Songs About UFOs, Aliens

The 11 Best Songs About UFOs and Aliens – A ListCaboodle Playlist

The Pentagon recently confirmed the existence of photos and video of “unidentified aerial phenomena” taken in 2019. The mysterious triangle-shaped UFOs blink and move through the sky, capturing the imagination.

In the spirit of such paranormal activity, we decided to put together a playlist of our favorite songs that mention UFOs, extraterrestrial close encounters, or alien abductions.

Songs about UFOs and aliens
CONTENTS:

    11 best songs about UFOs, aliens, and flying saucers

    Take a spin through these 11 of our favorite songs about UFOs and aliens. Then be sure to check out more selections from across the decades below.

    1. Hypnotized by Fleetwood Mac

    Album: Mystery to Me
    Date: 1973

    In the early 1970s, guitarist/singer Bob Welch was a member of the band Fleetwood Mac. He wrote the bluesy tune “Hypnotized” with Dave Walker singing vocals.

    At the time, Welch was interested in paranormal activity like UFOs and the Yaqui Indian sorcerer Don Juan. He incorporated many of these themes in the song’s lyrics.

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    2. Starman by David Bowie

    Album: Ziggy Stardust
    Date: 1972

    David Bowie’s “Starman” delivers a message that we are not alone and there is hope for the future. The lyrics describe Bowie’s alter ego Ziggy Stardust traveling through space, seeking to warn us of a coming apocalyptic disaster.

    The spacey hit tune reached #10 in the U.K charts and #65 in the U.S.

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    3. Subterranean Homesick Alien by Radiohead

    Album: OK Computer
    Date: 1997

    Radiohead lead singer Thom Yorke describes the genesis of “Subterranean Homesick Alien” this way: “The first essay I ever wrote in school was, ‘You are an alien from another planet. You have landed and you are standing in the middle of Oxford, and write an essay about what you see… how would you see these people?’ and that’s where a lot of it came from, really.”

    Another inspiration for the song came from Yorke’s experience of driving down a country road when he hit a pheasant that flew in front of his vehicle. When he got out of the car to investigate, the feeling of an alien abduction overtook him.

    4. Rapture by Blondie

    Album: Autoamerican
    Date: 1980

    Blondie’s “Rapture” is noted as being the very first #1 hit to ever feature a rap verse.

    As the 1970s disco era came to a close, the band capitalized on the relatively new musical style with silly rhymes like the “man from Mars eating cars.” The novelty of inserting a rap sequence in the song helped make it a hit on both the U.S. and U.K. charts.

    5. Nobody Told Me by John Lennon

    Album: Mild And Honey
    Date: 1984

    “Nobody Told Me” was recorded in 1980 by John Lennon and released after his death in 1984 as a single. It reached the Top 10 in both the U.S. and U.K.

    In the song, Lennon mentions “a UFO over New York and I ain’t too surprised.”

    Inspiration for the lyric came from an experience in 1974 when he thought he witnessed a UFO over New York’s East River. According to his girlfriend at the time, he shouted out the window “come back, take me!”

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    6. E.T. by Katy Perry

    Album: Teenage Dream
    Date: 2010

    In this dreamy electronic ballad, Katy Perry describes her lover from “a different dimension.”

    The same songwriters who wrote Perry’s breakthrough hit “I Kissed a Girl” intended “E.T.” for the rap group Three Six Mafia. But when Perry heard it, she knew she had to make it hers. She explains, “…I always knew I wanted to write this futuristic, alienistic song.”

    The song hit #1 in the U.S. and charted #3 in the U.K.

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    7. I Ran (So Far Away) by A Flock of Seagulls

    Album: A Flock Of Seagulls
    Date: 1982

    The British pop band A Flock of Seagulls debut release was a concept album about aliens invading Earth.

