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・ No Greater Love
・ No Greater Love (1952 film)
・ No Greater Love (1960 film)
・ No Greater Love (1996 film)
・ No Greater Love (2010 film)
・ No Greater Love (album)
・ No Greater Love (disambiguation)
・ No Greater Love (novel)
・ No Greater Love (Only Fools and Horses)
・ No Ground No Fans
・ No Grounds for Pity
・ No GST Party
・ No Guitars
・ No Gun Ri Massacre
・ No Guns Allowed
No Guru, No Method, No Teacher
・ No Guts No Glory
・ No Guts No Glory (Airbourne album)
・ No Guts No Glory (Phyno album)
・ No Guts, No Glory (moe. album)
・ No Guts...No Glory (Molly Hatchet album)
・ No ha parado de llover
・ No Habla
・ No Hace Falta
・ No Hacen Na
・ No Hair Day
・ No Half Measures Ltd.
・ No Hands
・ No Hands on the Clock
・ No Happy View


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No Guru, No Method, No Teacher : ウィキペディア英語版
No Guru, No Method, No Teacher

''No Guru, No Method, No Teacher'' is the sixteenth studio album by Northern Irish singer-songwriter Van Morrison, released in 1986 on Mercury.
Upon release in 1986, it was well received by critics and charted at number twenty-seven in the UK and number seventy on the ''Billboard'' 200.
==Recording and composition==
The album was recorded at Studio D and Record Plant Studios in Sausalito, California in 1985 with Jim Stern as engineer.〔Heylin, ''Can You Feel the Silence'', p. 520〕 The basic takes were recorded at Studio D with Chris Michie, Jef Labes, Baba Trunde, David Hayes and Morrison. Overdubs, guitar solos, strings and back-up vocals were added at the Record Plant with the masters taken to Townhouse Studios in London. Overdubs with Ritchie Buckley on saxophone, Martin Drover on trumpet and oboe played by Kate St. John were added in the London studio.〔
The song "In the Garden" was a favorite fan concert performance for years. Morrison told Mick Brown in 1986 on the ''Interview Album'': "I take you through a definite meditation process which is a form of transcendental meditation. It's not about TM, forget about that. You should have some degree of tranquillity by the time you get to the end. It only takes about ten minutes to do this process."〔Hinton, ''Celtic Crossroads'', p. 255〕 There are references back to ''Astral Weeks'' with gardens wet with rain and a childlike vision.〔Heylin, ''Can You Feel the Silence?'', p. 394〕 The words are poetic as in the line "you are a creature all in rapture/You had the key to your soul".
"Got to Go Back" features Kate St. John's oboe and reminisces of school days back in the singer's childhood in Belfast. "Oh, The Warm Feeling" is also a song of feeling the safety of family and love in childhood.
"Foreign Window" is a song concerned with dealing with some sort of self-imposed therapy and having to go on no matter what. Brian Hinton remarks, "There is a grace and majesty here which I have experienced from little else in rock music."
"Here Comes the Knight" is a pun on the Them song "Here Comes the Night" and quotes from the epitaph on the gravestone of one of Morrison's favorite poets, W. B. Yeats. The Yeats Estate had denied Morrison's request to transform a Yeats poem to music, but the gravestone was considered public property: "Here come horsemen through the pass / They say cast a cold eye on life, on death".
"Ivory Tower" echoes Yeats once more.
The song "Thanks For the Information" is a comment on the cliches of the business world.〔Hinton, Celtic Crossroads, p.255-257〕

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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