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}} 〕 |rev2 = Amazon.com |rev2score = favourable〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Astronaut: Duran Duran: Music )〕 |rev3 = ''Entertainment Weekly'' |rev3score = B |rev4 = ''NME'' |rev4score = 〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Duran Duran: Astronaut )〕 |rev5 = ''Rolling Stone'' |rev5score = }} ''Astronaut'' is the 11th studio album by English pop rock band Duran Duran, first released on 11 October 2004 (see 2004 in music). This was Duran Duran's first studio album since ''Pop Trash'' (2000), and the first (and, to date, last) full album since ''Seven and the Ragged Tiger'' (1983) to be recorded by the most famous five member lineup of the band (the stand-alone 1985 single "A View to a Kill" was their last studio recording together.) ==The making of the album== Duran Duran originally announced a reunion of the most famous five members in 2001, and began writing new music together in the south of France. They continued to write and record intermittently, working hard for a few months at a time, throughout 2002 and 2003. The band's friend Nile Rodgers did preliminary production work on several tracks. Meanwhile, the search for a record label went on, complicated by the band's desire for independence, control, strong promotional support, and a commitment for more than one album, at the same time that the cash-strapped and risk-averse recording industry was unwilling to gamble on the "leftover fame" of a band best known for a series of 20-year-old hits. The band, frustrated and with nearly thirty new songs approaching completion, set out on a world tour in 2003 to show that the band still had drawing power. The sold-out dates in Japan, America, the United Kingdom and Australia and New Zealand—and the nearly delirious news coverage that followed the reunited band—warmed the record labels to the possibilities. The new songs "Sunrise", "Still Breathing", "Virus", "Beautiful Colours" and "What Happens Tomorrow" were played during these concerts; John Taylor also played a demo recording of "What Happens Tomorrow" on the air at Los Angeles radio station STAR 98.7 in May 2003. During this period, a "teaser CD" with short demo versions of a few of the unfinished songs (used to demonstrate the new work to potential labels and producers) was leaked to the Internet and quickly copied throughout the band's fan base. The songs were "Virus", "Sunrise", "TV vs. Radio", "Taste the Summer", "Salt in the Rainbow", and "Pretty Ones". The band was very unhappy about the leak, and with the exception of "Sunrise" (which became the first single) and "Taste the Summer", the leaked songs were not included in the final track listing for the album. Jason Nevins also remixed "Virus", which was not released as a single. (The Jason Nevins version of "Virus" later appeared as a bonus track on a Japanese release of ''Astronaut''). A remix of "Sunrise" by Jason Nevins was included on the ''Queer Eye for the Straight Guy'' soundtrack in February; it received a warm reception by DJs anticipating new work from Duran Duran, but the song was not released as a single from the soundtrack. The band always plays the Jason Nevins version live in concert. The main version off the CD incorporates tracks from Jason Nevins production, to which he is credited on the album's liner notes. In March, the band donated "Beautiful Colours" to FIFA, the international governing body for football, to use as its Centennial song. At the awards ceremony for the FIFA 100, honouring the top living footballers, a video of top moments in the sport was accompanied by the song. However, the song would not be one of those that made the final version of the album. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Astronaut (Duran Duran album)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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