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・ There Goes My Baby (Charlie Wilson song)
・ There Goes My Baby (film)
・ There Goes My Baby (The Drifters song)
・ There Goes My Baby (Trisha Yearwood song)
・ There Goes My Baby (Usher song)
・ There Goes My Everything
・ There Goes My Everything (book)
・ There Goes My Everything (song)
・ There Goes My Girl
・ There Goes My Heart
・ There Goes My Heart (film)
・ There Goes My Heart (Lisa Stansfield song)
・ There Goes My Heart (The Mavericks song)
・ There Goes My Heart Again
・ There Goes My Life
There Goes Old Georgetown
・ There Goes Our Love Again
・ There Goes Rhymin' Simon
・ There Goes Susie
・ There Goes the Bride
・ There Goes the Bride (1932 film)
・ There Goes the Bride (1980 film)
・ There Goes the Fear
・ There Goes the Groom
・ There Goes the Groom (film)
・ There Goes the Neighborhood
・ There Goes the Neighborhood (album)
・ There Goes the Neighborhood (Body Count song)
・ There Goes the Neighborhood (book)
・ There Goes the Neighborhood (film)


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There Goes Old Georgetown : ウィキペディア英語版
There Goes Old Georgetown

"There Goes Old Georgetown" ((Listen )) is the unofficial name of the Georgetown University sports teams' fight song. It is also known as simply "Georgetown Fight Song". It is actually an amalgamation of three songs, only the oldest of which, 1913's "The Touchdown Song", contains the lyric "here goes old Georgetown". Onto a version of this was added "Cheer for Victory", written in 1915, and "The Hoya Song", written in 1930, both of which are included in their entirety.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title= Georgetown Traditions: The Songs )〕 The authors of these songs, and of the combined version, are unknown. Although some effort has been taken to change the song, no serious proposal has come forth.
==Music==
Georgetown's fight song is rare among U.S. university fight songs for mentioning other colleges by name, generally rivals of Georgetown in the early-to-mid 20th century. Specifically, it mentions Yale University, Harvard University, Princeton University, College of the Holy Cross, the United States Naval Academy, and Cornell University, and mocks their fight songs. In the late 20th and early 21st century, the Hoyas only played Cornell and Holy Cross regularly in football, and many of these schools no longer used the fight songs that Georgetown's song mocks. By 2015, rowing was the only sport in which Georgetown athletes competed against all colleges named in the fight song. The song lacks references to Big East Conference rivals, such as Villanova.
During men's and woman's basketball games, the line "Straight for a touchdown" is typically changed to "Straight for a rebound," which allows the rhyme to continue. In some editions, both the football and basketball versions are sung back to back, while others repeat the first two verses. The final verse is usually followed by a call and response of the school cheer, "Hoya Saxa." Anyone can start the Georgetown fight song by asking a large group of Hoyas, "How long's it been?" The group will reply with the fight song. Or, if a properly motivated Hoya crowd, starting and holding the long low base note of "It's…" will also work.

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「There Goes Old Georgetown」の詳細全文を読む



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