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"Queen of the Slipstream" is a romantic ballad written by Northern Irish singer-songwriter Van Morrison and recorded on his 1987 album, ''Poetic Champions Compose''. In 1988 it was released as a single in the U.K., but did not chart.〔Hinton. ''Celtic Crossroads'', p.349〕 ==Recording and composition== "Queen of the Slipstream" was recorded at the same sessions as the other tracks that were released on ''Poetic Champions Compose'' in the summer of 1987 at the Wool Hall Studios, Beckington.〔Heylin. ''Can You Feel the Silence?'', p.525〕 The song is a romantic ballad composed in the key of E major with a chord progression of E-G#m-A. The bridge uses the progression of F#m-C#m-F#m-E-F#m-C#m-F#m-C#m. It is written in 4/4 time and is played at a slow tempo.〔''Van Morrison Anthology'', p.110-112〕 Morrison used a full string orchestra for "Queen of the Slipstream", as Fiachra Trench, the arranger of the string parts, told biographer Peter Mills: "() string sessions in the USA had been for a smaller section than I used: I think we had about 26 players. The string session went very smoothly ... On "Queen of the Slipstream" I reduced the strings to a chamber group for Van's harmonica solo and the second bridge which follows. Otherwise it's the full section."〔Mills. ''Hymns to the Silence'', p.100-101〕 Trench went on to say: "Some of the string lines are derived from Neil Drinkwater's piano lines. I often use that technique when writing string arrangements, it helps to make the strings sound more part of the track, less like an overdub, less pop."〔Mills. ''Hymns to the Silence'', p.101〕 The lyrics quote two of Morrison's songs from his early career; "the slipstream" derives from "Astral Weeks" and the lines "I see you slipping and sliding in the snow ... you come running to me, you'll come running to me" were used in "Come Running".〔 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「Queen of the Slipstream」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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