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・ Wildlife Game Refuges Act of 1916
・ Wildlife garden
・ Wildlife Habitat Incentives Program
・ Wildlife inspector
・ Wildlife Institute of India
・ Wildlife Jams
・ Wildlife Lane
・ Wildfire (1925 film)
・ Wildfire (1945 film)
・ Wildfire (1986 TV series)
・ Wildfire (band)
・ Wildfire (Carol Vance Martin)
・ Wildfire (comics)
・ Wildfire (disambiguation)
・ Wildfire (Kolmården Wildlife Park)
Wildfire (Michael Martin Murphey song)
・ Wildfire (motor company)
・ Wildfire (SBTRKT song)
・ Wildfire (Silver Dollar City)
・ Wildfire (The Walking Dead)
・ Wildfire (TV series)
・ Wildfire at Midnight
・ Wildfire Communications
・ Wildfire emergency management
・ Wildfire Games
・ Wildfire history of Cape Cod
・ Wildfire Interactive
・ Wildfire LLC
・ Wildfire modeling
・ Wildfire Studios


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Wildfire (Michael Martin Murphey song) : ウィキペディア英語版
Wildfire (Michael Martin Murphey song)

"Wildfire" is a classic song written by Michael Martin Murphey and Larry Cansler. It was originally recorded by Murphey, who had yet to add his middle name to his recorded work, and appears on his gold-plus 1975 album ''Blue Sky – Night Thunder''.
Released in February 1975, as the album's lead single, "Wildfire" became Murphey's highest-charting Pop hit in the United States. The somber story song hit #2 in Cash Box and #3 on the ''Billboard'' Hot 100 chart in June 1975. In addition, it reached the top position of the ''Billboard'' Adult Contemporary chart.〔Whitburn, Joel (1996). ''The Billboard Book of Top 40 Hits'', 6th Edition (Billboard Publications)〕
The single continued to sell, eventually receiving platinum certification from the RIAA, signifying sales of over two million US copies. Members of the Western Writers of America chose it as one of the Top 100 Western songs of all time.
==Background==
Murphey and Cansler co-wrote "Wildfire" in 1968, shortly after Murphey emerged as a solo artist. Earlier in the decade he had been part of a duo known as the Lewis & Clark Expedition (which had appeared and performed in an episode of ''I Dream of Jeannie'') in 1968 with his fellow singer-songwriter Boomer Castleman. When Murphey rerecorded "Wildfire" for a new album in 1997, he was quoted by ''Billboard'' as saying that what many consider his signature song "broke my career wide open and, on some level, still keeps it fresh. Because that song appeals to kids, and always has, it's kept my career fresh."〔Hyatt, Wesley (1999). ''The Billboard Book of #1 Adult Contemporary Hits'' (Billboard Publications)〕
In a 2008 interview, Murphey talked about the origins of the song and the context in which in was written. He was a third-year student at UCLA, working on a concept album for Kenny Rogers. The work was demanding, sometimes taking more than twenty hours a day. One night he dreamed the song in its totality, writing it up in a few hours the next morning. He believes the song came to him from a story his grandfather told him when he was a little boy — a prominent Native American legend about a ghost horse. Murphey didn't have a horse named Wildfire until a few years before the interview, when he gave that name to a palomino mare.

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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