翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Don't You Know You're Beautiful
・ Don't You Know?
・ Don't You Lie to Me
・ Don't You Love Me
・ Don't You Love Me (49ers song)
・ Don't You Love Me (Eternal song)
・ Don't You Miss Me
・ Don't You Rise
・ Don't You See!
・ Don't You Think It's Time?
・ Don't You Think This Outlaw Bit's Done Got Out of Hand
・ Don't You Turn Your Back on Me
・ Don't You Wanna Be Relevant? / Our Bovine Public
・ Don't You Wanna Feel
・ Don't You Wanna Stay
Don't You Want Me
・ Don't You Want Me (disambiguation)
・ Don't You Want Me (Felix song)
・ Don't You Want Me (Jody Watley song)
・ Don't You Want My Love
・ Don't You Want My Love (Debbie Jacobs song)
・ Don't You Worry 'bout a Thing
・ Don't You Worry 'bout a Thing (album)
・ Don't You Worry Child
・ Don't You Worry My Little Pet
・ Don't!
・ Don't! Buy! Thai!
・ Don't-care term
・ Don, Benin
・ Don, Nord


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Don't You Want Me : ウィキペディア英語版
Don't You Want Me

"Don't You Want Me" is a single by British synthpop group The Human League, released on 27 November 1981 as the fourth single from their third studio album ''Dare'' (1981).
It is the band's best known and most commercially successful recording and was the 1981 Christmas number one in the UK, where it has since sold over 1,560,000 copies, making it the 23rd most successful single in UK Singles Chart history. It later topped the ''Billboard'' Hot 100 in the US on 3 July 1982 where it stayed for three weeks. In 2015 the song was voted by the British public as the nation's 7th favourite 1980s number one in a poll for ITV.
==Background==
The lyrics were originally inspired after lead singer Philip Oakey read a photo-story in a teen-girl's magazine. Originally conceived and recorded in the studio as a male solo, Oakey was inspired by the film ''A Star Is Born'' and decided to turn the song into a conflicting duet with one of the band's two teenage female vocalists. Susan Ann Sulley was then asked to take on the role. Up until then, she and the other female vocalist Joanne Catherall had only been assigned backing vocals; Sulley says she was chosen only through "luck of the draw".〔Interview – ''Smash Hits'' Magazine – December 1981〕 Musicians Jo Callis and Philip Adrian Wright created a synthesizer score to accompany the lyrics which was much harsher than the version that was actually released. Initial versions of the song were recorded but Virgin Records-appointed producer Martin Rushent was unhappy with them. He and Callis remixed the track, giving it a softer, and in Oakey's opinion, "poppy" sound. Oakey hated the new version and thought it the weakest track on ''Dare'', resulting in one of his infamous rows with Rushent.〔Martin Rushent speaking on UK Channel 4 Documentary "Top 10 Electro Pioneers" BBC – 27 November 2001〕 Oakey disliked it so much that it was relegated to the last track on the B side of the (then) vinyl album.
Before the release of ''Dare'', three of its tracks—"The Sound of the Crowd", "Love Action (I Believe in Love)", and "Open Your Heart"—had already been released as successful singles. With a hit album and three hit singles in a row, Virgin's chief executive Simon Draper decided to release one more single from the album before the end of 1981. His choice, "Don't You Want Me", instantly caused a row with Oakey who did not want another single to be released because he was convinced that "the public were now sick of hearing The Human League" and the choice of the "poor quality filler track" would almost certainly be a disaster, wrecking the group's new-found popularity. Virgin were adamant that a fourth single would be released and Oakey finally agreed on the condition that a large colour poster accompany the 7" single, because he felt fans would "feel ripped off" by the 'substandard' single alone.
The Human League often added cryptic references to their productions and the record sleeve of "Don't You Want Me" featured the suffix of "100". This was a reference to The 100 Club, a restaurant/bar in Sheffield.〔Smash Hits Magazine December 1981〕
Today, the song is widely considered a classic of its era. In a retrospective review, Stephen Thomas Erlewine, senior editor for AllMusic, described the song as "a devastating chronicle of a frayed romance wrapped in the greatest pop hooks and production of its year." Oakey still describes it as over-rated, but acknowledges his initial dismissal was misguided and claims pride in the track. Oakey is also at pains to point out another misconception, that it is not a love song, but "a nasty song about sexual power politics".〔Human League Interview – Eamon Holmes GMTV 2001〕

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「Don't You Want Me」の詳細全文を読む



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