翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Someone's Daughter
・ Someone's in Love
・ Someone's Knocking at the Door
・ Someone's Looking at You
・ Someone's Watching Me!
・ Someone's Watching Over Me
・ Somepalli Sambaiah
・ Someplace Closer to Here
・ Someplace Else (Kolkata)
・ Someplace Else Now
・ Someplace Far Away (Careful What You're Dreaming)
・ Someplace Good
・ Someday We'll All Be Free
・ Someday We'll All Be Free (album)
・ Someday We'll Be Together
Someday We'll Know
・ Someday We'll Look Back
・ Someday We'll Look Back (song)
・ Someday When Things Are Good
・ Someday World
・ Someday You'll Call My Name
・ Someday You'll Find Her, Charlie Brown
・ Someday's Dreamers
・ Someday, Someday
・ Someday, Someplace
・ Someday/Boys & Girls
・ Somedaydream
・ Somedaydream (album)
・ SoMedia
・ Someecards


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Someday We'll Know : ウィキペディア英語版
Someday We'll Know

"Someday We'll Know" is a song by the New Radicals. It was released in May 1999 as the second single off their album ''Maybe You've Been Brainwashed Too'' and the follow-up to the smash "You Get What You Give". The single did not fare as well as the previous single, in part due to the announcement of lead member of the band Gregg Alexander stating that the New Radicals "() no longer be a recording, promoting, or performing entity" and that he would focus on producing and writing material for other artists. This announcement came just as the music video was being produced for the song and the statement that "the fatigue of traveling and getting three hours' sleep in a different hotel every night to do boring 'hanging and schmoozing' with radio and retail people is definitely not for me" effectively stopped all promotion of the song.
==Content==
It is a midtempo ballad about lost love and regret, in which the singer asks a series of rhetorical questions and compares them to the end of his relationship, suggesting that issues of love and breaking up pose questions that will never be answered. For the line, "I'm speeding by the place that I met you for the 97th time tonight," which has led some to erroneously interpret the song as the account of an obsessive stalker, Alexander used the number 97 because of the year the band formed.
The B-side was "The Decency League", a cynical and bitter song about suppression and censorship of sex by Christian "decency leagues". Alexander sings, "The decency league, dedicated to stopping all sexual behaviour/I'm merely trying to deprive all those of the reasonable use of their sexual organs". The track acts as a stark contrast to the A-side.

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「Someday We'll Know」の詳細全文を読む



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