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・ Time 106.6
・ Time 106.8
・ Time 107.5
・ Time 2 Shine
・ Time 4 Sum Aksion
・ Time Ace
・ Time Actor
・ Time After Time
・ Time After Time (1947 song)
・ Time After Time (1979 film)
・ Time After Time (1986 film)
・ Time After Time (Alexander novel)
・ Time After Time (Angel song)
・ Time After Time (Appel novel)
・ Time After Time (Crumbächer album)
Time After Time (Cyndi Lauper song)
・ Time After Time (Elliot Minor song)
・ Time After Time (Etta James album)
・ Time After Time (Eva Cassidy album)
・ Time After Time (Hana Mau Machi de)
・ Time After Time (Jake Mathews album)
・ Time After Time (Oscar Peterson album)
・ Time After Time (The Wire)
・ Time After Time (Timmy T album)
・ Time Again
・ Time Again (Claire Voyant album)
・ Time Again (David Sanborn album)
・ Time Again (disambiguation)
・ Time Again... Amy Grant Live
・ Time Air


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Time After Time (Cyndi Lauper song) : ウィキペディア英語版
Time After Time (Cyndi Lauper song)

"Time After Time" is a song by American singer-songwriter Cyndi Lauper. It was recorded by Lauper for her debut studio album, ''She's So Unusual'' (1983), with Rob Hyman (co-writer), contributing backing vocals. The track was produced by Rick Chertoff and released as a single on January 27, 1984. It was the second single to be released from the album and became Lauper's first #1 hit in the U.S. The song was written in the album's final stages, after "Girls Just Wanna Have Fun", "She Bop" and "All Through the Night" had been written. The writing began with the title, which Lauper had seen in ''TV Guide'' magazine, referring to the 1979 science fiction film ''Time After Time''.
"Time After Time" is composed of simple keyboard-synth chords, bright, jangly guitars, clock-ticking percussion, and elastic bassline, and lyrically it's a love song of devotion. Most music critics gave the song positive reviews, with most commending the song for being a solid and memorable love song, as well as considering the track Lauper's best song. The song has been selected as one of the Best Love Songs of All Time by many media outlets, including ''Rolling Stone'', Nerve, MTV and many others. "Time After Time" was also nominated for a Grammy Award for Song of the Year at the 1985 edition.
The song was a success on the charts, becoming her first number-one single on the U.S. ''Billboard'' Hot 100 chart on June 9, 1984 and remaining there for two weeks. Worldwide, the song is her most commercially successful single, after "Girls Just Want to Have Fun", and reached number three on the UK Singles Chart and number six on the ARIA Singles Chart. The song is also known for its numerous covers by a wide range of artists, including Miles Davis, who recorded an instrumental version for his 1985 album, ''You're Under Arrest'', and Eva Cassidy, whose cover of the song appears on her posthumous album of the same name. R&B singer Lil Mo also covered the song for her 2001 debut album ''Based on a True Story''. An acoustic version was sung by Lauper with Sarah McLachlan on her 2005 album, ''The Body Acoustic''. Lauper has performed the song live with Patti LaBelle twice in 1985 and 2004 and with Sarah McLachlan at the American Music Awards of 2005, as well as with rapper Lil' Kim in 2009.
== Background and recording ==

While writing for her debut studio album, in the spring of 1983, Cyndi Lauper was introduced to American musician Rob Hyman, who was recommended by Rick Chertoff, the album's producer. Lauper had already recorded the majority of the album, including the songs "Girls Just Want to Have Fun", "She Bop" and "All Through the Night", but Chertoff insisted that she and Hyman needed to record just "one more song". Therefore, Hyman and she sat at a piano and started working on "Time After Time". The inspiration for the song came after both songwriters were going through similar things with their relationships; he was coming out of a long and hard relationship, while she was having a lot of bumps with boyfriend, David Wolff. One of the first lines Rob wrote was "suitcase of memories", which according to Lauper, "strucked her", claiming it was a "wonderful line", while other lines came from Lauper's life. The song's title was inspired after Lauper started writing for the song and needed a fake title as a placeholder for the time being. Thus, Lauper was looking in the TV Guide and saw a lot of movie titles, with the 1979 science fiction movie ''Time After Time'' being chosen. Although trying to remove the title later, Lauper claimed she couldn't take it out without the song falling apart.〔
Initially, Epic Records wanted "Time After Time" as the album's lead-single. However, Lauper claimed that releasing a ballad first defines an artist in a certain way, noting that she could have been known as a balladeer and that it could have killed her career. Therefore, her manager Dave Wolf convinced that "Girls Just Wanna Have Fun" could be an anthem, and ultimately her label agreed and released it as the lead-single.〔 "Time After Time" eventually became the album's second single,〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.discogs.com/master/view/121736 )〕 being released on January 27, 1984.〔

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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