    Band members took inspiration from a 1950s sci-fi movie they saw. In the film, people ran to escape a flying saucer. The impact of the movie stuck with lead singer Mike Score, “So even though we had the basics of the music already, we went to rehearsal that night and the picture was in my head and we started to try to formulate words about that.”

    The song was the band’s biggest hit, landing at number 9 in the U.S. and #43 on the U.K. charts.

    8. Come Sail Away by Styx

    Album: The Grand Illusion
    Date: 1977

    The late 1970s heralded the introduction of Star Wars along with this intergalactic hit from the band Styx.

    Written by the band’s vocalist/keyboard player Dennis DeYoung, it describes a personal journey into the unknown with the purpose of following one’s dreams.

    Toward the end of the song, the traveler is visited by aliens that appear as angels. He “climbed about their starship and headed for the skies.”

    The song charted at number 8 in the U.S.

    9. Purple People Eater by Sheb Wooley

    Released as single
    Date: 1958

    The novelty song “Purple People Eater” by Sheb Wooley reached no. 1 on the Billboard pop charts and no. 12 in the U.K. in the 1950s.

    The tune describes a strange creature with one eye and one horn and able to fly. Absurdly, it descends to Earth to be in a rock ’n roll band.

    According to Wooley, he wrote the song after hearing an alien monster joke told by his friend’s kid.

    10. Children of the Sun by Billy Thorpe

    Album: Children of the Sun
    Date: 1979

    Billy Thorpe’s space-opera album “Children of the Sun” reached the top 40 on the Billboard Pop Album chart in 1979.

    The 6:44 minute-long song dramatically describes people of the Earth being transported to space “on a silvery light.”

    As the 70s classic rock hit describes, “They passed the limits of imagination / Through the doors—to a world—of another time / On a journey of a thousand lifetimes / With the Children of the Sun – They started to climb.”

    11. Mothership Connection (Star Child) by Parliament

    Album: Mothership Connection
    Date: 1975

    Parliament’s “Mothership Connection” became the band’s first certified gold and later platinum album. Popular singles from the record include “Mothership Connection (Star Child),” “P-Funk (Wants to Get Funked Up),” and “Tear the Roof Off the Sucker (Give Up the Funk).”

    The outer-space concept album broke new ground. “We had put black people in a situation nobody ever thought they would be in, like the White House. I figured another place you wouldn’t think black people would be was in outer space,” lead singer George Clinton said. “I was a big fan of Star Trek, so we did a thing with a pimp sitting in a spaceship shaped like a Cadillac, and we did all these James Brown-type grooves, but with street talk and ghetto slang.”

    More songs about UFOs (by the decade)

    1950s – Flying saucer songs

    • The Flying Saucer Parts 1 & 2 by Bill Buchanan and Dickie Goodman
    • My Flying Saucer by Woodie Guthrie (recorded later by Billy Bragg and Wilco)
    • Two Little Men In A Flying Saucer by Ella Fitzgerald
    • Flyin’ Saucers Rock & Roll by Billy Lee Riley and Jerry Lee Lewis

    1960s – Songs about UFOs

    • Let There Be More Light by Pink Floyd
    • Mr. Spaceman by The Byrds
    • Set the Controls for the Heart of the Sun by Pink Floyd
    • Voices Green and Purple by The Bees
    • It Came Out of the Sky Creedence Clearwater Revival
    • After the Gold Rush by Neil Young
    • Calling Occupants of Interplanetary Craft by Klaatu (cover by The Carpenters
    • Childhood’s End by Pink Floyd
    • Here Come the Martian Martians by Jonathan Richman and the Modern Lovers
    • Horsell Commons and the Heat Ray by Jeff Wayne
    • I’ve Seen the Saucers by Elton John
    • Third Stone From the Sun by Jimi Hendrix
    • Longer Boats by Cat Stevens
    • It Came Out of the Sky by Creedence Clearwater Revival
    • Martian Boogie by Brownsville Station
    • Waiting for the UFOs by Graham Parker
    • Silver Lights Sammy Hagar

