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・ Kōyashita Station
・ Kōyodo Station
・ Kōyō Gunkan
・ Kōyō Ishikawa
・ Kōyō Kawanishi
・ Kōyō Okada
・ Kōyō Yasumoto
・ Kōyōdai Station
・ Kōyōen Station
・ Kōraibashi
・ Kōraku-en
・ Kōrakuen Station
・ Kōreisai
・ Kōrere
・ Kōri Hisataka
Kōri no Sekai
・ Kōri no ue ni Tatsu yō ni
・ Kōrien Station
・ Kōriki clan
・ Kōriki Kiyonaga
・ Kōriki Masanaga
・ Kōriki Tadafusa
・ Kōrikoppu
・ Kōrimoto Station
・ Kōrimoto Station (JR Kyushu)
・ Kōriyama Castle
・ Kōriyama City Museum of Art
・ Kōriyama Kaiseizan Athletic Stadium
・ Kōriyama Station
・ Kōriyama Station (Fukushima)


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Kōri no Sekai : ウィキペディア英語版
Kōri no Sekai

is the third studio album by Japanese singer-songwriter Yōsui Inoue, released in December 1973.
==Overview and song information==
''Kōri no Sekai'' was recorded after a single "Yume No Naka e" became a smash hit. Part of the recording took place at the Trident and Advision studios in London, United Kingdom, with musicians including two former members of the band Quatermass, John Gustafson and Pete Robinson. Three of them including title track were co-arranged by Nicky Harrison. Harrison was also the strings arranger for The Rolling Stones' ''Goats Head Soup'' album, which topped the chart in the U.S. and UK in Autumn 1973.
A song "Kokoro Moyou" was released as a lead single in September 1973 and became his first top-ten charting hit consequently, peaking at #7 on the Oricon. It was originally titled "Futsū Yūbin" and written for the folk duo Betsy & Chris, but the pair refused to record his song. A pop idol Saori Minami covered "Kokoro Moyou" on her album ''Natsu no Kanjou'' released in a following year. Ayaka Hirahara and Akina Nakamori also recorded the song in later years.
Flip side of a single "Kokoro Moyou" was "Kaerenai Futari", a ballad Inoue and Kiyoshirō Imawano wrote together. Reportedly, then-unknown co-writer eked out a living by the income of the song, until he became popular as a frontman of the band RC Succession in the 1980s.〔 〕 Imawano joined the songwriting on "Machibouke" too, and occasionally collaborated with Inoue in later years.
The lead-off track of the album was initially written by Inoue alone, and it was previously issued on his live album ''Modori Michi''. The studio recording version of "Akazu no Fumikiri" heard on ''Kōri no Sekai'' is completely different song, which features renewed composition by the arranger Katz Hoshi.

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「Kōri no Sekai」の詳細全文を読む



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