was ever-present in their minds, as life imitated art.

“Just Tryin’ to Make the World Make Sense for a Minute”

The graphic novel Station Eleven , which becomes the “Bible” of this series and gives the show its name, was written and drawn by Miranda Carroll (Danielle Deadwyler). When she was a child, Miranda’s entire family was killed in hurricane Hugo, electrocuted by a live wire that struck the water submerging their home. She alone survived—up on the countertop high and dry, coloring with crayons. What saved her by chance as a child is the very practice that heals and homes her as an adult: creating pictures that mean something, that make the world make sense for a minute. 

we can go wandering under the moon

Although Miranda herself dies in the pandemic that serves as the show’s tragic premise, her brilliant graphic novel lives on in the possession of two traumatized children (Kirsten and Tyler) who rely on its wisdom as the world disintegrates around them. “When I read it, it didn’t matter that the world was ending, because it was the world,” Kirsten (Mackenzie Davis) says in Year Twenty after the crisis, remembering her eight-year-old obsession with Station Eleven . Its words (decades later) could still flow over her tongue with the consoling immediacy of the Hail Mary or the Our Father. Station Eleven was truly “alive,” integrated within a higher purpose as a liturgical script for grief, anger, terror, despair, loneliness, hope, connection, and comfort, like a pocket-sized book of Psalms. 

we can go wandering under the moon

Young Kirsten (Matilda Lawler) even wrote a play based on the death scene from Miranda’s novel, and performed it with her adult caregivers Jeevan and Frank Chaudhary. Their little family drama not only provided the brothers a chance to say goodbye to each other using Miranda’s poignant words, but also gave Kirsten the chance to practice being the monster she would need to become to survive on her own (quite presciently, she casts herself as the killer).

When Kirsten meets “the Conductor” Sarah (Lori Petty) in Year Two, she is invited into the nomadic life of a Shakespearean acting troupe which circles Lake Michigan performing a different play each year. “We’re the Traveling Symphony. We travel for a reason,” Sarah explains. “We burn the house down, and then we go! Just tryin’ to make the world make sense for a minute. You know, they blame you if you stay, but they love you— like you saved ’em —when you come back.” Sarah understands that the feast-and-fasting, cyclical-and-celebratory nature of the musical drama they share with the community is what keeps their art fresh. By always moving on (yet always coming back), they cultivate their audience’s anticipation, giving them something to look forward to, providing a festive occasion to an otherwise difficult life of manual labor.

In the post-pan world, Shakespeare doesn’t exist as a book of plays collecting dust; his work isn’t passively consumed through screens and headphones, or studied by experts in graduate programs (all of which are gone). Shakespeare is a verb: it’s something these people do . His spirit is embodied by this motley crew of actors and musicians, dressed in costumes made from supplies you’d find at Costco, using props scavenged from abandoned settlements. Shakespeare is the highlight of the year for regular folks—a festival commenced by the arrival of the Symphony’s horse-drawn caravan, as their tuba player belts out “ Give Up The Funk ,” and crowds gather to wave and welcome them in. The pandemic may have killed 99.99% of humanity, but Shakespeare is very much alive.

we can go wandering under the moon

“Survival Is Insufficient”

The verbal and visual art of Miranda’s graphic novel, and the dramatic art of Hamlet , are accompanied by a series of beautiful and spontaneous songs that grace the story. In episode two (“A Hawk from a Handsaw”), we are granted a seat around the Traveling Symphony’s campfire as they relax and mingle with their hosts, and strike up what can only be described as a hootenanny :

There ain’t no movies On a silver screen There ain’t no television Playing scene after scene There ain’t no metro With a rock ’n’ roll band But come on darlin’, grab my hand…
’Cause we can go wandering under the moon The stars are brighter now after the doom Cell phones and tablets—they won’t be back soon So we can go wandering under the moon

The musicians make a list of their losses, hang them on a tune, and—in a light-hearted rebuttal of death’s damage—decide that maybe things are kinda better now than they were before . Maybe joy is still possible after suffering (as long as there’s a hand to grab, folks to join you on the chorus, and a backup trombone).

When chaos, pain, or death break apart the pattern of our living, of our family, of our home, of our society, the way we cope is to establish a new pattern out of the pieces.

This intuition that joy is inextinguishable, that Life deserves a round of applause no matter what hell it puts you through, is seen vividly in episode seven (“Goodbye My Damaged Home”), which flashes back to young Kirsten, Jeevan (Himesh Patel), and Frank (Nabhaan Rizwan) barricaded in an apartment during the first one hundred days of the pandemic—an anxiety-ridden and horrifying time. 

When Kirsten discovers that everyone she ever knew and loved is dead, amidst tears and screams she gropes for comfort : “ I don’t even know how many days it is until Christmas !” she confesses. Jeevan and Frank are unsure how best to console her, but they do have a calendar ( it’s eleven days till Christmas ); they have colorful lights they can string up, ugly Christmas sweaters for all three of them to wear, and plenty of wrapping paper and eggnog. The attempt at festivity is nearly destroyed by the drone of the last remaining newscaster—“Chicago isn’t Chicago anymore. It’s just 2.5 million bodies…”—until Jeevan turns off the TV, and they sit in their sadness. Kirsten breaks the silence with “The First Noel,” and somehow manages to smile while singing. And into the darkness of that dead city, Christ comes. Jeevan isn’t the only one who gets teary hearing Kirsten’s voice: according to the show’s creator Patrick Sommerville, the whole crew filming the scene also burst into tears .

we can go wandering under the moon

Another occasion of joy breaking in had the cast and crew not crying, but dancing :  “It’s real. It’s a way to stay hot,” Frank tells Jeevan and Kirsten in all seriousness, before busting out in a spontaneous rap cover of “Excursions” (by A Tribe Called Quest) which gets them all out of their huddled, frozen seats to laugh and dance together around the dining room table.

