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・ UBE2I
・ UBE2J1
・ UBE2L3
・ UBE2L6
・ UBE2M
・ UBE2N
・ UBE2O
・ Ubaldo Terzano
・ Ubaldo Vitali
・ Uballissu-Marduk
・ Ubalá
・ Ubang language
・ Ubangi
・ Ubangi Province
・ Ubangi River
Ubangi Stomp
・ Ubangi-Shari
・ Ubangi-Shari constitutional referendum, 1958
・ Ubangi-Shari Representative Council election, 1946
・ Ubangi-Shari Territorial Assembly election, 1952
・ Ubangi-Shari Territorial Assembly election, 1957
・ Ubangian languages
・ Ubank Limited
・ Ubanteman
・ Ubaoner
・ UBAP1
・ UBAP2
・ UBAP2L
・ Ubaporanga
・ Ubaque


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Ubangi Stomp : ウィキペディア英語版
Ubangi Stomp
"Ubangi Stomp" is an American rockabilly song. Written by Charles Underwood and first released on record by Warren Smith in 1956, the song did not chart, but went on to become a rockabilly standard, covered by many artists. Ubangi Stomp – usually Smith's recording – appears on many compilation albums, including ''The Sun Records Collection'' and ''The Best of Bob Dylan's Theme Time Radio Hour''.
Ubangi Stomp is a straighforward uptempo rock and roll song; the lyrics, of no great literary depth ("''Ubangi stomp ubangi style / When the beat just drives a cool cat wild''"), tell in first person the story of a sailor who goes to Africa ("''I rocked through Africa and... Seen them cats doin' the Ubangi stomp''") and, enamored of the local music and dance, jumps ship to go native ("''Then the captain said son, we gotta go / I said that's alright, you go right ahead / I'm gonna Ubangi-stomp 'till I roll over dead''"). Some mixing of cultural stereotypes is seen when supposed Native American terms ("heap big", tom-tom) are mixed into the ostensibly African setting.
The Ubangi Stomp Festival, an annual international exposition of America roots and rockabilly music,〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Ubangi Stomp )〕 takes its name from the song, as does the Ubangi Stomp Club, a Dublin organization that organizes and promotes roots concerts and gigs.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Ubangi Stomp Club )
Saxophonist Earl Bostic released an instrumental piece titled "Ubangi Stomp" in 1954, but this has no relation to Underwood's song beyond the title.
==Notable recordings==

*Warren Smith (single) (1956, Sun #250)
*Jerry Lee Lewis, on the album ''Jerry Lee Lewis'' (1958, Sun)
*The Trashmen (single) (1965, Argo #5516)
*Alice Cooper, on the album ''Lace and Whiskey'' (1977, Warner Bros.)
*John Prine, on the album ''Pink Cadillac'' (1979, Asylum)
*The Cichlids on the album ''Be True To Your School'' (1980, TK)
*The Stray Cats, on the album ''Stray Cats'' (1981, Arista)
*Gary Young (single) (1981)
*The Honeymoon Killers, on the album ''The Honeymoon Killers from Mars'' (1984, Fur)
*The Busters (single) (1996)
*Eddie Hinton, on the album ''Hard Luck Guy'' (1999, Capricorn)
The song has been covered by many other artists, including the Juke Joints (on their album ''20 years''), the Top Cats (on their album ''Full Throttle Rockabilly''), The Slippers (on their album ''Ubangi Stomp''), The Sundowners (on the B-side of their 1959 single "Snake Eyed Woman"), The Velaires (on the B-side of their 1961 single "It's Almost Tomorrow"), Bobby Taylor (on the B-side of his 1962 single "Seven Steps to an Angel"), and others. Rory Storm and the Hurricanes recorded the song at Abbey Road Studios in 1964, but this version was never released.

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「Ubangi Stomp」の詳細全文を読む



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