翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ We gaan naar Rome
・ We Gather Together
・ We Gave It All Away... Now We Are Taking It Back
・ We Get Letters
・ We Get Requests
・ We Get There When We Do
・ We Can Make it Together
・ We Can Make It! (Arashi song)
・ We Can Only Live Today (Puppy)
・ We Can Remember It for You Wholesale
・ We Can Remember It for You Wholesale (collection)
・ We Can Replace You
・ We Can Report Them
・ We Can Talk
・ We Can Try
We Can Work It Out
・ We Can Work It Out (Andreas Johnson song)
・ We Can Work It Out (disambiguation)
・ We Can Work It Out (Sweetbox song)
・ We Can't All Be Angels
・ We Can't Be Friends
・ We Can't Be Stopped
・ We Can't Be Stopped (No Limit Records album)
・ We Can't Change the World. But, We Wanna Build a School in Cambodia.
・ We Can't Dance
・ We Can't Dance (band)
・ We Can't Go Home Again
・ We Can't Go On Living Like This
・ We Can't Go Wrong
・ We Can't Have Everything


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We Can Work It Out : ウィキペディア英語版
We Can Work It Out

"We Can Work It Out" is a song by the Beatles, written by Paul McCartney and John Lennon. It was released as a "double A-sided" single with "Day Tripper", the first time both sides of a single were so designated in an initial release. Both songs were recorded during the ''Rubber Soul'' sessions.
The song is an example of Lennon–McCartney collaboration at a depth that happened only rarely after they wrote the hit singles of 1963. This song, "A Day in the Life", "Baby, You're a Rich Man", and "I've Got a Feeling", are among the notable exceptions.
==Composition==
McCartney wrote the words and music to the verses and the chorus, with lyrics that "might have been personal", probably a reference to his relationship with Jane Asher. McCartney then took the song to Lennon:
With its intimations of mortality, Lennon's contribution to the twelve-bar bridge contrasts typically with what Lennon saw as McCartney's cajoling optimism, a contrast also seen in other collaborations by the pair, such as "Getting Better" and "I've Got a Feeling". As Lennon told ''Playboy'' in 1980:
Based on those comments, some critics overemphasised McCartney's optimism, neglecting the toughness in passages written by McCartney, such as "Do I have to keep on talking until I can't go on?". Lennon's middle shifts focus from McCartney's concrete reality to a philosophical perspective in B minor, illustrating this with the waltz-time section suggested by George Harrison that leads back to the verse, possibly meant to suggest tiresome struggle.
Music critic Ian MacDonald said:

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「We Can Work It Out」の詳細全文を読む



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