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Where Have All the Flowers Gone : ウィキペディア英語版
Where Have All the Flowers Gone?

"Where Have All the Flowers Gone?" is a modern folk-style song. The melody and the first three verses were written by Pete Seeger in 1955 and published in ''Sing Out!'' magazine. Additional verses were added by Joe Hickerson in May 1960, who turned it into a circular song.
Its rhetorical "where?" and meditation on death place the song in the ''ubi sunt'' tradition. In 2010, the ''New Statesman'' listed it as one of the "Top 20 Political Songs".
The 1964 release of the song as a Columbia Records 45 single, 13-33088, by Pete Seeger was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 2002 in the Folk category.
==Composition==
Seeger found inspiration for the song in October 1955 while he was on a plane bound for a concert at Oberlin College, one of the few venues which would hire him during the McCarthy era.〔(''A Folk Legend's Fertile Ground,'' Oberlin Alumni Magazine, summer 2014 )〕 Leafing through his notebook he saw the passage, "Where are the flowers, the girls have plucked them. Where are the girls, they've all taken husbands. Where are the men, they're all in the army."〔Notes from: Where Have All the Flowers Gone - The Songs of Pete Seeger〕 These lines were taken from the traditional Cossack folk song "Koloda-Duda", referenced in the Mikhail Sholokhov novel ''And Quiet Flows the Don'' (1934), which Seeger had read "at least a year or two before".〔
Seeger created a song which was subsequently published in ''Sing Out'' in 1962. He recorded a version with three verses on ''The Rainbow Quest'' album (Folkways LP FA 2454) released in July 1960. Later, Joe Hickerson added two more verses with a recapitulation of the first〔 in May 1960 in Bloomington, Indiana.〔Dunaway, David King (2008). ''How Can I Keep From Singing? The Ballad of Pete Seeger'', pp. 228-30. Random House, Inc. ISBN 0-345-50608-1.〕
In 2010, the ''New Statesman'' listed it as one of the "Top 20 Political Songs".〔
The song appeared on the compilation album ''Pete Seeger's Greatest Hits'' (1967) released by Columbia Records as CS 9416.
Pete Seeger's recording from the Columbia album ''The Bitter and the Sweet'' (November 1962), CL 1916, produced by John H. Hammond was also released as a Columbia Hall of Fame 45 single as 13-33088 backed by "Little Boxes" in August, 1965.〔(Pete Seeger - Little Boxes/Where Have All the Flowers Gone. Discogs.com. )〕〔(Pete Seeger - The Bitter and the Sweet. Discogs.com. )〕

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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