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・ Orange River mudfish
・ Orange River Sovereignty
・ Orange River white-eye
・ Orange Romania
・ Orange Roses
・ Orange Roughies
・ Orange roughy
・ Orange Route
・ Orange S.A.
・ Orange Safari
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Orange Skies
・ Orange skunk clownfish
・ Orange Sky (song)
・ Orange Sky Golden Harvest
・ Orange slice
・ Orange Slovensko
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・ Orange soft drink
・ Orange Sport (Poland)
・ Orange spotted filefish
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・ Orange SPV
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Orange Skies : ウィキペディア英語版
Orange Skies

"Orange Skies" is a song written by Bryan MacLean and originally recorded in 1966 by the band Love for their second album ''Da Capo'' (1967). It was first released in December 1966 as the B-side to the band's single "She Comes in Colors". The original recording features band leader Arthur Lee on lead vocals instead of MacLean.
According to Bryan MacLean, "Orange Skies" was the first song he ever wrote. At the time 17 years old and working as a roadie for The Byrds, he based the song on a section from The Byrds' version of "The Bells of Rhymney", attributing that arrangement to Roger McGuinn.〔(Perfect Sound Forever: Bryan MacLean - The last interview ) Retrieved 6 September 2009〕 Allmusic critic Matthew Greenwald also detects influences on the song from Rodgers and Hammerstein musicals, and notes a similarity with Stevie Wonder's later song "My Cherie Amour."〔 Greenwald calls it a highlight of ''Da Capo'', describing it as "a soulful, light meditation on falling in love."〔 Writing in ''The New Rolling Stone Album Guide'', Paul Evans called the song "strange and lovely." As described by author Barney Hoskyns, the song uses "Latin rhythms and cool jazz shadings to fashion a kind of spaced-out MOR." Dominic Priore calls it "a beautiful utopian pastiche unmatched in 1960s music."
Two demo versions by MacLean (on acoustic guitar and vocals) were released in 1997 on the album ''Ifyoubelievein''. A piano version by his half-sister Maria McKee was released on her album ''Live - Acoustic Tour 2006''. Other artists that have covered this song include The Galaxies, Os Baobás (both from Brazil), and Flower Power (Czechoslovakia).
== 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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