Get in a zone of positivity Not negativity ’Cause we gotta strive for longevity

Frank, usually quiet and reserved, seizes the moment to utter his unambiguous, full-throated Yes! to Life, and to bring his family into that rhythm with him. At this point in the story, he’s probably realized that, given their scant resources and his crippled leg, Jeevan and Kirsten will both have a better chance of surviving if he sacrifices himself and stays behind when it’s time to move on. And still, he blesses them with a dance party. 

Surrounded by death and loss, these two songs—one of God’s visitation and the other of human aspiration—punctuate the darkness with light, and bring warmth to the paralyzing chill of a Chicago winter without electricity. Kirsten and Frank don’t create this music themselves (unlike the Traveling Symphony and their newly-minted folk songs ), but they take traditions, both old and new, and pull them into the present moment. They affirm the goodness of being alive, even when all they can see around them is damage. The Traveling Symphony’s slogan—“Survival Is Insufficient”—forms the wellspring of festivity, not only for the troupe, but for that isolated trio who reached out for beauty and held on for dear life.

“This Strange and Awful Time Was the Happiest of My Life”

In the slim volume In Tune with the World: A Theory of Festivity , Catholic philosopher Josef Pieper writes that there is a many-stranded relationship linking the arts to festivity, and that underlying all festive joy in particular circumstances is

an absolutely universal affirmation extending to the world as a whole, to the reality of things and the existence of man himself . . . the prime festive occasion, which alone can ultimately justify all celebration, really exists; that . . . at bottom everything that is, is good, and it is good to exist.  

This must be the paradoxical conclusion that Christians come to, for the God who is “the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world” ( Rev. 13:8 NKJV) and died on the cross for us, is the same God who saw everything He had made and declared it “good.” This is ultimately the higher purpose that all living art is integrated with: delight in the beauty God has made, and delight in participating in His patterned world in such a way that even darkness and death are “metabolized” into the Whole, rather than being granted the power to destroy the Whole. As the resurrection of Jesus Christ shows us, death is not avoided, but accepted and then transcended. Death and hell are destroyed from the inside out .

“The whole world is an organic unity,” Reformed theologian Herman Bavinck wrote, “upheld by one thought, led by one will, directed to one goal . . . a building that grows and a body that is built . It is a work of art from the Supreme Artist and from the Master Builder of the universe.” To recognize ourselves as a small part of that organic unity—as works of art who can make works of art—provides us with a meaning that no amount of suffering and loss can take away, and that even nonbelievers can participate in without (yet) recognizing the holy ground they’re standing on. As Frank says on the day of his death, quoting Station Eleven for Kirsten’s play, “This strange and awful time was the happiest of my life.” Strange, awful, and happy can somehow co-exist (without canceling each other out) when they are incorporated into a beautiful whole. That skilled “fitting together” of disparate pieces is what art is .

The cast and crew of Station Eleven developed a practice that skillfully fitted together their creative task of making this show with the sad and scary fact of COVID-19. Main actor Mackenzie Davis initiated a weekly, face-to-face moment of connection and celebration for the otherwise masked and distanced coworkers. Station Eleven embodied beautiful patterns both on screen and behind the scenes.   As cinematographer Steve Cosens describes ,

[W]e would all stand in a big circle . . . somebody would step into the middle of the ring and remove their mask so that people, the whole crew, could see what their face looked like. Because we were all of course totally covered. Everybody would, you know, you’d get in the middle, you’d be all shy and self-conscious and you’d take your mask off. And everybody would applaud, and then you put your mask back on and go on with the day. But we started to do that every Friday and it was such a beautiful thing that [Mackenzie] initiated, and it really made us all realize just also the value of connecting with each other. 

To greet the face of another person with applause—to make the revelation of another’s smile a nigh-liturgical act—is a creative way to turn separation into communion, to turn the “relational fast” of pandemic restrictions and isolation into a festive circle. The sorrow is simultaneously accepted and transcended by a beautiful new pattern. Affirmation wins.

we can go wandering under the moon

When chaos, pain, or death break apart the pattern of our living, of our family, of our home, of our society, the way we cope is to establish a new pattern out of the pieces. We take what is ready-to-hand and arrange it just so to create meaning and beauty again; or we inhabit and “put on” the words and creations of others who have done this beauty-making work before us and entrust our hearts to their wisdom. That’s why a song can heal you, a movie can remake you, a book, a poem, a liturgy, or a painting can stitch you back together. As Sommerville said, “[A]rt can hold and help people [even when] the author of the art isn’t there.” There’s no knowing what healing and joy you’ve brought to others (unknown to you in this life) through something beautiful you have made.

