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・ The Food Defect Action Levels
・ The Food Emporium
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・ The Food Network Awards
・ The Food of the Gods (film)
・ The Food of the Gods (short story)
・ The Food of the Gods and How It Came to Earth
・ The Food Programme
・ The Food Project
・ The Food Trust
・ The Food Wars
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・ The Fool (1990 film)
・ The Fool (2014 film)
・ The Fool (design collective)
The Fool (guitar)
・ The Fool (Lee Ann Womack song)
・ The Fool (play)
・ The Fool (Ryn Weaver album)
・ The Fool (Tarot card)
・ The Fool (Warpaint album)
・ The Fool and His Money
・ The Fool and the Flying Ship
・ The Fool and the Princess
・ The Fool Circle
・ The Fool Killer
・ The Fool Monty
・ The Fool of Kairouan
・ The Fool of Quality
・ The Fool of the World and the Flying Ship


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The Fool (guitar) : ウィキペディア英語版
The Fool (guitar)

The Fool is a 1964 Gibson SG guitar, painted for Eric Clapton by the Dutch design collective of the same name. One of the world's best-known guitars, it symbolizes the psychedelic era.〔 Clapton used the guitar extensively while playing with Cream and it was an important element of his famed "woman tone".
==History==
The Fool, a "psychedelic fantasy," according to Clapton, was the brainchild of Marijke Koger who, along with Simon Postuma, was a founding member of The Fool collective. In early 1967, the collective were contacted by Robert Stigwood, then manager of Cream, to work on instruments and costumes for the band, which was about to leave London for a tour of the United States. Koger and Postuma painted Clapton's Gibson SG, a drum kit for Ginger Baker, and a Fender Bass VI for Jack Bruce, which he did not like very much and played only on TV performances.〔
The guitar made its debut as Cream played their first show in the United States on 25 March 1967 at the RKO theater on 58th Street, Manhattan, where Cream and The Who played a series of shows headlined by Mitch Ryder〔 and promoted by Murray the K. Clapton used the guitar for most of Cream's recordings after ''Fresh Cream'', particularly on ''Disraeli Gears'', until the band broke up in 1968. After Clapton it passed to Jackie Lomax, who may have acquired it from George Harrison. It then passed to Todd Rundgren,〔 who had seen Clapton play it during Cream's show at the RKO Theater and was "mesmerized" by it. Rundgren reportedly paid $500 for the guitar and had various repairs done to it. He had the guitar finished anew and retouched in places, and a portion of the neck and headstock was replaced. Rundgren sold the guitar in 2000 at auction for around $150,000〔 to pay off a tax debt, donating 10% to Clapton's Crossroads Centre.〔 The Fool was resold to a private collector a few years later for around $500,000.〔〔
The Fool has had other work done: some of the control knobs have been replaced and, most notably, the original trapeze-style bridge was replaced with a Tune-o-matic. The guitar now has Grover tuners rather than the original Klusons.〔

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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