China will transmit 30 pieces of Chinese music to the Earth from its first 
lunar satellite set to be launched next year. 
The Commission of Science, Technology and Industry for National Defense said 
on Friday that it is seeking recommendations from the public on which tunes to 
play in a bid to increase public awareness of China's space program. 
 
The public will be able to choose from a list of 150 songs put forward by the 
commission's Lunar Probe Engineering Center, which includes music from the 
country's 56 ethnic groups, pop music from the mainland, Taiwan and Hong Kong 
and opera soundtracks. 
The center said the public can vote on the websites of the TV Guide published 
by the country's biggest broadcaster, CCTV, and the center before August 9. 
The final results will be made public in October, said the center. 
Huang Qiang, spokesperson of the commission, said the satellite project was 
approved by the Chinese central authorities in 2004 as part of the three-stage 
Chang'e Program. The project has a budget of 1.4 billion yuan (170 million U.S. 
dollars). 
The program, named "Chang'e" after the legendary Chinese goddess who flew to 
the moon, aims to eventually place an unmanned vehicle on the moon by 2010. 
The lunar satellite is designed to obtain 3D images of the lunar surface, 
analyze the content of useful elements and materials, and probe the depth of the 
lunar soil and the space environment between the earth and the moon. It will 
orbit the moon for one year. 
Unlike the single transmission of the popular hymn "The East is Red" 
broadcast in 1970 from the country's first man-made terrestrial satellite, the 
music from space next year will be very different. 
The hymn "The East is Red" was selected in 1967 by satellite experts and 
space officials to pay tribute to Mao Zedong, founder of new China and the 
Communist Party of China. The tune was so popular that at that time even 
illiterate adults knew the words. 
The successful launch of the country's first satellite in 1970 made China the 
fifth country in the world capable of developing and launching a satellite on 
its own. The other countries were the Soviet Union, the United States, France 
and Japan.