翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ The Box of Life
・ The Box Play
・ The Box Plus Network
・ The Box Set
・ The Box Set (Cocteau Twins)
・ The Box Set (Kiss)
・ The Box Social
・ The Box Soho
・ The Box Tops
・ The Box Tree
・ The Box-Lobby Challenge
・ The Boxcar Children
・ The Boxcar Children (film)
・ The Boxcars
・ The Boxed Life
The Boxer
・ The Boxer (1997 film)
・ The Boxer (2012 film)
・ The Boxer (Kele Okereke album)
・ The Boxer (The Chemical Brothers song)
・ The Boxer and Death
・ The Boxer and the Spy
・ The Boxer Rebellion (band)
・ The Boxer's Bride
・ The Boxer's Omen
・ The Boxing Girls of Kabul
・ The Boxing Kangaroo
・ The Boxing Lesson
・ The Boxing Mirror
・ The Boxmasters


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The Boxer : ウィキペディア英語版
The Boxer

"The Boxer" is a song by the American music duo Simon & Garfunkel from their fifth studio album, ''Bridge over Troubled Water'' (1970). Produced by the duo themselves and Roy Halee, it was released as the lead single from the album on March 21, 1969. The song, written by Paul Simon, is a folk rock ballad that variously takes the form of a first-person lament as well as a third-person sketch of a boxer. Simon's lyrics are largely autobiographical, partially inspired by the Bible, and were written during a time when he felt he was being unfairly criticized. The song's lyrics discuss poverty and loneliness. It is particularly known for its plaintive refrain, in which the singer sings 'lie-la-lie', accompanied by a heavily reverb-ed drum.
"The Boxer" was the follow-up to one of the duo's most successful singles, "Mrs. Robinson". It peaked at number seven on the ''Billboard'' Hot 100. It performed well internationally, charting within the top 10 in nine countries, peaking highest in the Netherlands, South Africa, and Sweden. ''Rolling Stone'' ranked the song #106 on their list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.
==Creation and recording==

The original recording of the song is one of the duo's most highly produced, and took over 100 hours to record. The recording was performed at multiple locations, including Nashville, St. Paul's Chapel in New York City, and Columbia studios.
The version originally released on single by the duo features an instrumental melody played in unison on pedal steel guitar and piccolo trumpet. The song also features a bass harmonica, played by Charlie McCoy〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Charlie McCoy's Credits, Harmonica Session )〕 heard during the second and final verses. On the BBC, Paul Simon had Garfunkel's instrumental solo played with a soprano saxophone.
In the magazine ''Fretboard Journal''〔''Fretboard Journal'' number 12, Winter 2008,〕 Fred Carter, Jr. recounts:
I had a baby Martin, which is a 000-18, and when we started the record in New York with Roy Halee, the engineer, and Paul () was playin' his Martin—I think it's a D-18 and he was tuned regular—he didn't have the song totally written lyrically, but he had most of the melody. And so all I was hearin' was bits and pieces while he was doin' his fingerpicking… I think he was fingerpicking in an open C. I tried two or three things and then picked up the baby Martin, which was about a third above his guitar, soundwise.
And I turned down the first string to a D, and tuned up the bass string to a G, which made it an open-G tuning, except for the fifth string, which was standard. Did some counter fingerpicking with him, just did a little backward roll, and lucked into a lick. And that turned into that little roll, and we cut it, just Paul and I, two guitars. Then we started to experiment with some other ideas and so forth. At the end of the day, we were still on the song. Garfunkel was amblin’ around the studio, hummin’, and havin’ input at various times. They were real scientists. They’d get on a part, and it might be there () six weeks later.
On my guitar, they had me miked with about seven mics. They had a near mic, a distant mic, a neck mic, a mic on the hole. They even miked my breathing. They miked the guitar in back. So Roy Halee was a genius at getting around. The first time we were listenin’, they killed the breathing mic. And they had an ambient mic overhead, which picked up the two guitars together, I suppose. And so, I was breathin’, I guess, pretty heavy in rhythm. And they wanted to take out that noise, and they took it out and said, ‘Naw, we gotta leave that in.’ That sounds almost like a rhythm on the record. So they left the breathin’ mic on for the mix. I played Tele on it and a 12-string, three or four guitars on it. I was doing different guitar parts. One was a chord pattern and rhythm pattern. Did the Dobro lick on the regular six-string finger Dobro—not a slide Dobro.
I never heard the total record until I heard it on the air… I thought: That’s the greatest record I heard in my life, especially after the scrutiny and after all the time they spent on it and breakin’ it apart musically and soundwise and all of it. There was some magic in the studio that day, and Roy Halee captured it. Paul and I had a really nice groove.


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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