2. “She Bangs The Drums” – The Stone Roses: An Artist A Week/A Song A Day – A History of Alternative Music

2. “She Bangs The Drums” – The Stone Roses

(From the album The Stone Roses)

1989

The Stone Roses would undergo some final lineup changes in the year prior to recording their self-titled debut album. Rhythm guitarist Andy Couzens would be forced out of the band and bassist Pete Garner would choose to leave the group, replaced by Mani, who had played with an early version of the band called Waterfront. This lineup of Ian Brown, John Squire, Reni, and Mani, would be the classic lineup of the band and would be the foursome to write and record their seminal debut album. In the run-up prior to the release of The Stone Roses the band would release the non-album single “Elephant Stone”. “Elephant Stone” would not be a hit but it did serve as a transitional song between the group’s earlier more British Invasion indie rock style and their more psychedelic and danceable music that would soon make them famous. Indeed, like many of their early singles, “Elephant Stone” would be re-released after The Stone Roses became more successful and the re-release of the song would hit #8 in the UK. Their debut album The Stone Roses was released in April of 1989 and the first single from the record “Made Of Stone” was a minor success, peaking at #90 (although it too would later be re-released and go to #20). However, the first Stone Roses song to earn much real traction and mainstream airplay was the second single from their debut album, “She Bangs The Drums”. “She Bangs The Drums” draws on elements of sunny psychedelia, noise rock like The Jesus & Mary Chain, while still also maintaining some of the echoes of British Invasion era pop that the band’s earlier work drew more heavily on. “She Bangs The Drums” doesn’t lean as heavily into the dance culture that would soon define Manchester as “Madchester” but it does have a rhythmic pulse unlike their past work that new bassist Mani adds to the band. “She Bangs The Drums” was the first Stone Roses song to crack the UK Top 40 at #36 (and would hit #34 when it was re-released eight months later). “She Bangs The Drums” didn’t make The Stone Roses superstars but it did announce they were to be a presence on the scene right as that scene was about the exploder into the mainstream.

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7. “Love Of Our Lives” – Indigo Girls: An Artist A Week/A Song A Day – A History of Alternative Music

7. “Love Of Our Lives” – Indigo Girls

(From the album Poseidon & The Bitter Bug)

2009

The Indigo Girls had started off the 21st century with a return to form on the excellent Become You. They then released the solid but not spectacular All That We Let In in 2004 and the excellent Despite Our Differences in 2006. As the end of the first decade of the 21st century was closing in, Indigo Girls were on a run of high quality album releases and becoming respected elder statesmen to a younger generation of artists; not to mention that they had earned a rabidly devoted fan base. That run of excellent albums continues with 2009’s Poseidon & The Bitter Bug, a relatively concise album that saw the duo come as close to returning to the sound of their early records than they had in more than a decade. Poseidon & The Bitter Bug is strong from front to back and offers new classics from Saliers’ like the upbeat “What Are You Like?” and the reflective “Fleet Of Hope”, while Ray is equally strong on the teenage nostalgia of “Driver Education” and the country/folk of “Second Time Around”. The deluxe version of the album also has a second disc where all of the tracks are stripped down into a raw, acoustic style that purposefully mimics the band’s earliest work in sound and aesthetic. The second disc is a great bonus and many of the versions are as good, if not better, than the more produced versions. However the real treat of the bonus material is Amy Ray’s excellent “Salty South”, which is the only song on the bonus material not to be on the album proper, which is a crime as it is one of Poseidon & The Bitter Bug’s best songs. Another clear highlight of Poseidon & The Bitter Bug is the second single, Emily Saliers’ “Love Of Our Lives”. A call to action that could be heard either as an attempt to save a personal relationship or to fight for the often still denied rights of the LGBTQ community (which was a big topic at the time of the album’s release). “Love Of Our Lives” does what Indigo Girls does best, marries smart lyrics about important topics to melodic music while two of the best singers in the business weave beautiful harmonies. In the years since Indigo Girls have continued to work, tour, and release great new material, including four new studio albums: The holiday album Holly Happy Days, and the new studio albums Beauty Queen Sister, One Lost Day, and Look Long, all of which are strong latter-day efforts.

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5. “Touch Me Fall” – Indigo Girls: An Artist A Week/A Song A Day – A History of Alternative Music

5. “Touch Me Fall” – Indigo Girls

(From the album Swamp Ophelia)

1994

No Indigo Girls album feels like it was more shaped by one of the pair than 1994’s Swamp Ophelia, which feels like it leans into the sound and aesthetic of Amy Ray much more than Emily Saliers. This is interesting since for the first time on any Indigo Girls record Emily Saliers actually writes more of the songs than does Amy Ray, with her penning six of the eleven. Still, Swamp Ophelia feels rooted in the more Americana and alt rock influences favored by Ray and anchored by her five songs, most notably the folk/prog centerpiece of the album “Touch Me Fall”. To a large degree this makes sense in 1994 when alt rock ruled the airwaves, and Saliers songs are as strong as ever, but “Touch Me Fall” is raw and brutal and complex in a way that serves the album perfectly and feels like it is of its era, in a good way; which is a notable feat for a folk duo that made a name for themselves in the late 1980’s. “Touch Me Fall” isn’t grunge and it’s not alternative rock, at least not in the 90’s sense of that word, but it does share many of the qualities of those genres in that it is dark and earthy and expressive. These same traits also color Ray’s other contributions to Swamp Ophelia, especially the opener “Fugitive”, which may be the hardest rocking song Indigo Girls had done to this point in their career, and the Holocaust-based anthem of the oppressed “This Train Revised” that closes the record. These songs, and Ray’s others, dominate the album thematically and sonically, while Saliers’ add coloring and texture within the lines that Ray’s songs have drawn, making Swamp Ophelia one of their most emotionally powerful albums.