As Anglican priest Tish Warren Harrison writes , “Beauty doesn’t take away the pain of suffering or vulnerability,” nor does it “resolve our questions or tie anything up in a nice metaphysical bow,” but it can be enough to get us through the next hour, to enable us to hold a painful mystery without hating it. And maybe, just maybe, it can open a crack large enough for joy to get a foot in the door. He’s always there, knocking ( Rev. 3:20 ).

This was the last of a four-part series on Station Eleven. In case you missed them, read the intro and my take on the other primary virtues of the show: helping even when you don’t know what you’re doing , and risky hospitality .

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Under the Harvest Moon

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River roads.

Let the crows go by hawking their caw and caw. They have been swimming in midnights of coal mines somewhere. Let ’em hawk their caw and caw.

Beat, Old Heart

Beat, old heart, these are the old bars All stragglers have beat against. Beat on these bars like the old sea Beats on the rocks and beaches. Beat here like the old winter winds Beat on the prairies and timbers. Old grizzlies, eagles, buffalo, Their paws and beaks register this.

Plow over bars of sea plowing, the moon by moon work of the sea, the plowing, sand and rock, must be done.

Ride over, ride over bars of sea riding, the sun and the blue riding of the sea— sit in the saddles and say it, sea riders.

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Music Grotto

45 Best Songs About The Moon

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The moon is a major factor in many of the most popular songs ever written. Songs about the moon are often romantic, reflecting on how it illuminates our nights with its light.

Some songs are also simply about the moon itself and the effect this celestial body has had on us throughout history. For others, they may be metaphors for life’s phases or cycles – waxing and waning like the tides. Whatever they’re about, these 44 best-songs about the moon have stood out as some of the most memorable to date.

1. Shoot The Moon – Norah James

Shoot The Moon

This song was released in 2002 and was part of the album Come Away with Me . The song has a strong acoustics feature making it popular for sober occasions. It is best for a slow dance. The song talks about how love changes like the seasons.

Next: Best sad songs of all time to feel down to

2. The Moon’s A Harsh Mistress – Glen Campbell

The Moon's A Harsh Mistress (Remastered 2001)

Glen Campbell released the song in 1974 and is part of the album The Best of Glen Campbell . Its lyrics talk about life challenges and how it can be hard to overcome them. It has a strong melody that makes it suitable for various settings. It is best paired with an easy dance step and slow-moving choreography.

Next: Top songs about life and all it entails

3. Talking To The Moon – Bruno Mars

Bruno Mars - Talking To The Moon (Lyrics)

This song was released in 2010 and is part of the album Doo – Hoops & Hooligans . The lyrics are about how it feels to be away from someone you love. The song has a smooth melody that makes it suitable for most occasions.

Next: Songs about missing someone and being far away

4. Moonlight Serenade – Glenn Miller

Glenn Miller & His Orchestra - Moonlight Serenade (Audio)

Moonlight Serenade was written in 1935 but released four years later. Miller wrote the lyrics to the song while he was a trombone player. The song performed well in the charts in both the U.K. and the U.S. It was number 12 and 3 respectively. The song is about two lovers spending time together.

Next: Most romantic and beautiful love songs of all time

5. Once In A Very Blue Moon – Nanci Griffith

Nanci Griffith - Once In A Very Blue Moon

Griffith released this hit number in 1984 as the lead single from her album “Once In a Very Blue Moon.” The song was written by Nanci herself and helped her establish her career as a musician . The song talks about the struggles that come after parting with a loved one.

6. To The Moon And Back – Savage Garden

Savage Garden - To The Moon & Back (Extended Version)

The Australian duo didn’t realize how big of a hit this song would become when they released it in 1997. They wrote the lyrics first and then paired them with a melody to complete the song. The song reached number twenty-four in the United States. It was Savage Garden’s only song to reach this achievement, but it also hit number two on the Australian ARIA charts.

7. Moonlight – Grace Nanderwaal

Grace VanderWaal - Moonlight (Video)

Grace was born on January 15, 2004, in Kansas and began her musical career by posting videos on Youtube. The song was part of the album Just the Beginning, released in 2017. The song is about fighting depression and the challenges it presents.

Next: The best songs about depression and its challenges

8. Neon Moon – Brooks and Dunn

Brooks & Dunn - Neon Moon (Official Audio)

The duo released the song as a track number in their album, Brand New Man. The lyrics describe a man in love with a woman who has walked out on him and is brokenhearted. The song was top on the Country Chart for three consecutive weeks.

Next: Best songs about breakups in a relationship

9. Moon River – Andy Williams

Moon River

Andy William’s version of Moon River was no. 89 on the Billboard Hot 100 Chart in 1962. The song is about a man longing to be in the arms of his lover. He is willing to do anything for her, even if it means he has to cross an ocean to get to her.

Next: The top songs about ocean, sailing and the sea

10. The Moon And The Sky – Sade

Sade - The Moon And The Sky

Sade originally debuted this song on her 2011 album “Ultimate Collection” as a single, and it was no. 54 on the billboard. The song is about giving up on a relationship after trying your best.

11. Get You The Moon- Kina Ft Snow

Kina - get you the moon (Lyrics) ft. Snow

Get You The Moon is a song about being ready to get the impossible for someone you love. The song was released in 2018 under Columbia Records. It’s a very catchy song to be used as workout motivation!

