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"Cleveland Rocks" is a rock song by Ian Hunter from his 1979 album ''You're Never Alone with a Schizophrenic''. The song is seen as a de facto anthem in Cleveland, Ohio.〔Petkovic, John. "Writer of Cleveland anthem is ready to rock town again" ''The Plain Dealer'' October 3, 2004: J2〕 The song was played every Friday at 6:00 PM on Cleveland radio station WMMS beginning in 1979 and is used as a victory song for the city's sports teams. In recognition of "Cleveland Rocks", Hunter was given the key to the city by Cleveland mayor Dennis Kucinich on June 19, 1979. ==Origins== The song was inspired in part by the songwriter's desire to counteract the poor reputation of a city for which he had some affection. Hunter states on his web site, "the inspiration for 'Cleveland Rocks' goes back to the old days when people used to make fun of Cleveland. Cleveland was 'uncool' and LA and NYC were 'cool'. I didn't see it that way. Lotta heart in Cleveland."〔(Ian Hunter - The Horse's Mouth )〕 The song was first released in 1977 under the title "England Rocks" on a single in the United Kingdom, predating the release of the "Cleveland" version by two years. Hunter has maintained, however, that Cleveland was the original subject of the song, stating on his web site, "I originally wrote 'Cleveland Rocks' for Cleveland. I changed it later to 'England Rocks' because I thought it should be a single somewhere and Columbia wouldn't release it as a single in the U.S. (too regional). 'Cleveland Rocks' is Cleveland's song and that's the truth."〔(Ian Hunter - The Horse's Mouth )〕 A live version of "Cleveland Rocks" appears on Hunter's 1980 album ''Welcome to the Club'' and on the soundtrack to the 1987 film ''Light of Day'', a movie with Joan Jett and Michael J. Fox that is based in Cleveland. The "England Rocks" version appears on the compilation albums ''Shades of Ian Hunter: The Ballad of Ian Hunter and Mott the Hoople'' and ''The Very Best of Ian Hunter'', as well on the CD re-issue of Hunter's 1977 album ''Overnight Angels''. The original version also serves as an unofficial tribute to the history of rock and roll, as at the beginning of the song, it has an archival sample of Cleveland disc jockey Alan Freed introducing his show on WJW, The Moondog Show before suddenly seguing into the intro to "Cleveland Rocks". (Freed had been deceased for fourteen years at the time of the release of "Cleveland Rocks".) Freed's show on WJW launched several rock and roll acts in the early days of the genre, and would later form part of the basis of opening the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland sixteen years later. Hunter performed "Cleveland Rocks" in the pregame ceremonies of Game 3 of the 2007 NBA Finals at Quicken Loans Arena—the first NBA Finals game in the state of Ohio. 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「Cleveland Rocks」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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