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・ Pleasant Valley High School (California)
・ Pleasant Valley High School (Iowa)
・ Pleasant Valley High School (Pennsylvania)
・ Pleasant Valley Historic District
・ Pleasant Valley Methodist Church
・ Pleasant Valley Middle School
・ Pleasant Valley Ranger Station
・ Pleasant Valley School
・ Pleasant Valley School (Bellvue, Colorado)
・ Pleasant Valley School (Stillwater, Oklahoma)
・ Pleasant Valley School District
・ Pleasant Valley School District (California)
・ Pleasant Valley School District (Pennsylvania)
・ Pleasant Valley Secondary School
・ Pleasant Valley State Prison
Pleasant Valley Sunday
・ Pleasant Valley Township
・ Pleasant Valley Township, Carroll County, Iowa
・ Pleasant Valley Township, Cerro Gordo County, Iowa
・ Pleasant Valley Township, Cowley County, Kansas
・ Pleasant Valley Township, Decatur County, Kansas
・ Pleasant Valley Township, Dodge County, Nebraska
・ Pleasant Valley Township, Fayette County, Iowa
・ Pleasant Valley Township, Finney County, Kansas
・ Pleasant Valley Township, Jo Daviess County, Illinois
・ Pleasant Valley Township, Johnson County, Iowa
・ Pleasant Valley Township, Mower County, Minnesota
・ Pleasant Valley Township, Potter County, Pennsylvania
・ Pleasant Valley Township, Saline County, Kansas
・ Pleasant Valley Township, Scott County, Iowa


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Pleasant Valley Sunday : ウィキペディア英語版
Pleasant Valley Sunday

"Pleasant Valley Sunday" is a song by Gerry Goffin and Carole King, most famous for the version recorded by The Monkees in 1967. Goffin's and King's inspiration for the name was a street named Pleasant Valley Way, in West Orange, New Jersey where they were living at the time.〔La Gorce, Tammy. ("New Jersey's Magic Moments" ), ''The New York Times'', October 30, 2005. Accessed November 25, 2007.〕 The road follows a valley through several communities among the Watchung Mountains. The lyrics were a social commentary on status symbols, creature comforts, life in suburbia and "keeping up with the Joneses". The song has been regarded by many as an understated comment on consumerism while maintaining a relentlessly driving pop beat. It became one of the Monkees' most successful singles.
==Production==
Chip Douglas, producer of the Monkees' music during 1967, also played bass guitar on some of their recordings. (This freed up Peter Tork to play keyboards.) He showed lead guitarist Michael Nesmith an interlocking bass and lead riff that they used throughout the song. Nesmith doubletracked the lead guitar riff, which was based on The Beatles' "I Want to Tell You", while Peter Tork and Davy Jones added piano and maraca parts. "Fast" Eddie Hoh, a session musician, played drums. Micky Dolenz sang lead vocals, and was the only member of The Monkees who did not play an instrument on the track.
For an ending, Douglas and engineer Hank Cicalo decided to "keep pushing everything up", adding more and more reverberation and echo until the sound of the music became unrecognizable, before fading out the recording. Separate mono and stereo versions were mixed for single and album records.
The single peaked at #3 on the Hot 100 and was featured in the second season of their television series. The song also appeared on the fourth Monkees album, ''Pisces, Aquarius, Capricorn & Jones Ltd.'', in November 1967. While the mono copies of the album had the same version as heard on the single, stereo copies had a version using a different take of the first verse and an additional backing vocal during the break.
In February 1986, MTV featured a marathon of episodes of the series titled ''Pleasant Valley Sunday'', which sparked a second wave of Monkeemania. The reunited Dolenz, Tork, and Davy Jones, already on tour, went from playing small venues to playing arenas and stadiums in the following weeks.

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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