Next: Best inspirational songs to get motivated

12. Man On The Moon – R.E.M.

R.E.M. - Man On The Moon (Official Music Video)

The song’s inspiration came from the late comedian Andy Kaufman. Michael Stipe, the lead singer, wrote this song and it is about Kaufman’s alter impersonation of Elvis. The song features a darkly-humorous lyric, sung by Stipe in his distinctive nasal voice. Its lyrical content is about the duality of human nature and how the world often sees the worst in us.

The song’s lyrics are famously known for their oblique nature, attributed to Stipe’s writing style. Its lyrics seem semi-autobiographical, as Stipe said that the song was a “huge exorcism for me” and that he had been holding onto the song for years. The lyrics are often attributed to Kaufman, as Stipe said it was a “eulogy.”

It’s known for being one of R.E.M.’s most successful songs to date, reaching #19 on the Billboard Hot 100. The song was also successful in the U.K., reaching #19 on the British singles chart.

Next: The best nature songs about the environment and earth

13. Moonlight – XXXTENTACION

XXXTENTACION - MOONLIGHT (OFFICIAL MUSIC VIDEO)

The term “Moonlight” in the song is used to depict XXXTentacion’s success as an artist and compliment a girl he is crushing on. This song was released on March 24, 2018, and was one of his big performances before he passed. However, the musician had it hard dealing with all the fame that his career brought him.

Next: The best songs about crushes

14. Moon At The Window – Joni Mitchell

Moon At The Window

The song was part of the album Wild Things Run Very Fast, released in 1982. It tells the story of how people don’t know how to value what they have. They keep using things and tossing them away in the same way that people don’t want to value what is in front of them.

15. Mwaka Moon – Kalash Ft Damso

Kalash - Mwaka Moon ft. Damso

This French song was released in October 2017, and it has a reggae tone to it. The song is a funky one and will have you on your feet dancing to it. It performed well in the charts in Belgium and France by clinching the top position.

16. Moon River – Frank Ocean

Frank Ocean - Moon River

This was the signature song for the album Moon River released in 2018, and it talked about wandering one’s mind. John and Henry are the original writers of this song. Many artists have covered this song over the years, most famously by Frank Sinatra and Jerry Butler. The song was written for Audrey Hepburn in the movie Breakfast at Tiffany’s and was originally called Audrey. The song didn’t make the cut and went unreleased for 11 years before it finally saw the light of day in the movie Days of Wine and Roses.

Next: Best cover songs of all time (most important covers)

17. Howling at the Moon – Milow

Howling at the Moon

Howling at the Moon was released in 2016 and talks about a man having a hard time with his girlfriend. He wants to run away from reality and its problems. The song itself has come under quite some criticism by the listeners due to its lyrics.

18. You House The Moon – Sam Hunt

You House the Moon

This is another song by Sam Hunt released in 2015. The story of this song is about a man who meets an attractive woman. He tries to impress her by inviting her over for dinner. The girl loves the idea but never shows up. This song is a great one to listen to when you are in the mood for some little bit of country music.

19. Moonshadow – Yusuf/ Cat Stevens

Yusuf / Cat Stevens - Moonshadow (Live, 1971)

The song was released in 1971 and is one of the most famous songs about the moon. It is also one of Cat Steven’s most popular songs, which you can find in several albums. The song is about finding hope even in hopeless situations. It talks about taking life as it is and being joyful in the present moment.

20. Moon Over Bourbon Street – Sting

Moon Over Bourbon Street

This song was released in 1985 as part of the album The Dream of the Blue Turtles . It has strong beats and was recorded in one take. The song talks about struggling with inner feelings on the actions one is supposed to take.

21. Moondance – Van Morrison

Moondance (2013 Remaster)

The song charted at no. 92 in the U.S. charts and is featured on the third studio album by Northern Irish singer-songwriter Van Morrison. The album is widely regarded as one of the greatest albums ever recorded and a definitive example of jazz-inspired rock music with pop overtones. In their November 2008 issue, Rolling Stone magazine placed the album at number 39 on their list of some of the greatest albums of all time.

Next: Top songs of all time (the best ever)

22. Dancing in the Moonlight – King Harvest

Dancing in the Moonlight (Original Recording) - King Harvest

Dancing in the Moonlight charted no. 13 in the U.S. charts and was released as a single in 1973. It is a great song and was the first song that King Harvest recorded and released as a group.

23. Harvest Moon – Neil Young

Neil Young - Harvest Moon [Official Music Video]

This song is a clear illustration of the Neil Young sound and refers to his album Harvest Moon . The song is full of allusions referring both to the harvest moon and Neil Young’s own life. It has a distinct folk sound to it, with the organ used in place of the guitar – something that would not have been out of place during the psychedelic folk movement in the 1960s. The song is best known for its famous chorus, which many artists have covered over the years.

24. Fly Me To The Moon – Frank Sinatra Ft Count Basie

Fly Me To The Moon – Frank Sinatra and Count Basie

This was one of the first jazz songs to top number one on the pop chart and was written in 1954 by Bart Howard. The song is about a man asking the moon to fly him away, with the lyrics “Fly me on a magic carpet ride.” The song was recorded by many artists over the years and has appeared in many movies and T.V. shows. They even used the song to send astronauts home from the moon as a morse code signal for help.

