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"Boulevard" is a song written and performed by American singer-songwriter Jackson Browne. It is from his 1980 album ''Hold Out''. When it was released as a single, it entered the Billboard Hot 100 chart at position number 72 on July 5, 1980. It peaked at number 19 and spent 16 weeks on the chart, the fifth-biggest hit of Browne's Top 40 career. Besides the United States, the song was also released as a single in Spain, Japan, the U.K., Italy and Germany.〔Paris, Russ. (JACKSON BROWNE FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS ) 〕〔Paris, Russ. (JACKSON BROWNE COMPLETE DISCOGRAPHY ) Accessed July 9, 2012.〕〔Wikipedia Jackson Browne Discography〕〔Whitburn, Joel. ''Billboard Hot 100 Charts - The Eighties.'' Wisconsin: Record Research, 1991.〕 ==Origin== Described as "uptempo Bob Seger-like" by David Bertrand Wilson on his record reviews website, the song's lyrics rather cynically describe the state of day-to-day and night-to-night life on the street (ostensibly Hollywood Boulevard in Los Angeles):〔(Wilson, David Bertrand. ''Hold Out'' Wilson & Alroy's Record Reviews. ) Retrieved July 9, 2012.〕 Browne said in a radio interview: "It's about runaways, and, you know... as sort of a bystander, it's about Hollywood Boulevard. I used to live right above Hollywood Boulevard, and there's a place called ''The Gold Cup'' and there's a lot of runaway kids and there's a lot of teen prostitution around there. It was partly written from the point of view of a young person on that street, yet it's not really immersed in that. You're sort of, maybe, empathizing with them to some degree, and also trying to say 'it's only time.' It's time on the boulevard, but this doesn't mean this is who you are and where you'll always be, I guess was what I was trying to say..."〔Paris, Russ. The Jackson Browne Fans Page, (Jackson Browne Audio Interview. )〕 :''The hearts are hard and the times are tough. :''Down on the boulevard, the night's enough. :''And time passes slow, :''Between the store front shadows and the street lights glow. :''Everybody walks right by like they're safe or something ... :''They don't know —' The song begins with, and is structured around, a loud electric guitar riff. According to the album liner notes, Rick Marotta guests on drums on this one song on the album. Russ Kunkel is credited with playing drums on all other songs on the ''Hold Out'' album. Danny Kortchmar adds maracas. 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「Boulevard (song)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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