Song talk #5: Trekkie’s Honeymoon
I’ve been assured that “Trekkies’ Honeymoon,” from my CD Practical Man, qualifies as a “filk song.” In case you are not familiar with the phenomenon, here’s what Wikipedia says:
Filk music is a musical culture, genre, and community tied to science fiction/fantasy fandom and a type of fan labour. The genre has been active since the early 1950s, and played primarily since the mid-1970s. The term (originally a typographical error) predates 1955.I love that the name is unabashedly derived from a typo. And yes, a song with multiple references to the Star Trek universe does seem to meet the criteria –though I have to say I never thought of the writing as “fan labour” (which sounds pretty onerous, and much too earnest for a satirical tune). The roots of the song go deep into my childhood, when Captain Kirk and his crew first came whooshing inexplicably through the vacuum of space and onto our little black-and-white 1960s TV screen. The original Star Trek has been in perennial reruns for so many decades, and its terms and images are so deeply embedded in popular culture now, that it is difficult to convey the excitement and wonder the series evoked for a child at the time, even when seen in shades of grey.
![Star Trek Federation Officers.jpg. Credit: popculturegeek.com, Flickr. Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic license. [Modified]](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj_-fAmZ32XTnUssl_cMzvkktR27jfrl4i254HUuWJcBoDmVrz7WLe0KbpyxmIVESb3HtRRjf99d32sb_gb6QIJKfMm7Bmr17RltG4oLAAKe1TZoxG_z7dWAZP98p4WoW5XxkxJXw/s200/800px-Star_Trek_Federation_Officers_blurpencil.jpg)
The immediate inspiration for “Trekkies’ Honeymoon” was a newspaper story about the latest Star Trek cosplay wedding. (I don’t think anyone was using the term “cosplay” at the time, but you get my drift: bridal party dressed in starship crew uniforms, with the bride and/or the groom in Klingon face prosthetics or Vulcan ears, and the ceremony performed by a Federation Admiral on a mockup of the bridge of the Enterprise. About as far as you can get from a Quaker wedding ceremony...)
![Cosplayers at Dragon Con 2010 By Mike (Flickr: DSC_0657) [CC BY 2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgKgjgWbCoPNeQwtDmWU9qntB4LZLZxbR-9zxiclP9LmFeOQxknWiqkHl6I5siPspz7PLEfQeGN7d8vsamkiJaeQyFn5m4oQaM6tTh4D_zCkckM5Wt2stNXOOkokY-qb6DUSlwsGw/s200/Star_Trek_cosplayers_in_Dragon_Con_Parade_2010_blurred.jpg)
Our wedding night's a Holodeck of passion
In a hotel suite rigged up like Deep Space Nine
We're in full Star Trek regalia
But the thing may be a failure
If you don't beam over here and say you're mine...
In recording the song, James Stephens, Alex Vlamis and I had a blast playing with the musical references of the Star Trek universe, and adding a Klingon chorus at critical points. The song is fun to do as a live solo number with just me and my guitar, but Alex’s brilliant piano takes it to the next galaxy.
Fortunately, most Trekkies (and recovered Trekkies) have a sense of humour. If I could just write a dozen more filk songs, maybe I could even work up a tour of the filk circuit (comic book and sci-fi conventions, cosplay events...) Unfortunately I think the only other one I can claim is “Aliens Are Landing In Our Yard,” and that is really more of a kid’s song. So trying to pass myself off as a filk musician would be akin to masquerading as a polka meister, having written only “The Polka Of Death.”
So now you've got my ring on
Won't you let me be your Klingon...
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