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・ Holiday Romance
・ Holiday Shores, Illinois
・ Holiday '80
・ Holiday (1930 film)
・ Holiday (1938 film)
・ Holiday (2006 film)
・ Holiday (2010 film)
・ Holiday (Alaska in Winter album)
・ Holiday (America album)
・ Holiday (Bee Gees song)
・ Holiday (comics)
・ Holiday (Dilana song)
・ Holiday (disambiguation)
・ Holiday (Dizzee Rascal song)
・ Holiday (Earth, Wind & Fire album)
Holiday (Green Day song)
・ Holiday (horse)
・ Holiday (Jennifer Paige album)
・ Holiday (Madonna song)
・ Holiday (magazine)
・ Holiday (Naughty by Nature song)
・ Holiday (novel)
・ Holiday (play)
・ Holiday (Roberta Flack album)
・ Holiday (Russ Freeman album)
・ Holiday (surname)
・ Holiday (The Goodies)
・ Holiday (The Magnetic Fields album)
・ Holiday (TV series)
・ Holiday (Vampire Weekend song)


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Holiday (Green Day song) : ウィキペディア英語版
Holiday (Green Day song)

"Holiday" is a song by the American punk rock band Green Day. It was released as the third single from their seventh studio album ''American Idiot''. The song is in the key of F minor. Though the song is a prelude to "Boulevard of Broken Dreams", "Holiday" was released as a single later on, in the spring of 2005. The song achieved considerable popularity across the world and performed moderately well on the charts. In the U.S., it reached number nineteen on the ''Billboard'' Hot 100 and number one on the Hot Modern Rock Tracks and Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks charts. It debuted at number eleven in the UK and at number twenty-one in Canada. The song has been featured in the 2006 comedy film, ''Accepted''. The Vancouver Canucks of the NHL once used it as their goal song.
==Background==
One of two explicitly political songs on the album (the other being fellow single "American Idiot"), "Holiday" took two months to finish writing, as Armstrong continually felt his lyrics were not good enough. Aided by the encouragement of Cavallo, he completed the song. "Holiday" was inspired by the music of Bob Dylan.〔 Armstrong wanted to write something stronger than "American Idiot", with harsh language to illustrate his points. The song takes aim at American conservatism. Armstrong felt that Republican politicians were "strategic" in alienating one group of people—for example, the gay community—in order to buy the votes of another. He later characterized the song as an outspoken "fuck you" to Bush. Armstrong for the first time imagined how he would perform the songs he was writing, and envisioned an audience responding to his lyric "Can I get another Amen?" The song's bridge, which Armstrong hoped to be as "twisted as possible," was designed as a "politician's worst nightmare."
The chorus's refrain—"This is our lives on holiday"—was intended to reflect the average American’s ambivalence on the issues of the day. Armstrong characterized the song as "not anti-American, it’s anti-war."

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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