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Sweet Revenge (John Prine album) : ウィキペディア英語版 | Sweet Revenge (John Prine album)
''Sweet Revenge'' is the third album by American folk singer and songwriter John Prine, released in 1973. ==Recording and composition== ''Sweet Revenge'' was produced by Arif Mardin and was mostly recorded at Quadraphonic Sound Studios in Nashville. Two songs, "Blue Umbrella" and "Onomatopoeia", were recorded at Atlantic Recording Studios in New York while "Dear Abby" was cut live at a gig at New York's State University. "Dear Abby" was attempted in the studio but, as Prine told David Fricke in 1993, "The studio version of that was cut with a band, and it was real stiff and humorless. We cut it once, live, and that was it. That was the power of the song, in the way people would turn their heads the minute I'd get to the first verse, the first chords. That was the reason we used the live version." In the liner notes to ''John Prine Live'', Prine writes that "My Mexican Home" was partially inspired his front porch in Maywood, Illinois, while "Grandpa Was A Carpenter" was his homage to his grandfather Empson Schobie Prine. The title track quotes a line from Hunter S. Thompson's ''Fear and Loathing on the Campaign Trail'' and reflects some of Prine's frustrations with how his second album was received, commenting in the ''Great Days: The John Prine Anthology'' liner notes, "I'd quit my job at the post office, I had this album out that got incredible reviews, and then this second one where the critics started to hit me. I think it got under my skin." The album concludes with an up-tempo version of the traditional work song "Nine Pound Hammer".
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