Next: The absolute best jazz songs of all time

25. Moonage Daydream – David Bowie

David Bowie- 03 Moonage Daydream

This song was released on the album The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars , released in 1972. It is perhaps one of Bowie’s most famous songs and was one of the last songs recorded for the album. The song is full of allusions to Bowie’s past, including his interest in Buddhism and bisexuality. Bowie has said that the song is about “alienation, my feelings of alienation at the time.”

Next: Most impactful songs about loneliness and being alone

26. Shame On The Moon – Bob Seger

Shame On The Moon

Bob gave this song a country-rock style, reminiscent of his earlier hits. The song is a clear composition referencing the breakup of Seger’s first marriage – something that Seger has never admitted to. The lyrics reflect how he felt after the breakup and have been often interpreted as about America’s loss of innocence.

27. Walking On The Moon – The Police

The Police - Walking On The Moon (Official Music Video)

When it comes to this song, there are many rumors about its meaning. The song was written by Sting, who said that he “tried to capture some of the spirits of the great pioneers of space flight.” Sting has also said that he is fascinated by the moon and even called it a “supernatural world.”

Next: Best songs about space and the universe (of all time)

28. Moonlight – Ariana Grande

Moonlight

Ariana has made this song her own, and the lyrics are about a girl who feels as though she is never good enough for anyone. The lyrics reference Ariana’s past relationship with Mac Miller and how she feels her boyfriend doesn’t understand that what they have is real. The song is about the moment when she finally stands up for herself and says enough is enough.

29. It’s Only a Paper Moon – Ella Fitzgerald

Ella Fitzgerald - It’s Only a Paper Moon

This song was first published in 1933, yet it was recorded by Fitzgerald in 1967. The song is about spending time with someone you love and how even though it might feel like a dream, there is still a sense of reality. The song is perfect for those who love jazz and swing, as well as fans of Fitzgerald herself!

30. Moonlight Shadow – Mike Oldfield

Moonlight Shadow (Remastered 2013)

It performed unexpectedly since the song charted no. 4 in the U.S. and no. 12 in the U.K., making it Mike’s most successful song on both charts to date. The lyrics are widely regarded as a tribute to John Lennon. The song has a folk sound to it, with the influence of Mike’s love for John.

31. Bark At The Moon – Ozzy Osbourne

Bark at the Moon

This song was part of Ozzy’s first album without his lead guitarist, who had died a year earlier in a plane crash. Its lyrics are about a werewolf who comes back from the dead to seek revenge. This song was written by Ozzy’s bassist Bob Daisley.

32. Runnin’ outa Moonlight – Randy Houser

Runnin' Outta Moonlight Randy Houser (Lyrics in Description)

With a unique uptempo tune that made it a big hit on the charts, the song caused quite a stir. Its lyrics are about spending as much time with someone you love before they walk out of your life forever and how it’s only natural to feel the way you do.

33. This is How We Walk on the Moon – Jose Gonzalez

José González - This Is How We Walk On The Moon

This is among the best songs about the moon because it is one of the most diverse. It has a folk sound and an indie rock vibe to it, which makes for something new and exciting. The lyrics deal with a failed relationship and how the protagonist is determined to get back what he lost.

34. Half Moon – Blind Pilot

Half Moon

The song was released in 2011, and the lyrics are about life, love, loss, redemption – all of which can be found in music and everyday life. The song is about how we all try to hide our emotions and be tough. It emphasizes that it is okay if you let your guard down now and again.

35. Dancing in the Moonlight – Thin Lizzy

Thin Lizzy - Dancing In The Moonlight

This song has a jazzy tune to it which makes it a perfect summer song. The lyrics are about a showgirl trying to make her way in the world and play different roles, including a maid. The protagonist is tired of the monotony and yearns to be herself again without letting her boss know what she’s up to.

36. Man on the Moon – Kid Cudi

Man On The Moon

The song’s lyrics are about how no matter what the protagonist does, nothing ever changes to make things better for himself and those around him. Cudi claims that this was his best song about the moon. It is a solid track for those who want to know what he is all about as an artist.

37. Dark Side of the Moon – Nicki Minaj ft Lil Wayne

Dark Side Of The Moon

Nicki and Wayne’s lyrics are about how they will always be there for each other even if the earth is destroyed. The song has an uptempo tune that makes it perfect for listening to at night.

38. Bad Moon Rising – Creedence Clearwater Revival

Creedence Clearwater Revival: Bad Moon Rising

This song talks about how when there’s trouble; it will follow you wherever you go. The protagonist is trying to warn people that they need to get out of town before it’s too late. The lyrics are a perfect example of what rock and roll is about.

Next: The top classic rock songs of all time (our list of favorites)

39. Drunk On The Moon – Tom Waits

Tom Waits - "Drunk On The Moon"

Tom’s lyrics are about how life’s situations can blind you, and it’s like nothing else matters. The song has a country sound which makes it perfect for both country and folk fans.

40. Dancing In The Moonlight – Toploader

Toploader - Dancing in the Moonlight (Official Video)

Initially released in August 1970, its cover was released in 2000 exactly thirty years later. Toploader’s lyrics are about how it feels amazing to be with someone that you love. The song is perfect for those who like pop and rock and those who like a good dance song.

