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・ Don't Make a Beggar of Me
・ Don't Make a Black Woman Take Off Her Earrings
・ Don't Make a Fool of Yourself
・ Don't Make a Wave Committee
・ Don't Make Any Plans for Tonight
・ Don't Make Em Like You
・ Don't Make It Easy for Me
・ Don't Make Me
・ Don't Make Me (Toya song)
・ Don't Make Me Angry
・ Don't Make Me Come Over There and Love You
・ Don't Make Me Come to Vegas
・ Don't Make Me Laugh
・ Don't Make Me Over
・ Don't Make Me Over (Family Guy)
Don't Make Me Over (song)
・ Don't Make Me Think
・ Don't Make Me Wait
・ Don't Make Me Wait (911 song)
・ Don't Make Me Wait (Peech Boys song)
・ Don't Make Me Wait for Love
・ Don't Make Me Your God
・ Don't Make Promises
・ Don't Make Waves
・ Don't Marry Her
・ Don't Matter
・ Don't Mean Nothing
・ Don't Mention The War
・ Don't Mention the World Cup
・ Don't Mess wit Texas


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Don't Make Me Over (song) : ウィキペディア英語版
Don't Make Me Over (song)

"Don't Make Me Over" is a song written by Burt Bacharach and Hal David, which also marked the recording debut of Dionne Warwick in 1962.
==Dionne Warwick version==
The songwriting/production team of Burt Bacharach and Hal David had been struck by Dionne Warwick's work as a session singer on The Drifters' "Mexican Divorce" in February 1962 and subsequently Warwick had regularly vocalized on demos of compositions by that Bacharach/David team, beginning with the song "Make It Easy on Yourself". Florence Greenberg, owner of the Scepter Records label, had signed Warwick after hearing her voice on the demo for "It's Love that Really Counts" although Greenberg did not wish to release that song as a single by Warwick ("It's Love That Really Counts" was given to the Shirelles to serve as a B-side); Greenberg also rejected "Make It Easy on Yourself" which was subsequently placed with Jerry Butler, which would become a charted hit recording. Warwick had hoped "Make It Easy on Yourself" would serve as her recording debut.
Upon learning from Bacharach and David the label didn't think her style was correct for their new song, and that Jerry Butler was selected for recording it, a keenly disappointed Warwick felt used, manipulated and exploited, and dismissed the team's assurance of writing her an equally viable song in her own style. According to a Biography cable television episode featuring Burt Bacharach, Warwick responded by shouting, in nearly a crying rant, at the songwriters as she left the recording studio: "Don't make me over, man . . . (you have to) accept me for what I am". Bacharach and David looked at each other in the moment, in stunned disbelief, at her youthful outburst at them. David said to Bacharach: "Burt, I think we just heard the title of a new song". David, never to waste life's circumstances and moments as inspiration for a song, in fact went to work on lyrics and utilized Warwick's authentic energetic outburst as the title and sentiment for "Don't Make Me Over", shifting the meaning of the phrase to "Accept me for what I am" and adding the phrase "Accept me for the things that I do".
With the song composition completed, Warwick recorded "Don't Make Me Over" under Bacharach and David's guidance at Bell Sound Studios NYC in August 1962. The production, at the time, was a recording industry departure and represented a new, powerful, often-soaring orchestral-choir framing of Bacharach's melodies with David's either forceful or tender lyrics around the bold, fresh soulful female voice of the young Dionne Warwick — an original sound — the new Bacharach-David style of recording had been coined for the listening public.
Florence Greenberg initially disliked the unconventional new sound. The witty Bacharach recalls Greenberg "cried upon hearing it, and not because she loved the recording" — and another track from the same recording session, "I Smiled Yesterday", was the official A-side of Warwick's debut single with "Don't Make Me Over" relegated to the B-side. However, "Don't Make Me Over" broke initially in heavy rotation on San Francisco radio upon the record's October 1962 release, and that title debuted on the ''Billboard'' Hot 100 on 8 December 1962 and peaked at #21 there, and at #5 on the R&B, in January 1963. (The single misspelled Dionne Warwick's true surname, Warrick, as Warwick; from this point the singer, previously known personally and professionally as "Dionne Warrick", went by the name "Dionne Warwick".)
The first of over 56 charted singles Warwick placed on the ''Billboard'' Hot 100 Chart between 1962 and 1998, the original recording of "Don't Make Me Over" was inducted to the Grammy Hall of Fame in 2000. That same year, Warwick recorded and released a revamped and updated version of "Don't Make Me Over" on her album ''Dionne Sings Dionne II'', roughly thirty-eight years after recording the original version.

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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