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・ Work order
・ Work Order Act
・ Work Out
・ Work Out (song)
・ Work Out New York
・ Work output
・ Work People's College
・ Work permit
・ Work permit (Belgium)
・ Work permit (United Kingdom)
・ Work Personality Index
・ Work Programme
・ Work rate
・ Work release
・ Work Research Institute
Work Rest and Play
・ Work Resumed on the Tower
・ Work rule
・ Work rules (Japan)
・ Work sampling
・ Work self-efficacy
・ Work song
・ Work song (disambiguation)
・ Work Song (Hozier song)
・ Work Song (Nat Adderley album)
・ Work spouse
・ Work station
・ Work stealing
・ Work systems
・ Work That (Mary J. Blige song)


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Work Rest and Play : ウィキペディア英語版
Work Rest and Play

''Work Rest and Play'' is an EP by British ska/pop band Madness. The EP was headlined by the song "Night Boat to Cairo", from the band's debut album ''One Step Beyond...''. It entered the UK Singles Chart on 5 April 1980, reached a high of number 6.〔 Retrieved on 19 June 2007.〕
==Release==
After the release of "My Girl", the band felt that they had exhausted the material from ''One Step Beyond...'', and did not want to release any more singles from the album.〔 However, Dave Robinson, head of Stiff Records, disagreed.〔 Eventually, a compromise was made, and the band decided to release an EP featuring one album track and three new tracks.〔 The "Work Rest and Play" EP was the result.
The EP's success was largely down to "Night Boat to Cairo", which headlined the set and had an accompanying music video. The fourth song, "Don't Quote Me On That", was a commentary on press coverage which had tried to paint the band as racists who supported the National Front. Some of the band's shows had been disrupted by skinhead violence and, in a 1979 ''NME'' interview, Madness member Chas Smash was quoted as saying "We don't care if people are in the NF as long as they're having a good time." This was quoted to add to the speculation that Madness was a racist band supporting the National Front, although the band members denied those allegations.〔 Retrieved on 19 June 2007.〕
A promotional 12" single was issued in the UK featuring Don't Quote Me On That backed with Swan Lake from the One Step Beyond... album. The version of Don't Quote Me On That is a different, shorter mix from the one eventually used on the UK EP, and seems to have been used in all European countries outside the UK. It can be heard during the opening titles of the Madness film 'Take It Or Leave it'.
Releases varied. Some countries opted to issue Night Boat To Cairo as a two-track 45rpm single, containing a variety of b-sides: in France Swan Lake; in Belgium The Young & The Old and in Germany Don't Quote Me On That. In the Netherlands Night Boat To Cairo was the b-side and Tarzan's Nuts from One Step Beyond was the a-side of the 45rpm single, this is in addition to the 33rpm EP which was also issued there. In Portugal the EP featured a different mix of Night Boat To Cairo.
In the UK 45rpm DJ and jukebox editions were printed up with Deceives The Eye as the b-side. In Italy a 33rpm 12" single was released with Un Passo Avanti (One Step Beyond sung in Italian) and Night Boat To Cairo on the one-side and The Young & The Old and Don't Quote Me On That on the other.
When Japan released the Grey Day-led 6-track 12" EP in 1981, it contained the three 1980-recorded ''Work Rest & Play'' EP tracks, two of which were alternate mixes; the aforementioned Don't Quote Me On That plus Deceives The Eye which ends cleanly without Suggs's echoing, fading vocal.
The 2010 re-release of the band's first studio album ''One Step Beyond...'' includes the three original songs from the ''Work Rest and Play'' EP as bonus tracks on a second CD.

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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