Telstar
Sorry I'll pass on the cats,, but the first selection caught my eye. I haven't heard Telstar in decades, brought back memories from when I was a kid. I remember what a big deal it was to be able to bounce a phone call off a satellite, now we do it all the time with out giving it a thought.
Here is some interesting background courtesy of Wikipedia:
" - is a 1962 instrumental record performed by The Tornados. It was the first single by a British band to reach number one on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100, and was also a number one hit in the UK. The record was named after the AT&T communications satellite Telstar, and was released five weeks after its launch into orbit in July 1962. It was written and produced by Joe Meek and featured a clavioline, a keyboard instrument with a distinctive electronic sound.
This novelty record was intended to evoke the dawn of the space age, complete with sound effects that were meant to sound "space-like". A popular story at the time of the record's release was that the weird distortions and background noise came from sending the signal up to the Telstar satellite and re-recording it back on Earth. However, is more likely that the effects were created in Meek's recording studio, which was a small flat above a shop in London. It has been claimed that the sounds intended to symbolize radio signals were produced by Meek running a pen around the rim of an ashtray, and that the "rocket blastoff" at the start of the record was actually a flushing toilet, with the recordings made to sound exotic by playing the tape in reverse at various speeds.
The record was an immediate hit after its release on August 17, 1962, remaining in the UK pop charts for twenty-five weeks, five of them at number one, and in the American charts for sixteen weeks."