    1970s – Songs about UFOs

    • Calling Occupants of Interplanetary Space by The Carpenters
    • I’ve Seen the Saucers by Elton John
    • Starship Trooper by Yes
    • Planet Claire by The B52s
    • A Spaceman Came Travelling by Chris de Burgh
    • UFO by Pink Lady
    • Silver Lights by Sammy Hagar
    • Invader by Judas Priest
    • Supersonic Rocket Ship by The Kinks
    • E.T.I (Extra Terrestrial Intelligence) by Blue Oyster Cult
    • Arriving UFO by Yes
    • Praying To The Aliens by Gary Numan
    • The Martian Boogie by Brownsville Station

    1980s – Songs about aliens

    • Fire Of Unknown Origin by Blue Öyster Cult
    • Books about UFOs by Hüsker Dü
    • Teenagers From Mars by Misfits
    • Flying Saucers by Nina Hagen
    • Surfing With The Alien by Joe Satriani
    • Love Walks In by Van Halen
    • I Turned Into a Martian by Misfits
    • Watching the Sky by Saxon
    • Loving the Alien by David Bowie
    • Zero Zero UFO by the Ramones
    • Inca Roads by Frank Zappa and the Mothers of Invention
    • No Doubt About It by Hot Chocolate

    1990s– Songs about UFOs

    • The Alien Song (For Those Who Listen) by Mila Jovovich
    • El Aparato (The Apparatus) by Café Tacvba
    • Alien (I Am) by Hawkwind
    • Alien Visitors by Man or Astro-man?
    • Another Sunday by I Mother Earth
    • Fell in Love with an Alien by the Kelly Family
    • Hangar 18 by Megadeth
    • Aliens Exist by Blink-182
    • Hat Too Flat by Walter Becker
    • Alien (I Am) by Hawkwind
    • I Made Love to a Martian by Mustard Plug
    • Martian Dance Invasion by Brainiac
    • Shades of Grey by Stuart Davis
    • Motorway to Roswell by Pixies
    • Scent of a Mule by Phish
    • Men In Black by Will Smith
    • Spaceman by Babylon Zoo
    • The Happening by Pixies
    • Who’s There? by Smash Mouth
    • Pets by Perry Farrell
    • Looking for a U.F.O. by Adrian Belew
    • The Universe of Geoffrey Brown album by Captain Sensible
    • ET by Toy-Box

    Songs about UFOs – The 2000s and beyond

    • Supernatural by Kesha
    • A L I E N S by Coldplay
    • The Aliens Are Here by The Hippos
    • And You Thought the Doctor’s Probe Hurt by Belvedere
    • Jaadoo, Jaadoo by Rajesh Roshan
    • Concerning the UFO sighting near Highland, Illinois by Sufjan Stevens on Illinois
    • Aliens by Doctor Octagon
    • Starlight by Muse
    • Well, Everybody’s F**ing In A UFO by Rob Zombie
    • The Best Room by Modest Mouse
    • Hardcore UFOs by Guided By Voices
    • UFO by Sneaky Sound System
    • Outer Space by Ace Frehley
    • Scary Little Green Men by Ozzy Osbourne
    • We’re Not Alone by Nas featuring Kanye West
    • Zopilotes (“Black Vultures”) by Café Tacuba on El Objeto Antes Llamado Disco
    • Space Invader by Ace Frehley
    • Signal by Twice
    • Rosetta Stoned by Tool
    • Ancient Aliens by Lemon Demon on Spirit Phone
    • Hey Aliens by The Bouncing Souls on Simplicity
    • Spaceship by Kesha
    • My Alien by Simple Plan
    • Tiny Alien by Katie Melua
    • I Want An Alien For Christmas by Fountains of Wayne
    • Take Me With You by Neck Deep
    • March To the Sea by Twenty One Pilots
    • Touch-Tone Telephone by Lemon Demon

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    Published 1/26/2026