Virgin Mobile FreeFest @ Columbia 8/30

August 30, 2009

On a forty acre lot in the heart of Columbia, Maryland, sits the Merriweather Post Pavilion. With a twenty-thousand person capacity, the venue hosted the Virgin Mobile FreeFest, a combination of local acts, top radio bands, and, most notably, the Blink-182 reunion tour. Spread across three stages (placed in spaced out corners of the the fenced-in plot of land), artists across a wide spectrum of genres performed for twelve hours.

Toronto’s Holy Fuck opened the Dance Tent with their blend improvised electronica. For about an hour, frontmen Brian Borcherdt and Graham Walsh provided a strange blend of synthesizers, keyboards, and unconventional effects (was that a film synchronizer?) over the rhythmic blasts of drummer Matt Schutlz and bassist of Matt McQuaid. Without the use of pre-programmed loops, the quartet separates themselves from their peers with a live take on the electronica genre. Somehow, the band sounded cluttered yet strangely coherent during their performance, making for an extremely fun way to kick off the festival.

Wale

Wale

Local rapper Wale was given a spot on the West Stage at 2PM. Known throughout Washington, DC, for his two singles (“Nike Boots” and the Lady Gaga collaboration, “Chillin”) the twenty-one year old college dropout performed well in front of a fairly large crowd. Connecting with the local audience, Wale announced he would “Shawn Suisam the next roll of toilet paper thrown on stage”–a remark that drew applause from Washington Redskins fans. Wale’s debut, Back to the Feature, is set for a release in October, but the highly recommended The Mixtape About Nothing should serve as a quality introduction to the rapper for those interested in clever lyrics and a tight flow.

Taking Back Sunday

Taking Back Sunday

Taking Back Sunday played the main stage around 3PM. The band sounded weak, and frontman Adam Lazzara sounded inexplicably unintelligent between songs, relating the band’s songs to various pop-culture elements–fun fact: “Carpathia” was inspired by the blockbuster film Titanic.  The band left much to be desired in terms of song selection, focusing heavily on the subpar Louder Now and New Again efforts. Taking Back Sunday was hardly interesting and even less exciting.

In complete contrast, The Hold Steady were exhilarant. Lead by storytelling wonder Craig Finn, the Minnesota five-piece played an excellent set for more than sixty minutes, digging through their four-album discography with ease. Beginning with the racing “Constructive Summer”, the band quickly captured the packed crowd, but it wasn’t until the band’s biggest singles (“Chips Ahoy”, “Sequestered in Memphis”) went back-to-back midway through the set that the assorted audience finally felt whole.

The Hold Steady

The Hold Steady

Two of the band’s more recent standout tracks (“Hot Soft Light”, “Ask Her For Some Adderall”) were unfortunately omitted, but older songs like “Your Little Hoodrat Friend” were undoubtedly crowd-pleasing. “Magazines”, a song about the cliche girl with “daddy issues”, was decidedly not cliche, and is easily one of the band’s most powerful live cuts. And in front of a festival audience holding nine-dollar beers, “Party Pit” and its big “I’m gonna walk around and drink” chorus was all too appropriate. “Separate Vacations”, a new brand new song from the band’s next album, was also played for one of the first times live.

The sun began to set as The Hold Steady finished their set, relieving some of the day’s intense heat. With a crisp performance and excellent song selection, The Holy Steady were clearly the strongest act during the first half of the festival.

On a day filled with excellent acts across all genres, perhaps none were more important than Long Island’s Public Enemy. Taking the stage at 5:30, the hip-hop pioneers cut through their hits from the last three decades. Songs from the politically charged–yet twenty year old–It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back hardly sound dated. The group’s strongest moments came from frontman Chuck D, a socially conscious rapper with an uncanny ability to combine tales of oppression with messages of hope. Backed by a tight production team and live band, Public Enemy performed extremely well.

Public Enemy

Public Enemy

And then, of course, there’s Flavor Flav. Now fifty years old, the quirky rapper spent a large portion of the band’s set talking about his recent television shows and celebrity status; what began as sincere gratefulness for his success quickly wore off the fourth or fifth time Flavor Flav stopped to talk about his life. Thankfully, Chuck D kept his partner in check, moving the set along despite Flavor Flav’s interruptions. In front of the largest West Stage audience all day, Public Enemy was fierce and genuine, furthering their reputation as one of hip-hop’s best groups.

