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・ Thousand Island Lake
・ Thousand Island Park Historic District
・ Thousand Island Park, New York
・ Thousand Islands
・ Thousand Islands (Cocoa Beach)
・ Thousand Islands (disambiguation)
・ Thousand Islands (Indonesia)
・ Thousand Islands Bridge
・ Thousand Islands National Park
・ Thousand Islands Parkway
・ Thousand Islands Playhouse
・ Thousand Islands Railway
・ Thousand Islands Secondary School
・ Thousand Islands – Frontenac Arch
・ Thousand Kites
Thousand Knives
・ Thousand Lake Mountain
・ Thousand Lakes Wilderness
・ Thousand Lights (State Assembly Constituency)
・ Thousand Lights Mosque
・ Thousand Mile Stare
・ Thousand Mile Tree
・ Thousand Miles (Destine song)
・ Thousand Oaks Civic Arts Plaza
・ Thousand Oaks High School
・ Thousand Oaks Philharmonic
・ Thousand Oaks Transit
・ Thousand Oaks, Berkeley, California
・ Thousand Oaks, California
・ Thousand origami cranes


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Thousand Knives : ウィキペディア英語版
Thousand Knives

(also known as ''Thousand Knives of Ryuichi Sakamoto'') is Ryuichi Sakamoto's first solo album. The album is named after Henri Michaux's description of the feel of using mescaline in ''Misérable Miracle''. It was recorded in about 500 hours, and Sakamoto would spend whole days without sleeping working on it.
==Overview==
This album features performances by guitarist Kazumi Watanabe (two songs from this album were included in the ''Tokyo Joe'' compilation) and Yellow Magic Orchestra members (the production techniques that Sakamoto learned while making this album would be later used in YMO recordings). The title track begins with a vocoded Sakamoto reading a poem written during Mao Zedong's visit to a well in the Jinggang Mountains in 1965; the song is performed in a reggae hymn style, inspired by Herbie Hancock's ''Speak Like a Child'' album; the song was later performed by YMO in their shows from 1978 to 1980 and was re-recorded for the ''BGM'' album; Sakamoto performed a classical trio version during live shows for the ''1996'' album and recorded a piano duo version for the ''/05'' album. "Plastic Bamboo" was performed in the earlier YMO shows, however, it was never re-recorded, and the only YMO recording of it is on the live album ''Live At Kinokuni-ya Hall 1978''. "The End of Asia" has the same melody as Haruomi Hosono's "Worry Beads" from the ''Paraiso'' (Sakamoto has claimed that he didn't do it on purpose) and the coda uses the melody of the Chinese national anthem "The East is Red"; the song was performed by YMO until 1980, and its first release as a YMO song was on the live album ''Public Pressure'', a drastically different studio version was included on the ''X∞Multiplies'' album.

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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