>>13154627it sorta says something about humanity. The beauty in the simplicity of classical music played by many people using many instruments made by other people with the score written and composed by one man. It really sets a tone. To contrast this we have the striking visuals of these abstract objects moving in space. The pinnacle of all human accomplishment and engineering. Man in space reduced into specs of dust and dirt floating amongst the stars.
Both the music and the visuals require a lot of prior knowledge in order to really understand the authors intent/or the true tone of the piece. Both are feats of human intelligence and ingenuity, and both can seem simple through other perspective. Orchestral music relative to other music is often lacking in punch and generally has movements in a slower tempo. Some would describe it as simple in a sense(at least the music typically paired with space films). And our floating shapes and astronauts in space are also simple, anyone can understand what is happening. But the immense complexity behind the scenes for "real" spaceflight conveys a sense of awe all on its own. Nobody gets hard to a picture of a car parking in a parking lot. But space ships docking looks like magic.
Culturally (and maybe for some people subconsciously) we understand the importance and relevance of different things. By using subtle tones to convey deeper meanings you can create works that seem perfectly natural and not forced at all. This is how all tropes in culture are made just fyi