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・ Sing It
・ Sing It Again Rod
・ Sing It Back
・ Sing It Loud
・ Sing It Loud (album)
・ Sing It Now
・ Sing It To You (Lavinia Jones song)
・ Sing Like Me
・ Sing Loud, Sing Proud!
・ Sing Lung
・ Sing Lustily and with Good Courage
・ Sing Me a Love Song
・ Sing Me a Song
・ Sing Me a Song of Songmy
・ Sing Me a Story with Belle
Sing Me Back Home
・ Sing Me Back Home (song)
・ Sing Me No Lullaby
・ Sing Me Softly of the Blues
・ Sing Me Something New
・ Sing meinen Song - Das Tauschkonzert
・ Sing Miller
・ Sing My Heart
・ Sing My Song
・ Sing My Welcome Home
・ Sing No Evil
・ Sing One for the Cowboy
・ Sing Our Own Song
・ Sing Out America!
・ Sing Out for Ireland


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Sing Me Back Home : ウィキペディア英語版
Sing Me Back Home

''Sing Me Back Home'' is an album by American country music singer and songwriter Merle Haggard, released in 1967 on Capitol Records.
==Background==
The album's title track was inspired by an inmate Haggard knew while he was serving time in San Quentin named Jimmy "Rabbit" Hendricks. As recounted in his 1981 autobiography ''Merle Haggard: Sing Me Back Home'', Rabbit devised a brilliant escape and invited Haggard to join him, but they both agreed it would be best that he stay put. Rabbit was captured two weeks later and eventually executed for the murder of a state trooper. Haggard, the "guitar playing friend", wrote the song as a tribute. Writing in the liner notes for the 1994 retrospective ''Down Every Road'', Daniel Cooper calls it, "a ballad that works on so many different levels of the soul it defies one's every attempt to analyze it."〔''Down Every Road 1962–1994'' compilation album. Liner notes by Daniel Cooper〕 In a 1977 interview in ''Billboard'' with Bob Eubanks, Haggard reflected, "Even though the crime was brutal and the guy was an incorrigible criminal, it's a feeling you never forget when you see someone you know make that last walk. They bring him through the yard, and there's a guard in front and a guard behind - that's how you know a death prisoner. They brought Rabbit out...taking him to see the Father,...prior to his execution. That was a strong picture that was left in my mind." The track topped the country singles chart a few weeks into 1968 (his second number one in a row) and he performed it as a duet with Johnny Cash on the latter's network television show in 1969.
Although Haggard wrote or co-wrote most of the tracks on ''Sing Me Back Home'', the song credits also list several important figures from his musical past, such as Lefty Frizzell, who wrote "Mom and Dad's Waltz" and was arguably Merle's biggest musical inspiration. In addition, a young Haggard had played behind both Buck Owens and Wynn Stewart during his time on the Bakersfield club scene, and the album features compositions by both. In fact, Haggard wrote "Home Is Where a Kid Grows Up" with Stewart and another one of his idols, Bob Wills (Haggard would cut a tribute album in honor of Wills in 1970).
While many country LPs during this period were often haphazardly assembled collections of studio cuts and cover songs to support a hit single or two, the quality of Haggard's albums during this period were remarkably high. In his 2013 biography ''Merle Haggard: The Running Kind'', David Cantwell gives part of the credit to producer Ken Nelson: "Nelson wasn't a musician himself, and he wasn't a knob-twirling auteur, either...Nelson had an ear for talent and material and for sounds...He was an old school A&R man, and he had the role's key skill: he could hear ''pop''." Another key ingredient in Haggard's sound during this period was the guitar blend of James Burton and Roy Nichols. As Haggard explained to ''Downbeat'' in 1980, "James was doing this thing called 'chicken pickin'. But he wasn't really bending the strings. Roy, on the other hand, was doing the string bending but wasn't doing the chicken' pickin'... Our guitar style came out of a marriage between the styles."

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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