The Music of the Spheres has been a subject of fascination of mine ever since I've encountered the topic in one line of my favorite hymn ("This is my Father's World") and in Fray Luis de Leon's poetry. Today, I came accross Johannes Kepler's text on The Harmonies of the World as I have been dvelving deeply into Astronomy/Astrology lately. Kepler highlights with great mathematical precision the geometrical beauty and harmonical placement of the planets. I love how he refers to God as 'The Artisan'. 
So here I leave you with a piece of 'Celestial Lore'... 
IN THE CELESTIAL HARMONIES WHICH PLANET SINGS SOPRANO, WHICH ALTO, WHICH TENOR, AND WHICH BASS?
Although these words are applied to human voices, while voices or 
sounds do not exist in the heavens, on account of the very great 
tranquillity of movements, and not even the subjects in which we find 
the consonances are comprehended under the true genus of movement, since
 we were considering the movements solely as apparent from the sun, and 
finally, although there is no such cause in the heavens, as in human 
singing, for requiring a definite number of voices in order to make 
consonance (for first there was the number of the six planets revolving 
around the sun, from the number of the five intervals taken from the 
regular figures, and then afterwards—in the order of nature, not of 
time—the congruence of the movements was settled): I do not know why but
 nevertheless this wonderful congruence with human song has such a 
strong effect upon me that I am compelled to pursue this part of the 
comparison, also, even without any solid natural cause. For those same 
properties which in Book III, [300] Chapter 16, custom ascribed to the 
bass and nature gave legal grounds for so doing are somehow possessed by
 Saturn and Jupiter in the heavens; and we find those of the tenor in 
Mars, those of the alto are present in the Earth and Venus, and those of
 the soprano are possessed by Mercury, if not with equality of 
intervals, at least proportionately. For howsoever in the following 
chapter the eccentricities of each planet are deduced from their proper 
causes and through those eccentricities the intervals proper to the 
movements of each, none the less there comes from that the following 
wonderful result (I do not know whether it is occasioned by the 
procurement and mere tempering of necessities): (1) as the bass is 
opposed to the alto, so there are two planets which have the nature of 
the alto, two that of the bass, just as in any Mode of song there is one
 [bass and one alto] on either side, while there are single 
representatives of the other single voices. (2) As the alto is 
practically supreme in a very narrow range [in angustiis] on 
account of necessary and natural causes unfolded in Book III, so the 
almost innermost planets, the Earth and Venus, have the narrowest 
intervals of movements, the Earth not much more than a semitone, Venus 
not even a diesis. (3) And as the tenor is free, but none the less 
progresses with moderation, so Mars alone—with the single exception of 
Mercury—can make the greatest interval, namely a perfect fifth. (4) And 
as the bass makes harmonic leaps, so Saturn and Jupiter have intervals 
which are harmonic, and in relation to one another pass from the octave 
to the octave and perfect fifth. (5) And as the soprano is the freest, 
more than all the rest, and likewise the swiftest, so Mercury can 
traverse more than an octave in the shortest period. But this is 
altogether per accidens; now let us hear the reasons for the eccentricities
---Johannes Kepler in Harmonies of the World (1619)
 
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