Next: The top 1970s love songs

41. Can’t Fight The Moonlight – Leann Rimes

LeAnn Rimes - Cant Fight The Moonlight (Official Music Video)

This piece is one of the best compositions about the moon because it is catchy and fun. The words are about how love is a magical feeling when enjoying each other’s company under the moonlight.

42. The Killing Moon – Echo & The Bunnymen

Echo & The Bunnymen - The Killing Moon (Official Music Video)

This song is ideal for those who like rock and even indie music. The lyrics are about how life can be difficult, but you have to keep fighting and doing what you love.

The song was released in 1984, and the lyrics are about how we all have to find our way no matter what life tries to throw at us. The song is perfect for those who like indie music and even folk songs.

Next: Best songs with deep meaning (hidden or otherwise)

43. Harvest Moon – Poolside

Poolside – Harvest Moon (Official Audio)

Poolside did wonders with this song by adding a tropical vibe to it. The lyrics are about how the protagonist is trying to make his way through life, but he can’t help falling in love with the moon and stars.

Next: The best songs about falling in love with someone

44. Blue Moon – Beck

Beck - Blue Moon (Audio)

The blue moon in the song depicts a friend; always there for the protagonist, even when times get tough. The lyrics are perfect for those who like indie music and folk songs.

45. To the Moon – Phora

Phora - To The Moon [Official Music Video]

This song is another great release from Phora. The lyrics are about how the protagonist is trying to find his way through life; he doesn’t think there is anything wrong with having a little fun along the way.

This song is all about following our dreams and doing whatever it takes to make those dreams come true. It is a perfect for those who like indie and folk music and pop songs that are both catchy and fun at the same time.

Songs about dreams, dreaming and more (our favorites)

Best songs about rain or rainy imagery

Best songs about cats and felines

wandering under the moon lyrics

As the Head Editor and Writer at Music Grotto, Liam helps write and edit content produced from professional music/media journalists and other contributing writers. He works closely with journalists and other staff to format and publish music content for the Music Grotto website. Liam is also the founding member of Music Grotto and is passionate in disseminating editorial content to its readers.

Liam’s lifelong love for music makes his role at Music Grotto such a rewarding one. He loves researching, writing and editing music content for Music Grotto.

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"Under The Moon" lyrics

Alex isley & jack dine lyrics.

  • Alex Isley Lyrics

Alex Isley & Jack Dine - Marigold album cover

Provided to YouTube by TuneCoreWandering Under the Moon · Dan RomerStation Eleven (Music from the HBO Max Limited Series)℗ 2022 Paramount MusicReleased on: 2...

1 & 2 & 3 & 4 & Chords from "Wandering Under the Moon (feat. Joe Pingue)" by Dan Romer from the album "Station Eleven (Music from the HBO Max Limited Series)" Played in the Key of G Major.

Take Me, Gravity Dan Romer We Will Rise Again (feat. Meredith Godreau) Dan Romer That's the Dream Dan Romer Did You Hide? Dan Romer Similar Songs In Our Time Nancy Sinatra Sycamore Dreamer Morning Dew Jesus Was a Cross Maker Cass Elliot Noi giovani Amedeo Tommasi There'll Be Some Changes Made (feat. Vince Giordano & The Nighthawks) Kathy Brier

So we can go wandering under the moon. Verse 2 Ain't no movies on a silver screen There ain't no television playing scene after scene There ain't no metro with a rock n roll band. So come on darlin take my hand. Chorus x 2. I think I figured out chords to the verse: G Am Em D G. 2.

Listen to Wandering Under the Moon by Dan Romer for free, and see the artwork, lyrics and similar artists.

Like the rest of you, I fell in love with this song from Ep 2 and I couldn't find both the lyrics and chords together. So if you want something done right, do it yourself!

Can't go driving, in an automobile There aint no motorcycles, popping up on their wheels Can't go flying, to a tropical land But come on darling, grab my hand Chorus1 Cause we can go wandering under the moon The stars are brighter now after the doom Phones and tablets, they wont be back soon So we can go wandering under the moon

Roads go ever ever on, Over rock and under tree, By caves where never sun has shone, By streams that never find the sea; Over snow by winter sown, And through the merry flowers of June, Over grass and over stone, And under mountains in the moon. Roads go ever ever on Under cloud and under star, Yet feet that wandering have gone Turn at last to home afar. Eyes that fire and sword have seen And ...

Over snow by winter sown And through the merry flowers of June Over grass and over stone And under mountains in the moon Roads go ever ever on Under cloud and under star Yet feet that...

AILEEN: No, I'm not! JOHNNY: That I'm in love, there's not a doubt, dear AILEEN: Yes JOHNNY: When can I call to take you out, dear AILEEN: Let's see, just call around beneath my window and let me hear "Yoo-Hoo" JOHNNY: When you hear yoo-hoo-hoo-hoo AILEEN: You-hoo, I'll be there waiting for you JOHNNY: Yoo-hoo, we'll have some loving to do ...

(Mud can make you prisoner, and the plains can bake you dry Snow can burn your eyes, but only people make you cry Home is made for coming from, for dreams of going to Which with any luck will never...

