翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ You Only Live Twice (film)
・ You Only Live Twice (novel)
・ You Only Live Twice (Pain album)
・ You Only Live Twice (song)
・ You Only Live Twice (soundtrack)
・ You Only Live Twice (Tim Brummett album)
・ You Only Loved Me Twice
・ You Only Move Twice
・ You Only Tell Me You Love Me When You're Drunk
・ You Open My Eyes
・ You or Me
・ You Ought to Be in Pictures
・ You Ought to Be with Me
・ You Ought to Know
・ You Ought to Know...
You Oughta Be Here with Me
・ You Oughta Be In Love
・ You Oughta Be in Pictures
・ You Oughta Know
・ You Overdid It Doll
・ You Owe It All to Me
・ You Owe Me
・ You Owe Me One
・ You Pay for the Whole Seat, but You'll Only Need the Edge
・ You Pay Your Money
・ You Pick Me Up (And Put Me Down)
・ You Ping
・ You Played Yourself
・ You Prefecture (Inner Mongolia)
・ You Press the Button, We Do the Rest


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You Oughta Be Here with Me : ウィキペディア英語版
You Oughta Be Here with Me

''You Oughta Be Here with Me'' is an album by American country music singer George Jones. This album was released in 1990 on Epic Records. It includes the singles "Hell Stays Open (All Night Long)" and "Six Foot Deep, Six Foot Down", neither of which charted.
==Background==
''You Oughta Be Here With Me'' was Jones's last proper studio album with Epic. Although the album featured several stirring performances, including the lead single "Hell Stays Open All Night Long" and the Roger Miller-penned title song, the single bombed and Jones made the switch to MCA, unceremoniously ending his relationship with producer Billy Sherrill and what was now Sony Music after 19 years. Sherrill had produced Jones since 1971 and the body of work they created had resulted in one of the most successful producer/artist alliances in the history of country music. Sherrill had actually retired with Jones as his only client. Sherrill, who had scored massive hits producing Tammy Wynette and Charlie Rich among many others, had taken heat over the years for the drastic changes he'd wrought on the genre with his elaborate Phil Spector influenced productions, but as Jones biographer Bob Allen observes in the book ''George Jones: The Life and Times of a Honky Tonk Legend'', "...despite his abiding fondness for full string orchestras, lush harmony vocals, and pop-style "wall of sound" productions, Sherrill had seldom strayed off the straight and narrow hard country path with Jones. In fact, as a producer he was responsible for some of Jones's all-time artistic high-water marks. More than once, he had rescued Jones from oblivion with his ability to hear the potential appeal of a song like "He Stopped Loving Her Today," even when Jones himself couldn't hear it. No less important, Sherrill had a knack for coaxing, stroking and cajoling the always temperamental and impatient singer through numerous vocal takes and overdubs (a process Jones hated) until he captured on tape that elusive vocal performance he'd heard in his head." Jones admitted in his 1996 memoir ''I Lived To Tell It All'' that Sherrill had saved his bacon more than once, writing "Rick Blackburn and Billy Sherrill were forever supportive of my career when it was under their guidance. I never got any flak from the record label about my legal and criminal woes."

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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