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Words near each other
・ Thankerton
・ Thankful
・ Thankful (Aaron Pritchett album)
・ Thankful (Flavour N'abania album)
・ Thankful (Kelly Clarkson album)
・ Thanjavur Nayak kingdom
・ Thanjavur Quartet
・ Thanjavur Shiva
・ Thanjavur Subha Rao
・ Thanjavur Taluk
・ Thank ABBA for the Music
・ Thank Christ for the Bomb
・ Thank Evans
・ Thank God
・ Thank God (Hank Williams song)
Thank God and Greyhound
・ Thank God for Believers
・ Thank God for Believers (song)
・ Thank God for Evolution
・ Thank God for Girls
・ Thank God for Girls (song)
・ Thank God for Kids
・ Thank God for Mental Illness
・ Thank God for Mississippi
・ Thank God for Silence
・ Thank God for the Radio
・ Thank God for the Rain / You Will Never Be
・ Thank God for You
・ Thank God He Met Lizzie
・ Thank God I Found You


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Thank God and Greyhound : ウィキペディア英語版
Thank God and Greyhound

"Thank God and Greyhound" is a song made famous by country music singer Roy Clark. Written by Larry Kingston and Earl Nix, the song was released in 1970 as the second single to the album ''I Never Picked Cotton''. The song was a top 10 hit on the ''Billboard magazine'' Hot Country Singles chart that November.
==Song plot==
"Thank God and Greyhound" is a twin-tempoed song, the tempo reflecting the man's emotions as the story plays out. The lyrics are told in first person by the protagonist, and tell of a relationship recently ended.
In the first part of the song, the tempo is notably depressing. The singer tells how a woman — the apparent dominant one in the relationship — squandered his finances and belittled him to the point of humiliation, yet he puts up with her antagonistic behavior in the vain hope that she may change. One day, after three years in the relationship, the woman announces to the singer that she is leaving and refuses to explain. The singer watches her board a Greyhound bus which pulls away from the station.
Following the line "... all I can think of ... is ...," the song's tempo changes to an ironically more upbeat one, and completes the verse ("thank God and Greyhound you're gone!"). At this point, the man is overjoyed and utterly relieved that his now ex-girlfriend is finally out of his life. Imagery of the bus pulling away (the engine hum and the black exhaust cloud) is used to underscore the man's ecstasy over the now-ended relationship, rationalizing his feelings in this way: "it may be kind of cruel, but I've been silent too long."

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Thank God and Greyhound」の詳細全文を読む



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