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Happy Sad
・ Happy Sad (song)
・ Happy Salma
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・ Happy Science
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・ Happy Seven
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Happy Sad : ウィキペディア英語版
Happy Sad

''Happy Sad'' is the third album by singer-songwriter Tim Buckley, released in 1969. It was recorded at Elektra Sound Recorders in Los Angeles, California and was produced by former Lovin' Spoonful members Zal Yanovsky and, coincidentally, his subsequent replacement Jerry Yester. It marked the beginning of Buckley's experimental period, as it incorporated elements of jazz that he had never used before. Many of the songs here represent a departure from the binary form that dominated much of his previous work. The sound of the album is characterized by David Friedman's vibraphone, an instrument which gives the album a more relaxed tone than Buckley's earlier work. The songs are much longer than on previous releases and this style continued through to later works. The vocals on the album are more drawn out than earlier performances and this represents the beginning of Buckley using his voice like an instrument. The lyrics on ''Happy Sad'' represent a change as Buckley stopped working with Larry Beckett, his lyricist on the two previous albums ''Tim Buckley'' and ''Goodbye and Hello'', and began writing the lyrics himself. Buckley's self-penned efforts stand in contrast to Beckett's occasionally political and literary-style work.〔Underwood, Lee. Retrieved on May 1, 2008 (Tim Buckley Biography ) ''timbuckley.com''〕 Buckley would also go on to author all his own material on the following two albums.
==Inspirations and song analysis==

''Happy Sad'' shares much in common with his later albums, ''Lorca'' and ''Blue Afternoon''. Much of the material that would appear on those albums was written at the same time as the songs that appear on this album, representing the most productive and prolific period of Buckley's career. Buckley's musical tastes expanded during the period that the album was written and the first track, "Strange Feelin", was directly inspired by Miles Davis' "All Blues" from ''Kind of Blue'' and the melody of the song is directly taken from the song.〔 "Buzzin' Fly" was written much earlier than the rest of the work and was originally performed with a group Buckley had during high school, the Harlequin 3, with bassist Jim Fielder and later lyricist, Larry Beckett.〔Dream Brother: The Lives and Music of Jeff and Tim Buckley, David Browne
The third track, "Love from Room 109 at the Islander (On Pacific Coast Highway)", is a song composed of various movements and this represents the second time Buckley wrote in this manner, his previous effort being the title track of ''Goodbye and Hello''. The segments of the song were written separately as "Danang" and "Asbury Park", as demonstrated on the later released demo sessions, ''The Dream Belongs to Me: Rare and Unreleased 1968 - 1973''. The final version of the song is backed by an 'ocean' sound effect, however this was not originally intended to feature on the song. Buckley and the band were happy with the take of song but due to a recording problem the track had a slight electric buzzing in the background. The producer solved this by muffling the buzzing with the ocean overdub.〔
"Dream Letter" is as an ode and apology to his ex-wife, Mary Guibert, and his son Jeff Buckley.〔 This is the second song Buckley wrote about the pair, the first being "I Never Asked to Be Your Mountain" on his previous LP, ''Goodbye and Hello''. In comparison to that song "Dream Letter" has a more apologetic tone, the lyrics reveal this with Buckley lamenting "Does he ever ask about me?" . It would be over five years later that Buckley would meet with his son again.〔Browne, David (October 24, 1993). Retrieved on May 1, 2008"(The Unmade Star )". ''The New York Times''.〕 The name of the song would later be used for a live album: posthumous release ''Dream Letter: Live in London 1968''. The concert features much of the same personnel from the ''Happy Sad''.
"Gypsy Woman" is a long track highlighting Buckley's vocal acrobatics and on the record has some qualities of a jam session. Buckley and his band were disappointed with its recording but the song would remain as part of Buckley's live repertoire for the following years.〔 The closer of the album, "Sing a Song For You", is more similar to Buckley's work on ''Goodbye and Hello'' than to the songs on the rest of the album. It shares the verse/chorus style and folk leanings of "Song to the Siren", which though released on ''Starsailor'' was written around the same period.

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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