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・ Top of the Rockies
・ Top of the Shops
・ Top of the Stairs
・ Top of the Tots
・ Top of the Town
・ Top of the Town (film)
・ Top of the World
・ Top of the World (1955 film)
・ Top of the World (1997 film)
・ Top of the World (Brandy song)
・ Top of the World (Bridgit Mendler song)
・ Top of the World (D'banj song)
・ Top of the World (Dixie Chicks song)
・ Top of the World (Jimmy Sturr album)
・ Top of the World (Khwezi song)
Top of the World (Lynn Anderson album)
・ Top of the World (Olé, Olé, Olé)
・ Top of the World (park)
・ Top of the World (Rascalz song)
・ Top of the World (ride)
・ Top of the World (Slightly Stoopid album)
・ Top of the World (The All-American Rejects song)
・ Top of the World (The Carpenters song)
・ Top of the World (The Cataracs song)
・ Top of the World (The Pussycat Dolls song)
・ Top of the World (The Wildhearts song)
・ Top of the World (Tim McGraw song)
・ Top of the World (TV series)
・ Top of the World (Van Halen song)
・ Top of the World Highway


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Top of the World (Lynn Anderson album) : ウィキペディア英語版
Top of the World (Lynn Anderson album)

''Top of the World'' is a studio album released through Columbia Records by country singer Lynn Anderson in 1973. The album was produced by Anderson's husband Glenn Sutton.
This was a very successful album for Lynn Anderson. It reached No. 7 on the "Top Country Albums" chart and No. 179 on the ''Billboard'' 200 albums chart. The album was named for her big 1973 hit, "Top of the World". Anderson had heard "Top of the World" when it was released on The Carpenters' 1972 studio album ''A Song for You'' and chose to record it herself. Richard Carpenter has stated of the cover, "Karen and I were still debating whether or not to release our version as a single when Lynn Anderson released her own cover of the song. It is was a carbon copy and sealed our choice to release the song ourselves." Anderson's version was a No. 2 country hit and a No. 74 pop hit. It has often been speculated that "Top of the World" would have been as big a pop hit for Lynn Anderson as her signature tune, "Rose Garden", had the Carpenters not released their pop version.
This album produced a second single, "Sing About Love", which reached No. 3 on the U.S. country charts. The album was heavy on cover recordings of other acts' hits; besides Anderson's two second release, the only non-cover on the album was a song "Fickle Fortune" written by her mother, Liz Anderson. Besides The Carpenters track, Anderson covered recent releases by Anne Murray, Roberta Flack, Brenda Lee, Vicki Lawrence, Joe Stampley, Tammy Wynette, Johnny Cash, and Bob Luman. The album was Anderson's final release in the dying reel to reel tape format, a format that had been disappearing from stores for several years and hard to find outside of Columbia House.
==Track listing==
#"Top of the World" (John Bettis, Richard Carpenter)
#"Danny's Song" (Kenny Loggins)
#"Nobody Wins" (Kris Kristofferson)
#"The Night the Lights Went Out in Georgia" (Bobby Russell)
#"I'm Still Loving You" (Richey, Glenn Sutton)
#"Kids Say the Darndest Things" (Billy Sherrill, Glenn Sutton)
#"Sing About Love" (Glenn Sutton)
#"Killing Me Softly With His Song" (Charles Fox, Norman Gimbel)
#"A Thing Called Love" (Jerry Reed)
#"Fickle Fortune" (Liz Anderson)
#"Lonely Women Make Good Lovers" (Oldham, Freddy Weller)

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