To have any chance seeing Weezer under the overcrowded main stage pavilion, I got in a wrapping line to enter the seated area–which did allow me to catch some of The Bravery, who sounded alright during the few songs I heard. To build anticipation for Weezer, a team of helicopter parachute jumpers landed on the pavilion’s roof minutes before the band took the stage. Greeted on the rooftop by Virgin founder Richard Branson, the jumpers put on a show for the camera as Branson sprayed champagne into the crowd.

Beginning with Black Sabbath’s “War Pigs”, Weezer exploded out of the gates and didn’t let up for sixty minutes. The band’s performance was quite similar to their show in Holmdel, New Jersey, and I’d encourage you to read our review of that event for a more in-depth review of Weezer’s set. Rivers Cuomo sounded great, and the rest of the band clicked to give the packed pavilion a tremendous show and possibly the best performance of the entire day.  Though the fifteen-song set was strictly singles, one third of the cuts came from their best album, 1994′s Weezer:

Weezer

Weezer

War Pigs (Black Sabbath cover)
Hash Pipe
Trouble Maker
Undone (Sweater Song)
Surfwax America
Perfect Situation
If You’re Wondering If I Want You To (I Want You To)
Say it Aint’ So
My Name is Jonas
Island in the Sun
The Good Life
Pork and Beans
Beverly Hills
Buddy Holly
Should I Stay or Should I Go? (The Clash cover)

Blink-182 took the mainstage around 9:30PM. The band’s setlist was very similar to their date just a few days earlier (please our review of that event for a more in-depth review), but with “Adam’s Song” and “Violence”  dropped in favor of “Going Away to College” and “Obvious”. The trio was thankful for the chance to play the festival and grateful for the giant crowd in attendance. Guitarist Tom DeLonge  and bassist Mark Hoppus gave a lengthy pitch encouraging the crowd to donate to homeless charities, since the concert itself was free.

Not to suggest that it was all serious, though; the Mark, Tom, and Travis show was as juvenile as ever, with songs like “Blow Job” and remarks about “going down on Oprah” the rule, not the exception. Adolescent romps like “Reckless Abandon” and 1997′s “Josie (Everything’s Gonna Be Fine)” were fast and fun. The full setlist:

Blink-182

Blink-182

Dumpweed
Feeling This
The Rock Show
What’s My Age Again?
Obvious
I Miss You
Stay Together for the Kids
Down
Always
Blow Job
Stockholm Syndrome
First Date
Man Overboard
Don’t Leave Me
Not Now
Going Away to College
All the Small Things
Reckless Abandon
Josie (Everything’s Gonna Be Fine)
Anthem Pt. 2
Carousel
Dammit

Though often imitated, few bands have matched the California trio’s penchant for crafting powerhouse punk-pop riffs over intense drum beats. The band performed well, even if DeLonge often missed lines in his own songs. For Blink-182, it’s not about precise execution or musical theory; it’s about three reunited friends sharing stages across the country and entertaining thousands of fans.

To catch Weezer and Blink-182, I unfortunately missed out on sets from The National (excellent Brooklyn indie-rock), Girl Talk (also known as Gregg Gillis, in a “mash-up” genre by himself), and Franz Ferdinand (surprisingly strong Scottish indie-rock). The entire evening was excellent, and most certainly worth a trip New York City to Maryland. The free festival unquestionably served up something for everyone, and, at its price tag, who could complain?

Photos courtesy of the incredible Brandon Wu

inTuneMusic is very interested in any submissions/corrections from this event including photographs, setlists, and audio/video. Please contact us, you will receive complete credit for any submission.


Blink-182 / Weezer / Taking Back Sunday @ Holmdel 8/26

August 26, 2009

PNC Bank Arts Center, a large venue anchored by a seven-thousand person seated amphitheater, hosted the North Jersey stop of Blink-182′s reunion tour, featuring support from Weezer, Taking Back Sunday, and Chester French. On a cool August night in Holmdel, New Jersey, Blink-182 captured an enormous crowd with their well-written blend of radio-ready punk-pop and colorful stage banter.

