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・ Forget Me Not (1922 film)
・ Forget Me Not (1935 film)
・ Forget Me Not (1936 film)
・ Forget Me Not (2009 film)
・ Forget Me Not (2010 British film)
・ Forget Me Not (2010 Japanese film)
・ Forget Me Not (Bonnie Pink song)
・ Forget Me Not (Dark Lunacy album)
・ Forget me not (disambiguation)
・ Forget Me Not (EP)
・ Forget Me Not (Lucie Silvas song)
・ Forget Me Not (Martha and the Vandellas song)
・ Forget Me Not (TV series)
・ Forget Me Not (Vera Lynn song)
・ Forget Me Not Farm
Forget Me Nots
・ Forget Me Nots and Remind Me
・ Forget Myself
・ Forget Paris
・ Forget the Differences
・ Forget the Mantra
・ Forget the Night Ahead
・ Forget The Rules
・ Forget the World
・ Forget the World (Afrojack album)
・ Forget the World (The Hippos album)
・ Forget to Remember
・ Forget Us Not
・ Forget What You Know
・ Forget Yourself


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Forget Me Nots : ウィキペディア英語版
Forget Me Nots

"Forget Me Nots" is a song by American rhythm and blues and crossover jazz singer-songwriter Patrice Rushen. Co-written by Rushen, Freddie Washington, and Terri McFaddin, it appeared on Rushen's seventh studio album, ''Straight from the Heart''. Making a radical shift in her music, Rushen would continue to harness the particular style of this record all through to her next album ''Now'', released two years later in 1984. Originally deemed by record label executives as a "flop", Rushen released the song and the song became a Top 40 pop (#23), Top 5 R&B (#4), and Top 5 dance (#2) hit on the ''Billboard'' charts and is the hit she's most notable for. Rushen's performance received a Grammy nomination for Best Female R&B Vocal Performance. Rushen had a number of songs on the R&B and Dance charts, but this was her only U.S. Top 40 pop hit and ranked #86 on VH1's 100 Greatest One Hit Wonders of the 1980s.
The bass line is particularly recognizable, and was performed on the record by session bass player Freddie Washington.
The classic tenor saxophone solo was played by Los Angeles session player and recording artist, Gerald Albright. Albright also appears in the music video of the song.
The lyrics are from the point of view of one professing her longing for a rekindling with an ex-lover. She ruminates on the romance's end, and sends the lover forget-me-nots, a flower that since medieval times has been given and worn to symbolize enduring love despite absence or separation.
==Cover versions and sampling==
Along with being prominently featured in the Tom Hanks hit film, ''Big'', the song has been frequently sampled. These include George Michael in "Fastlove" (which samples the song near the end), Will Smith in his 1997 hit "Men in Black" from the film of the same name, it also plays at the end of episodes in Men in Black: The Series. French rapper MC Solaar on "Les Temps Changent" from his funk-inspired ''Paradisiaque'' album, and also by hip hop artists The Beatnuts in "Give Me Tha Ass" from the ''Stone Crazy'' LP. In addition, Australian satirist Pauline Pantsdown sampled it heavily in the song "Backdoor Man" in 1997.
The song has also been covered directly by several artists. In 1991, electronic band Tongue 'n' Cheek recorded a dance version of "Forget Me Nots", which reached #26 on the UK Singles Chart. In 1996, Eurodance/dance-pop duo La Bouche covered it on their remix album, ''All Mixed Up''. In 2006, jazz guitarist Lee Ritenour collaborated with Patrice Rushen and South African singer Zamajobe on a cover version of the song for his album, ''Smoke 'n Mirrors''. Zamajobe sang the lead vocal, with Rushen on background vocals, Rhodes piano and on an organ solo. The version featured a brief African rhythm interlude.〔(Smoke 'n' Mirrors ), by Woodrow Wilkins, AllAboutJazz.com, June 14, 2007〕 In 2007, German dance project Vinylshakerz released their version of "Forget Me Nots".

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「Forget Me Nots」の詳細全文を読む



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