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・ All the Sad Young Literary Men
・ All the Sad Young Men
・ All the Same
・ All the Same (disambiguation)
・ All the Shah's Men
・ All the Small Things
・ All the Small Things (TV series)
・ All the Stars and Boulevards
・ All the Stuff (And More!) Volume 1
・ All the Stuff (And More!) Volume 2
・ All the Stuff (And More)-Vol 1
・ All the Suits Began to Fall Off
・ All the tea in China
・ All the Things (Your Man Won't Do)
・ All the Things I Should Have Known
All the Things She Said
・ All the Things She Said (Simple Minds song)
・ All the Things We Are
・ All the Things You Are
・ All the Time
・ All the Time (Kitty Wells song)
・ All the Time (Playmen song)
・ All the Time (The Strokes song)
・ All the Time in the World
・ All the Time in the World (book)
・ All the Time in the World (Jump5 album)
・ All the Time in the World (Lazlo Bane album)
・ All the Times I Cried
・ All the Times We Had
・ All the Tired Horses


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All the Things She Said : ウィキペディア英語版
All the Things She Said

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"All the Things She Said" is a song by Russian group t.A.T.u. from their fourth studio album ''200 km/h in the Wrong Lane'' (2002). The song was released as the album's lead single on 19 August 2002. It was written by Sergio Galoyan, Trevor Horn, Martin Kierszenbaum, Elena Kiper and Valeriy Polienko, while production was by Horn. "All The Things She Said" is the English-language version of their 1999 single "Ya Soshla S Uma".
"All The Things She Said" received mixed reviews from music critics, while some commended the production and lyrical content, others called it a gimmick and suggestive. The song reached number one in several countries around the world, including Australia, Austria, France, New Zealand, Switzerland and the UK. "All The Things She Said" reached number twenty on the US Billboard Hot 100, the first Russian act to accomplish this. Ivan Shapovalov commissioned the accompanying music video for the single, which shows the group behind a fence in school uniforms, trying to escape.
The music video caused considerable controversy in several nations because it depicted themes of lesbianism. Several organisations protested the video to be banned, while some music stations removed the scene with the girls kissing. The song had been performed many times, including on many MTV live shows, along with a megamix with "Not Gonna Get Us" at the MTV Movie Awards.
==Background==
Yulia Volkova and Lena Katina auditioned in a children group named Neposedi.〔(【引用サイトリンク】Novaya Gazeta">accessdate=May 3, 2015 )〕 However, Volkova was removed from the group a year later. Russian tabloids believed her removal was based on misbehavior and disrupting other members by stripping, smoking, drinking alcohol and swearing, but Neposedi denied this. Russian producers Ivan Shapovalov and Alexander Voitinskiy held an audition for two teenage girls, where Volkova and Katina auditioned and won the part. Despite knowing each other, both girls did not know they were auditioning.〔 For their Russian debut in 1999, Shapolavov named the duo Taty. The name origins from the English word "Tattoo".〔(【引用サイトリンク】accessdate=May 3, 2015 )
During their first sessions, Voitinskiy left the project. Shapovalov hired Elena Kiper to co-write and co-produce the music of Taty. Together, they wrote "Ya Soshla s Uma". The duo, alongside several other Russian producers and songwriters, completed the group's first album ''200 Po Vstrechnoy''. The album was a large success in Europe, selling over one million units.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=IFPI Platinum Europe Awards > 2002 Albums )〕〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Listy besellerow Wyrozienia > Platynowe CD )〕 Shapovalov persisted to sign the group with an international label, visiting North America with several record companies. He eventually settled a deal with a Russian division of Universal Music Group and Interscope Records.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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