Catching Taking Back Sunday‘s final moments, it was evident that the band just wasn’t built for the 17,000-capacity amphitheater/lawn setup. Sonically, the band’s songs were thin; vocalist Adam Lazarra sounded weak, and the band just didn’t hold together. Song selection was another issue, as the band’s ten song setlist unfortunately consisted of seven songs from New Again and Louder Now, arguably their weakest efforts. The full setlist:

What’s It Feel Like to be a Ghost?
Sink Into Me
Error: Operator
New Again
Set Phasers to Stun
Where My Mouth Is
Liar (It Takes One to Know One)
Cute Without the ‘E’ (Cut From the Team)
A Decade Under the Influence
MakeDamnSure

Rivers Cuomo and Brian Bell

Rivers Cuomo and Brian Bell

Weezer opened with a brief cover of Black Sabbath’s 1978 favorite, “War Pigs”, and with a quick Pat Wilson drum fill, the band switched gears into 2001′s “Hash Pipe”, rolling through their collection of hit singles for the next hour. Rivers Cuomo–Weezer’s frontman with awkward mannerisms and quirky behavior (likened to that of Rick Moranis’s chracter in Ghostbusters)–talked through the interludes of “Undone (Sweater Song)”, capturing the song’s original feel but adding a unique live twist to the experience.

The hedonistic “Surf Wax America” was excellent, and Raditude lead single “If You’re Wondering If I Want You To (I Want You To)” was an exciting tease of what Weezer’s next album might sound like. The one-two punch of 1994 hits “Say it Ain’t So” and “My Name is Jonas” was incredible; the former’s hair-lifting guitar solo was one of the night’s early highlights.

For “Island in the Sun” Cuomo played each of the song’s instruments, jumping from percussion to guitars, recording loops for the drums, acoustic guitar, and bass. When the loops were finished, he picked up an electric guitar and played the song’s signature chords with the crowd singing the “hip-hip” backing vocals. Cuomo played the first two verses alone before the rest of the band joined for the chorus; the entire performance was not only clever and entertaining but also very tight.

Rivers Cuomo high in the air.

Rivers Cuomo high in the air.

Pinkerton was represented by “The Good Life” before the band kicked into “Pork and Beans”, a strong cut from the band’s latest album.  The cheeky, yet soaring,  “Beverly Hills” had the whole crowd swooning with its tremendous chorus. “Buddy Holly” was the band’s last original song before a solid cover of The Clash’s “Should I Stay or Should I Go?” finished the set.

The setlist was heavy on their self-titled 1994 debut, undoubtedly their most well-written and purest effort:

War Pigs (Black Sabbath cover)
Hash Pipe
Trouble Maker
Undone (Sweater Song)
Surfwax America
Perfect Situation
If You’re Wondering If I Want You To (I Want You To)
Say it Aint’ So
My Name is Jonas
Island in the Sun
The Good Life
Pork and Beans
Beverly Hills
Buddy Holly
Should I Stay or Should I Go? (The Clash cover)

Cuomo, though unassuming and small in stature, proved that Weezer is large and in charge, one of the generation’s top rock acts. Even bookended by two covers, the band’s set was an excellent document of Weezer”s entire career and indeed a testament to the band’s stellar live show.

Tom Delonge wearing an Angels and Airwaves shirt.

Tom DeLonge wearing an Angels and Airwaves shirt.

After an incredible performance by Weezer, the recently reunited Blink-182 had their work cut out for them. Their first tour in nearly five years, it remained to be seen if the trio was up to the challenge. Opening with Enema of the State leadoff “Dumpweed”, Blink-182 appeared more than ready to overtake Weezer and spent the next eighty minutes demonstrating that fact.

With a dual vocal assault, “Feeling This” perfectly showcased the dynamics of frontmen Tom DeLonge and Mark Hoppus. “The Rock Show”, an adolescent love story about meeting a girl at Warped Tour, was one of the band’s strongest songs. By “What’s My Age Again” the entire sold-out venue was singing in unison to one of biggest songs of the 1990s.

Mark Hoppus

Mark Hoppus with his bandmates on screens behind him.

