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・ Happy Days (disambiguation)
・ Happy Days (musical)
・ Happy Days (play)
・ Happy Days (season 1)
・ Happy Days (season 10)
・ Happy Days (season 11)
・ Happy Days (season 2)
・ Happy Days (season 3)
・ Happy Days (season 4)
・ Happy Days (season 5)
・ Happy Days (season 6)
・ Happy Days (season 7)
・ Happy Days (season 8)
・ Happy Days (season 9)
・ Happy Days (TV theme)
Happy Days and Lonely Nights
・ Happy Days Are Here Again
・ Happy Days Are Here Again (film)
・ Happy Days in Aranjuez
・ Happy Days, 1880–1892
・ Happy Days, Sweetheart
・ Happy Daze
・ Happy Daze (Battlefield Band album)
・ Happy Daze (compilation album)
・ Happy Deathday
・ Happy Dragons' Press
・ Happy Durbar
・ Happy Easter
・ Happy Eater
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Happy Days and Lonely Nights : ウィキペディア英語版
Happy Days and Lonely Nights

Happy Days and Lonely Nights is a torch song written by Billy Rose and Fred Fisher which Ruth Etting introduced in 1928. The song was successfully revived in the 1950s in the US by the Fontane Sisters and in the UK most successfully by Ruby Murray.
Ruth Etting made her recording of the song in New York City on 24 May 1928 for release on Columbia Records. This version was ranked as high as #9 on the hit parade.
1928 also saw a version of "Happy Days and Lonely Nights" credited to the Knickerbockers actually by Columbia a&r director Ben Selvin.
In 1929 recordings of "Happy Days and Lonely Nights" were made by Vaughn De Leath and Eva Taylor.〔()〕
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The song was revived in 1954 by the Fontane Sisters whose version - made with the Billy Vaughn Orchestra - reached #18 on the US charts.〔() 〕
Although the UK release of the Fontane Sisters' version was overlooked it did result in three British-based acts covering "Happy Days and Lonely Nights" for the UK market: both Suzi Miller & the Johnston Brothers and Frankie Vaughan took "Happy Days and Lonely Nights" into the UK Top 20 with respective peaks of #14 and #11 in January 1955.
However it was the version by Ruby Murray - produced by Norrie Paramor - which debuted that 5 February which became the major hit reaching #6 on the chart dated that 26 February.
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Connie Francis recorded "Happy Days and Lonely Nights" at Metropolitan Studios (NYC) on 2 September 1958 in a session conducted by its producer Morton "Morty" Kraft. Although relegated to the B-side of the upbeat "Fallin'", "Happy Days and Lonely Nights" received enough attention to appear on the ''Cash Box'' Best Selling Singles chart at #88.〔()〕
"Happy Days and Lonely Nights" has also been recorded by Ken Dodd, Anneke Grönloh, Dick James, Ginger Rogers, Kathy Kirby, Duke Special and Kay Starr with instrumental versions by UK pianist Billy Thorburn (recorded 2 November 1954), Max Bygraves, Russ Conway, Ted Heath and Phil Tate.
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Ruby Murray set a UK chart record the week of 26 March 1955 when she had five releases in that week's Top 20 including "Happy Days and Lonely Nights" then at #16. Her precedent releases "Heartbeat" and "Softly, Softly" were respectively at #15 and #2 while the first follow-up to "Happy Days and Lonely Nights": "Let Me Go Lover" was at #5. That week Murray's single "If Anyone Finds, This I Love You" (with Ann Warren) debuted at #17. Murray's feat has yet to be bested and was only equaled the first week of July 2009 by Michael Jackson as a result of the "buzz" attendant on Jackson's passing.
==References==




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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