Major Tom (Coming Home)


"Major Tom " is a new wave song written and recorded by German singer-songwriter Peter Schilling. It was released in 1983 as the lead single from his album Error in the System. Featuring the story of a character unofficially related to "Major Tom", Schilling's track describes a protagonist who leaves Earth and begins drifting out into outer space as radio contact breaks off with his ground control team. His fate is left ambiguous as the song ends.
The song is one of multiple singles by various artists with a pop music related style influenced by the cultural roboticism associated with Berlin, Germany. It is specifically a part of the "Neue Deutsche Welle", a social movement in the arts within German society, and is one of its pieces that crossed over into the popular culture of other nations. Versions in both the English language and in Schilling's native German have earned critical and commercial acclaim over multiple decades.

Background

The song describes a calm, reflective astronaut known as Major Tom who is detached from the psychological stress of his colleagues and spends a significant amount of time engaging in certain scientific experiments about which he feels uncertain. An emotional insight breaks through his senses while he happily experiences weightlessness. The protagonist then meets his ambiguous fate after losing radio contact with other human beings. One line describes the Major as realizing that "mich führt hier ein Licht durch das All". He leaves Earth and begins drifting out into outer space. The English version ends with the line "coming home" followed by repeating the chorus "home," while the German lyrics ends with the chorus repeating "los".

Chart performance

The song was originally recorded in the German language and released in West Germany on 3 January 1983. It reached No. 1 in West Germany as well as in both Austria and Switzerland. The English version was first released in the United States on 24 September 1983. This version reached No. 1 in Canada, No. 4 in South Africa and peaked at No. 14 on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart the week of 24 December 1983. The English-language version of the song also reached No. 2 on the US Dance chart.

Reception

In retrospect, journalist Gavin Edwards of The New York Times has stated that "Major Tom" became a key part of "a brief-lived flowering of Kraut-pop in the States" during the late 1970s and early 1980s. Schilling's work proved to be "a hit in its English-language version" alongside other commercial "successes". Those include Trio's "Da Da Da" and After the Fire's "Der Kommissar", with Nena's "99 Luftballons" crossing over the Atlantic Ocean to commercial praise even in an untranslated version.

Other versions

In 1994, Schilling released a remixed version along with Boom-Bastic, titled "Major Tom 94". Other remixes were released in 2000, titled "Major Tom 2000", and in 2003, titled "Major Tom 2003".
On 24 March 2024, a petition was initiated to make "Major Tom" the new goal song for the Germany national football team for the 2024 UEFA European Football Championship. The song was used during two previous friendly matches as individual goal songs are not allowed by UEFA. During the UEFA Championship in the summer 2024, the song was played after each German victory and the original version of "Major Tom" re-entered the top ten of the German singles chart after more than 40 years. Schilling stated publicly that he felt emotionally overwhelmed by the support and praised his fans.

Charts

Chart Peak
position
Australia 57
Bolivian Chart1
Canada Top Singles 1
France 2
Ireland 22
UK Singles 42
US Billboard Hot 10014
US Billboard Dance/Disco Top 802
U.S. Cash Box Top 10010

Year-end chart Rank
Austrian Singles Chart13
Belgian Singles Chart43
Dutch Singles Chart22
German Singles Chart1
Swiss Singles Chart4

Cover versions

In popular media