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・ Uh Huh Her (album)
・ Uh Huh Her (band)
・ UH HUH!
・ Uh La La La
・ Uh Mamma
・ Uh Oh
・ Uh oh
・ Uh Oh! (game show)
・ Uh Oh… No Breaks!
・ UH Physics Department
・ Uh! Oh!
・ Uh, jeg ville ønske jeg var dig
・ UH-232
・ UH-301
・ Uh-ee
Uh-huh
・ Uh-Oh (Cowboy Mouth album)
・ Uh-Oh (David Byrne album)
・ Uh-Oh! (film)
・ Uh-Ohhh!
・ Uh-Uh Ooh-Ooh Look Out (Here It Comes)
・ Uh-Uh-Uh
・ Uh... Oh... Ah...
・ UH88
・ UHA
・ Uhaa Nation
・ Uhabia
・ Uhaitxa
・ Uhaitz
・ Uhami language


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Uh-huh : ウィキペディア英語版
Uh-huh

''Uh-Huh'' is an 1983 album by John Cougar Mellencamp, a stage name for John Mellencamp. It was Mellencamp's seventh album and the first in which he used his real last name. It charted at #9 on the ''Billboard'' 200.
''Uh-Huh'' contained three Top 20 ''Billboard'' Hot 100 hits: "Crumblin' Down" (#9), "Authority Song" (#15), and "Pink Houses" (#8). In 1989, it was ranked #32 on ''Rolling Stone'' magazine's list of the 100 Greatest Albums of the 80's.
The remastered version was released March 29, 2005 on Mercury/Island/UMe and includes one bonus track.〔http://www.mellencamp.com/discography.html?dd_id=38〕
==Songwriting collaborations==

Mellencamp almost always writes all of his own material, but ''Uh-Huh'' saw him engage in one-time collaborations with two distinctly different songwriters: the legendary John Prine on "Jackie O," and the unknown Will Cary on "Lovin' Mother Fo Ya."
Of "Jackie O," Mellencamp said on the Bob and Tom Show in November 2004: "I can't take credit -- John Prine wrote most of that song."
Mellencamp had written "Lovin' Mother Fo Ya" and was playing it live on his 1982 American Fool tour before it was even recorded (and before Cary had anything to do with the song). According to a 2003 article on LouisvilleMusic.com, Cary sent Mellencamp's guitarist, Mike Wanchic, a copy of "Out of My Dreams," an album he had recorded with his band the Nightcrawlers. "Out of My Dreams" contained a song called "Cruisin' in the Park," which Mellencamp liked. This led to a phone call regarding Mellencamp's wanting to record "Cruisin' in the Park" as the first single from "Uh-Huh." Cary recalled, "He ended up using the fourth verse from my song to start his song, 'Lovin Mother Fo Ya.'" A writing-credit deal was signed and Cary got 15% royalties for that song.

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「Uh-huh」の詳細全文を読む



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