Oh, I want to be there, I want us to be there, oh I want to be there, beside the lake, beneath the moon, Cool and swollen, dripping its hot liquor. I want to be there. Thank you, Lord, for the white blind light. A city rises from the sea. Let me tell you about heartache and the loss of God, Wandering, wandering a hopeless night.

Create and get +5 IQ. [Verse 1] C#m B A How they got inside, oh, really, I don't know B C#m Can't keep lettin' randoms up inside your home B A You drink too much to know, you drink too much to know B C#m Spirits in your blood, it's seeping through your soul B A Garden needs some water, garden needs some water B C#m Look up to the sky and I feel ...

Under the Harvest Moon. Under the harvest moon, When the soft silver Drips shimmering Over the garden nights, Death, the gray mocker, Comes and whispers to you As a beautiful friend Who remembers. Under the summer roses When the flagrant crimson Lurks in the dusk Of the wild red leaves, Love, with little hands, Comes and touches you With a ...

[Verse 1] Under the moon, I cry Waiting in the whisper of your name, my lullaby And I'm caught here in your eye I cannot be afraid to let you love me when we're far away [Pre-Chorus 1] We'll...

Over snow by winter sown, And through the merry flowers of June, Over grass and over stone, Under the mountains in the moon. Roads go ever, ever on, Over rock and under tree, By caves where never sun has shown, By streams that never find the sea. Category: The Hobbit (1977 film) soundtrack This page was last edited on 24 June 2014, at 21:41.

Posted by u/LeftAl - 10 votes and 3 comments

There's nothing there but the blue I'm under the moon Hoping I'll get over to you Some things are better to prove (some things are better) Be damned if I lose Just waiting under the moon (under the moon) There's nothing there but the blue (nothing there) I'm under the moon Hoping I'll get over to you Some things are better to prove Be damned if I lose Just waiting under the moon (under the ...

Plovers are flying. Over the dreaming meadows of silvery light. Over the meadows of June. Calling and crying. Wandering voices of love in the hush of the night. All night under the moon. Love ...

Its lyrics talk about life challenges and how it can be hard to overcome them. It has a strong melody that makes it suitable for various settings. It is best paired with an easy dance step and slow-moving choreography. Next: Top songs about life and all it entails 3. Talking To The Moon - Bruno Mars Bruno Mars - Talking To The Moon (Lyrics)

[Verse 1] Came to me naturally and never had to try Forcing my feelings down, impossible to hide Filterd and the glitter's dripped away Also never know that it's okay Trusting my gut again it...

"Under The Moon" lyrics Alex Isley & Jack Dine Lyrics "Under The Moon" Came to me naturally And never had to try Forcing my feelings down Impossible to hide Filtered and the glitter's dripped away On some level know that it's okay Trusting my gut again it always steers me right There's nothing there but the blue I'm under the moon

Translations ONEUS - 월하미인 (月下美人: LUNA) (English Translation) Lyrics [Verse 1: Seoho, Xion] A moon crying alone on a dark night Will you bloom and fade according to the light? Go back in time...

IMAGES

  1. Why we need to go back to the Moon

    we can go wandering under the moon

  2. Wandering Under the Moon-Hui Ballet Moon Over Helan Editorial Stock

    we can go wandering under the moon

  3. riding under full moon Arabian Nights Aesthetic, Night Aesthetic, Shoot

    we can go wandering under the moon

  4. To behold the wandering moon Riding near her...

    we can go wandering under the moon

  5. The Wandering Moon (2022)

    we can go wandering under the moon

  6. The Wandering Moon (2022)

    we can go wandering under the moon

COMMENTS

  1. Station Eleven

    C G Cell phones and tablets they won't, Bm Em be back soon, C D G so we can go wandering under the moon. [Chorus] G Am Em D G 'Cause we can go wandering under the moon (ba-da ba--baaaa, da-da-daaaa da-da-daaaaaaaa), G Am Em D C the stars are brighter now after the doom (ba-da ba--baaaa, da-da-daaaa da-da-daaaaaaaa)...

  2. Episode 2 campfire song : r/StationEleven

    Chorus We can go wandering under the moon The stars are brighter after the doom The phones and tablets, they won't be back soon. So we can go wandering under the moon. Verse 2 Ain't no movies on a silver screen There ain't no television playing scene after scene There ain't no metro with a rock n roll band.

  3. Wandering Under the Moon

    Provided to YouTube by TuneCoreWandering Under the Moon · Dan RomerStation Eleven (Music from the HBO Max Limited Series)℗ 2022 Paramount MusicReleased on: 2...

  4. Wandering Under the Moon

    Like the rest of you, I fell in love with this song from Ep 2 and I couldn't find both the lyrics and chords together. So if you want something done right, do it yourself!

  5. Why It's So Challenging to Land Upright on the Moon

    When the robotic lander Odysseus last month became the first American-built spacecraft to touch down on the moon in more than 50 years, it toppled over at an angle. That limited the amount of ...

  6. Wandering Under The Moon

    Can't go driving, in an automobile There aint no motorcycles, popping up on their wheels Can't go flying, to a tropical land But come on darling, grab my hand. Chorus1 Cause we can go wandering under the moon The stars are brighter now after the doom Phones and tablets, they wont be back soon So we can go wandering under the moon.