The heavier “Violence” and the bouncy yet somber “I Miss You” felt right at home alongside the band’s older songs. In fact, a third of the setlist came from the band’s untitled 2003 album, with three of the seven songs coming in a row (“Down”, Always”, “Stockholm Syndrome”). With Hoppus’s solid bass-line into a twangy DeLonge guitar-riff, “Man Overboard” was fun and exciting. Things slowed down with “Adam’s Song” before picking up with “All the Small Things” and “Reckless Abandon”. The appropriately titled “Anthem Pt. 2″ finished up the band’s set with DeLonge proclaiming “If we’re fucked up, then you’re to blame!” before the trio left the stage.

Drummer Travis Barker was the first to return for an encore, jamming over a Jay-Z track before his drum platform lifted into the air, slowly spiraling around the stage. The impressive drum solo set the mood for DeLonge and Hoppus to return, at which point the band began fan-favorite “Carousel”. The band finished with a rousing performance of Dude Ranch‘s “Dammit”. The full set:

Dumpweed
Feeling This
The Rock Show
What’s My Age Again?
Violence
I Miss You
Stay Together for the Kids
Down
Always
Stockholm Syndrome
First Date
Man Overboard
Don’t Leave Me
Not Now
Adam’s Song
All the Small Things
Reckless Abandon
Josie (Everything’s Gonna Be Fine)
Anthem Pt. 2
Carousel
Dammit

The Mark, Tom, and Travis show.

The Mark, Tom, and Travis show.

The Mark, Tom, and Travis show was excellent, from the strong performance to the hilarious on-stage banter. It’s apparent that even in their late thirties, the aging punk-pop trio still finds toilet humor and sexual puns as funny as ever–and somehow it works. DeLonge has always provided the main comedic assault, but Hoppus was equally witty yet still managed to keep the show moving during Delonge’s drawn about stories and jokes about “your mom”.

The tour continues through the country, with alternating support from a number of bands including Fall Out Boy, Panic at the Disco, Motion City Soundtrack, Valencia, and All-American Rejects.

Photos courtesy of Gabreez, Weezer.com

inTuneMusic is very interested in any submissions/corrections from this evening including photographs, setlists, and audio/video. Please contact us, you will receive complete credit for any submission.


Lifetime @ New Brunswick 8/21

August 21, 2009

In New Jersey–and especially in New Brunswick–the terms “punk” and “community” are not tossed around lightly. The bands often tour together, in some cases live together, and in all cases look out for each other. On August 21, The Bouncing Souls and Lifetime shared a stage; on August 22, they joined together (through the The Bouncing Souls’s Chunksaah Records) to raise money for Happy Day Records founder Richie Cunningham, who was diagnosed with cancer. The now-defunct Endeavor–who put their first album out on Cunningham’s label–reunited for the benefit to provide direct support to Lifetime.

New Brunswick’s tiny Court Tavern offered the venue, with a twenty-dollar entry donation going directly to the cause. Though I missed most of Endeavor (and openers Torchbearer), what I caught sounded great and the band had the entire basement singing along to the closing track, “Dry” (from Crazier Than a Shithouse Rat)

After much setup and some sound issues, Lifetime began their sixteen-song setlist with Hello Bastards lead-off cut “Danerurym” with a perfect segue into the rowdy “Rodeo Clown”. By “Just a Quiet Evening”, from the band’s self-titled reunion album, the crowd was singing every word with frontman Ari Katz, pushing onto the stage to share the microphone.

By the time the band got to “Nortbound Breakdown”, the crowd had turned into a pit, and crowdsurfers were nearly kicking out the ceiling tiles. “Turnpike Gates” was appropriately ferocious, and “(The Gym Is) Neutral Territory” sounded as hateful and sincere in 2009 as it did in 1995. The band rounded out their set with a few more Jersey’s Best Dancers songs (bringing the night’s total to six, the most from any album), closing with “25 Cent Giraffes”. The full set:

Lifetime setlist

Lifetime setlist

Daneurysm
Rodeo Clown
Just a Quiet Evening
Young, Loud, and Scotty
Irony is For Suckers
Song for Mel
Turnpike Gates
Airport Monday Morning
Hey Catrine
Northbound Breakdown
(The Gym Is) Neutral Territory
Bringin’ It Backwards
Knives, Bats, New Tats
The Boy’s No Good
Haircuts and T-Shirts
25 Cent Giraffes

For anyone who experienced the band during their initial run in the mid-1990s, the show was a great throwback to one of the genre’s most important bands. For latecomers, it was readily-obvious what all the hype was about. The band performed at 100% for the entire set, feeding off of the crowd’s enthusiasm for forty-five minutes. With families and other musical projects, Lifetime does not spend much time on tour. If the band comes to your town, however, do not miss the chance to see a great punk band still on top of their game.

inTuneMusic is very interested in any submissions/corrections from this evening including photographs, setlists, and audio/video. Please contact us, you will receive complete credit for any submission.


