翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Out of the Chorus
・ Out of the Chute
・ Out of the City
・ Out of the Closet
・ Out of the Clouds
・ Out of the Cold
・ Out of the Cool
・ Out of the Cradle
・ Out of the Cradle (book)
・ Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking
・ Out of the Dark
・ Out of the Dark (1989 film)
・ Out of the Dark (1995 film)
・ Out of the Dark (2014 film)
・ Out of the Dark (Curtiss novel)
Out of the Dark (Into the Light)
・ Out of the Dark (O.G. Funk album)
・ Out of the Dark (Weber novel)
・ Out of the Dark (Wilton Katz novel)
・ Out of the Dark ... Into the Light
・ Out of the Darkness
・ Out of the Darkness (1915 film)
・ Out of the Darkness (1971 film)
・ Out of the Darkness (1978 film)
・ Out of the Darkness (1985 film)
・ Out of the Darkness (Community and Overnight Walks)
・ Out of the Darkness (Hinton novel)
・ Out of the Darkness (Jack Starr album)
・ Out of the Darkness (Sacred Mother Tongue album)
・ Out of the Darkness (Turtledove novel)


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Out of the Dark (Into the Light) : ウィキペディア英語版
Out of the Dark (Into the Light)


''Out of the Dark (Into the Light)'' (1998) is the eighth album by Falco. It was released posthumously, less than a month after Falco's death on 6 February 1998, in a car accident.
==Background information==
In 1996, techno styled song ''Mutter, der Mann mit dem Koks ist da'' ("mother, the man with the coke (cocaine/charcoal) is here") by T>>MA ("T>>MA" as Falco's pseudonym) hit the market and brought the artist back into the charts of all German-speaking countries. In the song Falco plays with the ambiguity of the german word "Koks" which means both cocaine and charcoal.
Although Falco's band leader found Out of the Dark good enough to be released as the second single, Falco himself wanted it to be released on the album only.
Follow up single became ''Naked'' which was quite successful in Austria but didn't meet Falco's expectations in Germany, leading him to postpone the album release.
It is known that Falco was unsure about the perfect order of the CD tracks, so that he often changed it, and he also planned to record a track called "Tomorrow Never Knows" as a cover from The Beatles (this is shown on the facsimile attached to the CD).
In the time shortly before his death, Falco also removed some songs that were eventually released on further albums, 'Best Of's and single CDs.


On February 6, 1998, Falco made one of his last phone calls. He told his guitarist, Milan Polak, to come over to the Dominican Republic because he wanted to record some songs with his band, but this never took place as Falco died in the afternoon of that day.
Three weeks after Falco's death in a car accident, the album was officially released in Austria, Germany, Switzerland and the Netherlands. The worldwide release was on 2 March 1998. Its previous title had been "Egoisten" ("egotists").
The album turned out to be a big success in German-speaking countries, resulting in another number one in Austria,#3 in Germany and #4 in Switzerland; it also reached #35 in Hungary, a non German-speaking country.〔Album Charts of Hungary http://www.mahasz.hu/m/?menu=slagerlistak&menu2=archivum&lista=top40&ev=1998&het=17&submit_=Keresés〕〔Austrian Album Charts: http://austriancharts.at/showitem.asp?interpret=Falco&titel=Out+Of+The+Dark+%28Into+The+Light%29&cat=a〕
〔Swiss Album Charts: http://hitparade.ch/showitem.asp?interpret=Falco&titel=Out+Of+The+Dark+%28Into+The+Light%29&cat=a〕
〔German Album Charts: http://eucharts.tripod.com/GE/GE9819.HTM〕
The posthumous singles charted quite well in most countries in comparison to those from his previous three albums.
The single Out of the Dark was especially successful, climbing to number 2 of the Austrian and the German charts respectively and also had very good airplay. Furthermore, it came under the Top 5 of the Latvian airplay charts and even reached the Argentine Airplay Charts of Buenos Aires with #98.
Most of the posthumous success is credited to the song Out of the Dark.
Out of the Dark contains the line "...muss ich denn sterben, um zu leben?" ("...do I have to die in order to live?").
This made many people think Falco felt that he was going to die soon, though he had already performed the song live a year before his death.
The actual motives why Falco wrote this song remain misty.
Egoist and also The Spirit Never Dies (Jeanny Final) became his last notable hits in Germany and Switzerland.
Ten years after Falco's death the album re-entered the Austrian charts again.

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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