翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ The Russian Wilds
・ The Russian Woodpecker
・ The Russians Are Coming
・ The Russians are coming
・ The Russians are coming (disambiguation)
・ The Russians Are Coming, the Russians Are Coming
・ The Rustle of Silk
・ The Rusty Razor
・ The Rutabega / Owen
・ The Ruth Rendell Mysteries
・ The Rutherford Journal
・ The Ruthless Four
・ The Rutland Weekend Songbook
・ The Rutles
・ The Rutles (album)
The Rutles Archaeology
・ The Ruts
・ The Rutu Estate
・ The Ruum
・ The RVM Foundation Humanitarian Hospital and RVM Transit Home
・ The RVM Foundation Shiv Temple
・ The Ryan White Story
・ The Ryans and the Pittmans
・ The Ryde
・ The Rye
・ The Rye (brook)
・ The Ryersonian
・ The Ryland Inn
・ The Ryleys School
・ The Ryoji Noyori Prize


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

The Rutles Archaeology : ウィキペディア英語版
The Rutles Archaeology

''The Rutles Archaeology'' is an album by the comedy band The Rutles. Like their previous release, the album contains pastiches of Beatles songs.
Three of the four musicians who had created the soundtrack for the 1978 film — Neil Innes, John Halsey, and Ricky Fataar — reunited in 1996 and recorded a second album, ''Archaeology'', an affectionate send-up of ''The Beatles Anthology'' albums (although its original cover design rather parodied that of The Beatles' singles compilation ''Past Masters: Volume One''). The fourth 'real' Rutle, Ollie Halsall, died in Spain in 1992. Eric Idle was invited to participate, but declined.
Like the ''Anthology'' project that it lampooned, it featured tracks ostensibly from all periods of the Rutles' career, sequenced to reflect the fictional band's chronology. Several of the songs were actually older Innes songs that were dusted off and given the 'Rutles' treatment. The reunion was blessed by George Harrison, who encouraged The Pre-Fab Four to proceed. (When approached, he told Innes, 'Sure. It's all part of the "soup"...', an encounter that Innes related in interviews in 1996.)
The reunion was triggered by Innes's appearance at the Los Angeles festival "Monty Python: Lust For Glory!", an event that celebrated the 25th anniversary of the Monty Python troupe and was produced by Martin Lewis for the American Cinematheque. Innes performed two sold-out gigs at Los Angeles's Troubadour Club under the name "Ron Nasty & The New Rutles", using a local Beatles tribute band.
Following the success of the shows, Lewis and Innes collaborated on the project that became ''Archaeology''.
==Track listing==
Below is a track listing, citing the original Beatles song(s) and other sources thought to be part of the inspiration for each individual track (where applicable).
All songs were credited solely to Innes; all lead vocals by Innes except for Fataar on tracks 5 and 13, and Halsey on tracks 2 and 8.
The Japanese release of ''Archaeology'' includes 4 bonus tracks: "Lullaby", "Baby S'il Vous Plait", "It's Looking Good" (rehearsal), and "My Little Ukulele". "Baby S'il Vous Plait" and "It's Looking Good" were also issued (along with the LP version of "Joe Public") on a UK CD single and 10" of "Shangri-La."
"Baby S'il Vous Plait" was a 'cod' Franglais version of an earlier Rutles song "Baby Let Me Be", from the 1978 soundtrack. The song was recorded as a pastiche of the Beatles' two German-language recordings of "She Loves You" and "I Want to Hold Your Hand", with suitably poor translation and even poorer foreign accents. "My Little Ukelele" was a George Formby-esque novelty number, melding McCartney's many experiments with old-time composition ("Honey Pie", "When I'm 64" etc.) with Harrison's fondness for Formby and the ukelele. "Lullaby" was a brief musical gag from Innes's own live act re-recorded as though it were Ron Nasty amusing the studio staff.
On February 19, 2007, EMI Gold (UK) released a budget reissue of ''Archaeology'' with new cover artwork and five bonus tracks: The aforementioned "Lullaby," "My Little Ukelele," and "Baby S'il Vous Plait" surfaced again, and two previously unreleased numbers — "Under My Skin" and "Rut-A-Lot" (the latter a medley of Rutles songs performed live by Innes, presented as a jab at Idle's recently successful ''Spamalot'') — made their first appearances. "Under My Skin" is a cover of Cole Porter's "I've Got You Under My Skin", performed with some mock half-forgotten lyrics to suggest the Beatles' Star Club era.

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「The Rutles Archaeology」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.