  7. J. R. R. Tolkien

    Pursuing it with eager feet. Until it joins some larger way. Where many paths and errands meet. The Road goes ever on and on. Down from the door where it began. Now far ahead the Road has gone ...

  8. Wandering Under the Moon (feat. Joe Pingue)

    Meet Luca Dan Romer. When the Morning Light Shines In Dan Romer. Now That This Old World Is Ending Dan Romer. Vespa è Libertà Dan Romer. Take Me, Gravity Dan Romer. We Will Rise Again (feat. Meredith Godreau) Dan Romer. That's the Dream Dan Romer.

  9. So We'll Go No More a Roving

    And the moon be still as bright. For the sword outwears its sheath, And the soul wears out the breast, And the heart must pause to breathe, And love itself have rest. Though the night was made for loving, And the day returns too soon, Yet we'll go no more a roving. By the light of the moon.

  10. Dan Romer

    Chords: G, Am, Em, D. Chords for Dan Romer - Wandering Under the Moon. Play along with guitar, ukulele, or piano with interactive chords and diagrams. Includes transpose, capo hints, changing speed and much more.

  11. Roads Go Ever On, by J. R. R. Tolkien

    And under mountains in the moon. Roads go ever ever on, Under cloud and under star. Yet feet that wandering have gone. Turn at last to home afar. Eyes that fire and sword have seen, And horror in the halls of stone. Look at last on meadows green, And trees and hills they long have known.

  12. So, we'll go no more a roving

    Yet we'll go no more a roving. By the light of the moon. [1] " So, we'll go no more a roving " is a poem, written by (George Gordon) Lord Byron (1788-1824), and included in a letter to Thomas Moore on 28 February 1817. Moore published the poem in 1830 as part of Letters and Journals of Lord Byron . It evocatively describes how the youth at ...

  13. Station Eleven

    So we can go wandering under the moon. The musicians make a list of their losses, hang them on a tune, and—in a light-hearted rebuttal of death's damage—decide that maybe things are kinda better now than they were before. Maybe joy is still possible after suffering (as long as there's a hand to grab, folks to join you on the chorus, and ...

  14. Roads Go Ever On

    And under mountains in the moon. Roads go ever ever on, Under cloud and under star. Yet feet that wandering have gone. Turn at last to home afar. Eyes that fire and sword have seen, And horror in the halls of stone. Look at last on meadows green, And trees and hills they long have known.

  15. wandering under the moon lyrics

    The Moon is more than a rock. One of the few true constants throughout time, the Moon has been following Earth around for as long as humans have been wandering the Earth. Civilizations old and new have studied and celebrated the Moon.... If you love music, then you know all about the little shot of excitement that ripples through you when you hear one of your favorite songs come on the radio.

  16. Wandering Under the Moon

    to the monsters, we're the monsters

  17. Wandering Under the Moon

    Listen to Wandering Under the Moon by Dan Romer for free, and see the artwork, lyrics and similar artists. ... Go directly to shout page About This Artist. Artist images 4 more. Dan Romer. 105,631 ... Jenny Owen Youngs, Ian Axel, He Is We, April Smith, Lelia Broussard, Cara Salimando and Jukebox The Ghost/. View wiki. Dan Romer is a New York ...

  18. s01e02

    We invite the Traveling Symphony to visit us at the Museum of Civilization. What's the Museum of Civilization? A place that values human culture and the past. fսck the past. We never leave the wheel. ♪ ♪ all: ♪ We could go wandering under the moon ♪ I like the name of your town. ♪ ♪ She's got Daddy's nose. Hopefully Mommy's brain ...

  19. Wandering Under The Moon : r/StationEleven

    Welcome to /r/literature, a community for deeper discussions of plays, poetry, short stories, and novels. Discussions of literary criticism, literary history, literary theory, and critical theory are also welcome. We are not /r/books: please do not use this sub to seek book recommendations or homework help.

  20. Wanderings and Wonderings. Anyone can go on the most amazing…

    Write Under the Moon All welcome! 💖 Mermaid, aspiring novelist, music and nature lover, muser, TV nerd & occasional poet & gamer. I have BA in anthro, but my heart led me beyond.

  21. Abriella Milazzo on Instagram: "Under the glow of the bright full moon

    10 likes, 0 comments - her.wandering.spirit on February 25, 2024: "Under the glow of the bright full moon, we take a journey to somewhere new 律 ‍♀ ..."

  22. The Wandering Soul

    A destiny that it has to find. A soul without a purpose, Is like a man without a mind. It walks up to the mountains, It dives into the depths of the sea. It flies across towns and cities, Where is ...

  23. Werifesteria. The Wonder In Wandering

    A quiet devouring that takes heed of no instruction, Joy has its merits and pain has its function—. Yet I never found a language to express the weight that this heart carried. So I picked up my ...

  24. Dan Romer

    Dan Romer - Wandering Under The Moon [Folk/Campfire Music] (2022) comments sorted by Best Top New Controversial Q&A Add a Comment More posts you may like

  25. Aeternus

    Tracklist:00:00 - 01 Under The Blade Of The Dead02:08 - 02 Sworn Revenge08:43 - 03 White Realm15:20 - 04 Sentinels Of Darkness24:12 - 05 Embraced31:28 - 06 V...