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・ FACE AIDS
・ Face and neck development of the embryo
・ Face Animation Parameter
・ Face Behind the Face
・ Face Blind
・ Face book
・ Face cage
・ Face Candy
・ Face card
・ Face climbing
・ Face Control
・ Face control
・ Face cord
・ Face Dancer
・ Face Dancer (band)
Face Dances
・ Face Dances, Pt. 2
・ Face detection
・ Face diagonal
・ Face distortion
・ Face Down
・ Face Down (album)
・ Face Down (Arashi song)
・ Face Down (band)
・ Face Down (film)
・ Face Down (The Red Jumpsuit Apparatus song)
・ Face Down in Turpentine
・ Face Down, Ass Up
・ Face Drop
・ Face Everything and Rise


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Face Dances : ウィキペディア英語版
Face Dances

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''Face Dances'' is the ninth studio album by English rock band The Who.〔(Discogs - ''Face Dances'' LP 1981 Artone (POLY 5528) South Africa )〕 It was released in 1981 on Warner Bros. Records in the United States (it was the band's first release on that label) and on Polydor Records in the United Kingdom. It was one of two Who studio albums with drummer Kenney Jones, who had replaced Keith Moon after his death three years earlier.
Despite middling reviews from Rolling Stone and other critics,〔(Face Dances at Rolling Stone )〕 Roger Daltrey went on record saying he liked this album in a 1994 interview. Some critics, notably in the ''Boston Globe'' in a review in April 1981, said it was the Who's best album since 1973's ''Quadrophenia''.
The album peaked at #4〔(The Hypertext Who › Liner Notes › Face Dances )〕 on the US ''Billboard'' album charts and #2〔(The Who at chartstats.com )〕 on the UK album charts.
The album cover features paintings of the members by many British painters, who were commissioned by Peter Blake, designer of the cover of The Beatles' ''Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band'' album. Artists include Tom Phillips, Richard Hamilton, Allen Jones, David Hockney, Clive Barker, R. B. Kitaj, Howard Hodgkin, Patrick Caulfield, and Blake himself.
In 1992, Sincer Records re-released the album on CD. It only held the songs from the original LP.
In 1997, the album was re-mixed, remastered and re-released by MCA Records with three outtakes as well as two live tracks. The live track "How Can You Do It Alone" is an edited version of the live performance.
"You Better You Bet" was the first single from the album; its music video was one of the first music videos aired on MTV in 1981 and was the first video ever to be shown more than once on the channel.
==Live performances==
Every song on this album, with the exception of "Daily Records", has been performed live by either The Who or one of its members' solo projects.
On the band's 1981 tour supporting the album, five songs were performed live: "You Better You Bet", "Don't Let Go The Coat", "The Quiet One", "Did You Steal My Money", and "Another Tricky Day". However, only "You Better You Bet", "The Quiet One" and "Another Tricky Day" were played after the tour.
"You Better You Bet" is one of the band's more famous live songs, being played in almost every tour following 1981, namely 1989, 1999, 2000, 2002, 2004, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2013, and 2015. Live performances of this song did not differ much from the studio arrangement, save for the guitar solo, which was usually played differently.
"Don't Let Go The Coat" was played in every concert of the 1981 tour, but did not last past it.
"The Quiet One" was written by Entwistle to replace "My Wife" on stage, and it did for the years of 1981 and 1982. However, in the proceeding tours, this was never played again and "My Wife" was brought back.
"Did You Steal My Money" was only played four times on the 1981 tour, three of those times as an encore, and usually leading into another song.
"How Can You Do It Alone" was first performed live much earlier than the release date of the album. In fact, all of its live performances came before its release. In 1979, Townshend introduced this song with a different, faster arrangement with different lyrics during the encores of the North American leg of the tour. It was played once more in 1980. A version more similar to the studio version (though still quite different) was played at a concert at the Cornwall Coliseum in St Austell on 30 January 1981. By that time, the lyrics had been more or less set in stone. However, it was never played again after that concert.
"Another Tricky Day" was also performed live first before 1981. Townshend introduced some lyrics of the song during a jam of "Dance It Away" in Los Angeles on the 1980 tour. 1981 performances of this song featured a lengthy jam at its conclusion, and these versions could reach as long as eight minutes. In 2002, this song was brought back for the North American tour as a tribute to Entwistle, who died right before the start of the tour. The song was played a few more times in 2004 as well.
"Cache Cache" and "You" were never performed live by The Who, but Daltrey performed the former once on his 2009 ''Use It or Lose It tour'', while the John Entwistle Band sometimes played the latter during their concerts.

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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