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・ Jean Mamy
・ Jean Mandel
・ Jean Manga-Onguéné
・ Jean Mann
・ Jean Mansour
・ Jean Mantelet
・ Jean Manuel Rozan
・ Jean Marais
・ Jean Marais (cricketer)
・ Jean Maran
・ Jean Leclercq (politician)
・ Jean Lee
・ Jean Lee (aircraftwoman)
・ Jean Lee (archer)
・ Jean Lee (murderer)
Jean Lee and the Yellow Dog
・ Jean Lee Latham
・ Jean Lefebvre
・ Jean Lefebvre (merchant)
・ Jean Leguay
・ Jean Leguay (artist)
・ Jean Leising
・ Jean Lejeune
・ Jean Leloup
・ Jean Lemaire
・ Jean Lemaire (painter)
・ Jean Lemaire de Belges
・ Jean Lemaître
・ Jean Lemieux
・ Jean Lemire


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Jean Lee and the Yellow Dog : ウィキペディア英語版
Jean Lee and the Yellow Dog

''Jean Lee and the Yellow Dog'' is an album by Australian guitarist and songwriter Ed Kuepper recorded in 2007 and released on the Hot label.〔(The Kuepper Files: Discography ) accessed July 8, 2010〕 Described as a loose concept album based around Jean Lee, the last female hanged in Australia, the album was released in a single CD and as a double CD limited edition with outtakes and demo recordings. It was Kuepper's first album in seven years.
The album was co-written by Kuepper's wife Judi Dransfield and featured Laughing Clowns drummer Jeffrey Wegener and bassist Peter Oxley, formerly of The Sunnyboys, as well as former Saints singer Chris Bailey. It included a cover version of The Go-Betweens' "Finding You", which Kuepper included as a tribute to its writer, Grant McLennan, who died in 2006. The song was recorded at Kuepper's home studio. "I went off to pick up my son from school and when I came back he'd done it," Dransfield said. "I had to convince him not to do anything to it."
==Background==

Kuepper told ''The Age'' the ''Jean Lee'' album ended a years-long creative drought. "I went through a sort of personal situation where I guess I just couldn't write, and didn't want to write, and just felt ambivalent about even playing music." He came across a book about Jean Lee—a prostitute and petty criminal who was hanged in 1951 with two male accomplices for murdering a bookmaker, William "Pop" Kent, in Melbourne two years earllier—and said he was "blown away" by the fact that she had gone to the gallows. "When I read it I immediately thought of it as a musical-theatrical presentation." He said he and wife Judi Dransfield immediately began writing—"and it took on a life of its own."〔
"Jude has written poetry, and it was something that had occurred to me at various times, she should be writing lyrics," Kuepper said. "I think initially she had some difficulty with the story, I mean, none of the people are particularly likeable, but then once she got started on it, it just started flooding out, and it was great."〔
Dransfield said she did not connect with the story until she read about the arrest and what ensued. "When I read that she was willing to take the blame, knowing that the men had said they didn't do it, I was fairly impressed by that. She was a victim of circumstance and she was a single mum, which in the '50s was socially unacceptable."〔


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