The Bouncing Souls / Lifetime / None More Black @ NYC 8/20

August 20, 2009

Twenty years.

Twenty years is a long period of time, by any standard. Since forming in the late 1980s, The Bouncing Souls have released seven full-length albums and numerous other works including splits, EPs, compilations, and live albums. In 1991, the band debuted with Ugly Bill EP, a low budget recording by a handful of twenty year old punks. In 2009, the band continues to assert their relevance in a digital age by the unique approach of issuing one song per month (available for download) until December, at which point the songs will be collected and issued on a proper full-length (that is, if “proper full-length” is even a term that will continue into the next decade.) To celebrate the band’s storied history, the New Jersey quartet (named for the Doc Martens shoe company slogan “with bouncing soles”) as   directed and starred in a brief “television episode” set to air at the first of four anniversary shows in New York City and Philadelphia.

On a humid night in Manhattan at 6:30PM, Webster Hall opened its doors to a line of fans that wrapped around 11th Street. By 7PM, the television special began playing on the enormous screens set up on stage. Showcasing their latest video (“Airport Security”) and some comedy routines, the episode was a great way to relax before the show began.

None More Black

None More Black

None More Black started the evening with their blend of melodic hardcore-punk. Drawing primarily from This is Satire (2006), the band also mixed in some new material from their upcoming full-length. Frontman Jason Shevchuk stated how impressed he was with The Bouncing Souls’s twenty year run, commenting that he couldn’t stay in a band for more than two years (a reference to his previous bands Bound, Kid Dynamite, and Onguard). None More Black sounded great during their thirty minute set, warming up the crowd for their New Jersey brothers who would take the stage slightly after 8PM.

Lifetime

Lifetime

Opening with “Turnpike Gates”, Lifetime immediately captured the entire crowd. Forming a few years after The Bouncing Souls, the New Jersey five-piece was a staple and major influence to the blooming eastcoast hardcore-punk scene before disbanding in 1997. Without a stage-barrier and no security, the band encouraged the crowd to open enormous pits and to stage dive throughout the show; the fifteen hundred-person venue felt tiny and warm (and not just because of the excessive humidity). Frontman Ari Katz sounded as young as ever, gracefully slurring through the band’s verses in his trademark style.

Dan Yemin (who played with None More Black’s Shevchuk in Kid Dynamite) and the rest of the band sounded on-point; “Daneurysm” into the winding “Rodeo Clown” was one of the slickest moments of the evening. The band picked the strongest selections from their self-titled reunion LP (on Decaydence Records), including “Just a Quiet Evening” and single “Airport Monday Morning”. Appropriately, Hello Bastards closing track “Ostrichsized” finished off Lifetime’s forty-five minute set shortly after 9PM.

The Bouncing Souls

The Bouncing Souls

The Bouncing Souls exploded with 1997′s “Manthem” and didn’t stop for sixty minutes, reaching as far back as their 1994 full-length debut, The Good, The Bad, And The Argyle (“I Like Your Mom”, “Old School”) and performing excellent of covers of The Misfits (“Hybrid Moments”) and Avoid One Thing (“Sheena”). “Gasoline” and “Ghosts of the Boardwalk” were the only songs recorded in 2009 to make the set, meaning the crowd had years to learn the lyrics to the rest of the songs. It showed: every song was a singalong, complete with frontman Frontman Greg Attonito sharing the microphone with fans who surfed on stage.

The band sounded great throughout the set, engaging rabid fans the entire time. Even at forty years old singing decade-old songs like “Quik Check Girl”, Attonito was sincere and energized. Dual string-based assaults from Pete Steinkopf and Bryan Kienlen barely stopped, with the only break coming when a man in a wheelchair crowdsurfed onto the stage.

