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・ The Golem (album)
・ The Golem (Gustav Meyrink novel)
・ The Golem (Isaac Bashevis Singer novel)
・ The Golem (Leivick)
・ The Golem and the Dancing Girl
・ The Golem and the Jinni
・ The Golem's Eye
・ The Golf '92
・ The Golf Club
・ The Golf Club at Dove Mountain
・ The Golf Club at Harbor Shores
・ The Golf Players
・ The Golf Show
・ The Golf Specialist
・ The Goliath Bone
The Golliwogs
・ The Gollywhopper Games
・ The Golovlyov Family
・ The Gomers
・ The Gondoliers
・ The Gondwana Shrine
・ The Gone Jackals
・ The Gone Wait
・ The Gone-Away World
・ The Goner
・ The Gong
・ The Gong Show
・ The Gong Show Movie
・ The Gong Show with Dave Attell
・ The Gongs


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The Golliwogs : ウィキペディア英語版
The Golliwogs

The Golliwogs were an American rock band that eventually became Creedence Clearwater Revival.
The band started out, in 1959, as an instrumental trio called The Blue Velvets. The original line-up was John Fogerty (guitar), Stu Cook (piano), and Doug Clifford (drums). In 1960, John's older brother Tom, who had been in local bands since 1958, began singing with the group.
The Blue Velvets released three singles in the San Francisco Bay area, during 1961 and 1962, on Oakland's Orchestra Records. These recordings received only minimal sales although the second Blue Velvets single was added to Oakland's KEWB top 40 playlist by disc jockey Casey Kasem, who was employed at the station.
Following the Orchestra singles, Tom began playing rhythm guitar in addition to remaining the lead vocalist and front man while John continued as the lead guitarist. Meanwhile, Cook switched from piano to bass guitar.
In the middle of 1964, the band recorded two songs for Fantasy Records, a local label based in San Francisco. The band was attracted to Fantasy because, in 1963, it had released a national hit by Vince Guaraldi, "Cast Your Fate To The Wind". Max Weiss, one of Fantasy's co-owners, initially changed the group's name to The Visions, but when their songs were released as a single, in November 1964, Weiss renamed them The Golliwogs, an apparent reference to a once-popular minstrel doll called a Golliwogg. Seven singles were released in the San Francisco Bay area. While none of these broke out nationally, one, "Brown Eyed Girl", was a near break-out in Miami, Florida, for four weeks beginning on February 26, 1966, when it reached No. 10 on ''Billboard's'' "Regional Breakout" chart for Miami (a chart one level below their Bubbling Under charts).
Eventually, John Fogerty took control of the group, writing all of their material, singing lead vocals, and blossoming into a multi-instrumentalist who played keyboards, harmonica, and saxophone in addition to lead guitar. By 1967, he was producing the group's recordings.
In December 1967, the band changed its name to Creedence Clearwater Revival (CCR). The band's first album as Creedence Clearwater Revival was released in 1968.
In 1975, Fantasy released ''Pre-Creedence'', a compilation album of recordings by The Golliwogs. Fantasy also included an extensive collection of Blue Velvets and Golliwogs recordings in their 2001 CCR box set. Notably, the Blue Velvet tracks "Yes You Did" and "Now You're Not Mine" are not included, as they are thought to be lost to time.
==Recordings==


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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