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・ The Sweetest Drop
・ The Sweetest Fig
・ The Sweetest Gift
・ The Sweetest Gift (Big Tom and The Mainliners album)
・ The Sweetest Gift (Trisha Yearwood album)
・ The Sweetest Hangover
・ The Sweetest Illusion
・ The Sweetest Love
・ The Sweetest Mango
・ The Sweetest Punch
・ The Sweetest Sounds
・ The Sweetest Sounds (album)
・ The Sweetest Sounds (song)
・ The Sweetest Taboo
・ The Sweetest Thing
The Sweetest Thing (I've Ever Known)
・ The Sweetest Thing (song)
・ The Sweetheart of the Templar From the Valley of Rephaim
・ The Sweetheart Tree
・ The Sweethearts; or, The Top and the Ball
・ The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie
・ The Sweetness Lies Within
・ The Sweets of Sin
・ The Swell Season
・ The Swell Season (album)
・ The Swellers
・ The Swelly Express
・ The Sweyy
・ The Swift
・ The Swift Home Service Club


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The Sweetest Thing (I've Ever Known) : ウィキペディア英語版
The Sweetest Thing (I've Ever Known)

"The Sweetest Thing (I've Ever Known)" is a country-pop song written by Otha Young (a.k.a. Robert O. Young). Young (who died August 6, 2009) was the long-time musical partner of Juice Newton and wrote the song for her in the mid-1970s.
==History==
"The Sweetest thing (I've Ever Known)" was originally recorded and released in 1975 on Juice Newton's debut album, ''Juice Newton and Silver Spur'' (RCA), with Silver Spur being the backup band, which consisted of Otha Young, Tom Keeley and other musicians. The 1975 version was not issued as a single, although it was the B-side of two singles. In the meantime, Dottsy recorded a version in 1976 and took it to No. 86 on the country music charts and used it as the title track to her album ''The Sweetest Thing''.〔
Newton re-recorded the song on her 1981 album, the career-launching ''Juice'', which was Newton's third solo album and featured three of her five biggest pop hits: "The Sweetest Thing", "Angel of the Morning" and "Queen of Hearts". While "The Sweetest Thing" is often the least-recalled of the three hits from the ''Juice'' album, it was arguably the biggest hit at the time. In early 1982, it reached No. 1 on the ''Billboard'' adult contemporary chart,〔Hyatt, Wesley (1999). ''The Billboard Book of No. 1 Adult Contemporary Hits'' (Billboard Publications), page 258.〕 No. 1 on the ''Billboard'' country chart,〔 and No. 7 on the ''Billboard'' pop chart, where it remained in the Top 40 for eighteen weeks.〔Whitburn, Joel (1996). The Billboard Book of Top 40 Hits, 6th Edition (Billboard Publications), page 454.〕 The single is the only of Juice Newton's to reach the Top 10 on all three charts. On Billboard's year-end Top 40 chart, the song charted at No. 21 of all the singles of 1982.
The first pressings of the ''Juice'' album featured a different arrangement of the song, with a more prominent steel guitar part and no oboe. After the unexpected crossover success of "Angel of the Morning" and "Queen of Hearts", a pop version was mixed and replaced the country version on all future pressings of the album. The revamped version was also used for the single (which, somewhat ironically, became her first No. 1 Country Single). (The 1981 country version can be found on the United Kingdom best-of CD ''Country Classics'' and BGO's two-CD "Juice/Quiet Lies/Dirty Looks" boxed set.

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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