“True Believers” finished The Bouncing Souls set before chants of “Ole” (a Hopeless Romantic take on the classic fight song) brought the band back to an encore of “hey, hey, hey” shouts and Michael McDermott’s driving drums on “The Gold Song”. The penultimate “Kids and Heroes” from 2003′s Anchors Aweigh was warmly received before the band finished with the excellent “Night on Earth”. The full set (to the best of my memory; it deviated slightly from the written list):

The Bouncing Souls setlist

The Bouncing Souls setlist (courtesy of Christopher Rawlison)

Manthem
Sing Along Forever
Hopeless Romantic
Lean On Sheena (Avoid One Thing cover)
Kid
Fight To Live
That Song
Gasoline
Argyle
Hybrid Moments (The Misfits cover)
Ghosts of the Boardwalk
Ballad Of Johnny X
You’re So Rad
No Rules
I Think That the World
Quik Check Girl
Highway Kings
Old School
Private Radio
Lamar Vannoy
True Believers
The Gold Song
Kids And Heroes
Night On Earth

For a few hours, 2009 felt like the mid-1990s all over again. Both opening bands performed excellent sets, and The Bouncing Souls honored their two-decade-long legacy well with a great setlist and performance. Lifetime played the next evening in New Brunswick before rejoining The Bouncing Souls in Philadelphia as part of the Souls’s brief four-night set of anniversary shows.

For more photographs of the evening, please check out the incredible work of Dan Gonyea.

inTuneMusic is very interested in any submissions/corrections from this evening including photographs, setlists, and audio/video. Please contact us, you will receive complete credit for any submission.


The Hold Steady / Titus Andronicus @ Sayreville 7/24

August 20, 2009

After selling out four nights in New York in tiny 500-person clubs (two nights at Bowery Ballroom and two at Music Hall of Williamsburg), The Hold Steady set their sights on New Jersey’s 2200-person Starland Ballroom. Though the night did no’t sell out, the venue was fairly packed with a crowd as diverse as The Hold Steady’s influences; the audience was filled with Bruce Springsteen and ’80s hardcore punk shirts alike.

William Shakespeare-inspired Titus Andronicus opened the evening, but unfortunately fell victim to awful sound from the venue. From the beginning, everything was muddy–to the point that it was unenjoyable to stand and listen. Their debut album, The Airing of Grievances, is a strong indie album, but the band just did not sound good on a warm Friday in Jersey. Much of the crowd stood outside to smoke or wandered the venue’s multiple bars during the band’s set.

The Hold Steady also suffered from the venue’s sound problems, but the band managed to overcome those issues with an incredibly strong performance.  Lead guitarist Tad Kubler kept things interesting while drummer Bobby Drake and bassist Galen Polivka kept a rocksteady rhythm as the band reached effortlessly across their entire discography for nearly two hours.

“Most People are DJs”, from 2004′s Almost Killed Me, started the night with frontman Craig Finn frantically pouring his entire soul into every word. Packed with tribute to Iggy Pop, Dillinger Four, and The Clash, “Constructive Summer” found the entire crowd singing along. The band seemed to race through songs, with “Hot Soft Light” coming in at just over two minutes despite its four minute studio length.

Finn introduced the band (and showcased his own guitar ability with a few technical licks) during the middle of “Charlemagne in Sweatpants” before kicking into “Massive Nights”. The band played Boys and Girls in America b-side “Girls Like Status” but unfortunately skipped out on “Ask Her For Some Adderall”, a b-side from Stay Positive that received treatment on the band’s live album A Positive Rage. The full setlist:

Most People are DJs
Constructive Summer
Hot Soft Light
The Swish
Girls Like Status
Navy Sheets
Banging Camp
Charlemagne in Sweatpants
Massive Nights
Magazines
Don’t Let Me Explode
Party Pit
Sequestered in Memphis
Stevie Nix
Yeah Sapphire
Lord, I’m Discouraged
Hornets! Hornets!
You Can Make Him Like You
Southtown Girls
Your Little Hoodrat Friend
Stay Positive
Stuck Between Stations
Chips Ahoy!
Slapped Actress

The band’s encore began with the tributory title track, “Stay Positive”, with references to two early hardcore-punk acts, Youth of Today and 7 Seconds. Two cuts from Boys in Girls in America (raising the night’s total to eight from that era) preceded the band’s final song, “Slapped Actress”. Despite poor sound from the venue, the night was quite enjoyable and The Hold Steady put one of of the strongest performances of the year.


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