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"Calico Skies" is the sixth song on Paul McCartney's 1997 album, ''Flaming Pie''. McCartney had been staying in Long Island when the category-three storm Hurricane Bob that made landfall had hit in August 1991. This made McCartney sit with an acoustic guitar and write what he describes as "a gentle love song that becomes a 1960s protest song". The song was co-produced by George Martin and McCartney, being started, finished, and mixed within a single session on 3 September 1992 in Sussex, England. It is the earliest recording on ''Flaming Pie''. McCartney says of the song: ''"Bob, the hurricane, knocked out all the power; it was all candle-light, cooking on a woodfire. Very primitive, but we like that enforced simplicity. I couldn't play records, so I made up little acoustic pieces. This was one of them - it's a primitive little powercut memory."'' "Calico Skies" was arranged for string quartet; this version was included on McCartney's 1999 album ''Working Classical''. The song was also re-recorded for inclusion on the album Hope which was released in 2003 to aid victims of the Iraq war. ==Personnel== * Paul McCartney – vocals, acoustic guitar, percussion * Bob Kraushaar – engineer * George Martin – producer 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「Calico Skies」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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