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Alternative Music Playlists – Vol. 48: 2023

Alternative Music Playlists – Vol. 48: 2023 

Listen To The List: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/5G7UWtmFgkxdlr67StUYWP?si=abfdc506e8204763

Alternative music in the year 2023 can mean a lot of different things. Many of the early first wave bands are still making good music for their old fans and many new ones who rightly understand their importance and impact. Then there are the alt rock bands of the 1990’s and early 2000’s that were important and popular when alternative music was at its commercial/mainstream zenith. Finally, there are the newer bands of the past decade or so (including the current new cool artists) that have continued to make alternative music in the age of streaming and the internet. Many of these bands are excellent but have not garnered the same widespread appeal because music is in such a fractured age. Still, alternative rock is well into its third full generation as we get close to the 50th anniversary of punk rock exploding onto the scene in the late 70’s and changing everything. So, in 2023, alternative rock is something of a grab bag of styles, genres, and eras, that sometimes have little in common other than the desire to be different, do something new, or challenge listeners. A different person could compile a different list to represent the year gone by and be perfectly correct. This is one reflection on the state of alternative rock in 2023.

  1. “Carry You Home” – Circa Waves     From the album Never Going Under

Circa Waves capture the sound and spirit of newer bands in 2023 very well. On their fifth album Never Going Under the four-piece from Liverpool combines indie rock, 80’s-influenced new wave, and pop to create a modern-sounding fusion of those styles that is filled with plenty of hooks and melody. One of the best songs on Never Going Under is the slightly maudlin “Carry You Home” and it represents the sound of newer alt music in 2023 very well.

  1. “This Is Why” – Paramore     From the album This Is Why 

Paramore had been one of the most lasting of the emo and punk-pop bands of the early 00’s before going on hiatus so that singer/leader Hayley Williams could work on some solo material. However, with emo and pop-punk music having a comeback moment of sorts in the past year or two, it makes sense for Paramore to return. Indeed, the announcement of a Paramore reunion and new album came with a fair amount of positivity from both fans and critics. “This Is Why”, the title track from the new album is a clever and catchy mix of the older Paramore sound with some influences from Hayley Williams’ excellent solo work.  

  1. “Tropic Morning News” – The National     From the album First Two Pages Of Frankenstein 

The National have slowly built up their reputation and fanbase until they have become one of the most successful bands in alternative rock, and they have done it without ever really scoring a mainstream hit. The National released two albums in 2023 with First Two Pages Of Frankenstein and Laugh Track, both very good albums that hone their sound more than expand it (indeed, in some ways they even pull back a little from the electronic experiments of their previous albums). That said, these albums are nuanced, quietly simmering gems that feature many superb songs. One of the best of these is the first single from First Two Pages Of Frankenstein, the propulsive yet melancholy “Tropic Morning News”, a song that perfectly captures both the sound and the general feeling of The National at their very best.

  1. “Cool About It” – Boygenius     From the album The Record 

Boygenius is the female singer/songwriter collective of Pheobe Bridgers, Julien Baker, and Lucy Dacus. The three women first set aside their successful solo careers to release an EP together as Boygenius in 2018. However, 2023 saw them come together to release their first full album The Record, which became a major critical (and decent commercial) success. “Cool About It” is a folky, country-influenced song that evokes Laurel Canyon vibes even while vaguely recalling the Simon & Garfunkel classic “The Boxer” in its melody and overall tone. It’s a quiet and lovely song from some of the most talented artists making music right now.

  1. “King Of Oklahoma” – Jason Isbell & The 400 Unit     From the album Weathervanes 

Jason Isbell has been on a hot streak over the past few years and that run continued in 2023 which saw Isbell star in the Martin Scorcese film Killers Of The Flower Moon. His 2023 album, recorded with his usual band The 400 Unit, is a set of songs inspired by his work on the film. Weathervanes is not the soundtrack for the movie, but rather songs inspired by the themes and tone of the film, and “King Of Oklahoma” is both one of the standout tracks and a good example of the film’s themes serving as his muse.

  1. “If You’re Gonna Break My Heart” – Inhaler     From the album Cuts & Bruises 

It is not singer Elijah Hewson’s fault that he sounds so much like his famous father, but at least for me, it is so hard to hear Inhaler (who I really do enjoy) and not make comparisons to U2. To be fair, Inhaler has made attempts to step out of U2’s shadow and much of Cuts & Bruises finds the band staking claim on its own sonic territory. However, one of the album’s best songs is the warm, soulful ballad “If You’re Gonna Break My Heart”, which is both a great song on its own merits and (perhaps unfairly) a song that feels like it would have been perfectly at home on U2’s homage to America Rattle & Hum.

  1. “An Arrow In The Wall” – Death Cab For Cutie     From the non-album single “An Arrow In The Wall”

Death Cab For Cutie never put out a bad album and have become one of the most successful bands of the 21st century. That said, on 2022’s album Asphalt Meadows the band felt reinvigorated. 2023 saw Death Cab leader Ben Gibbard in the spotlight as he celebrated the 20th anniversary of both Death Cab For Cutie’s classic album Transatlanticism and The Postal Service’s Give Up; touring with both bands at once and playing both records in their entirety. Death Cab For Cutie didn’t release a new record in 2023 but the band did put out the stand-alone single “An Arrow In The Wall” as a new song to promote the tour. The song continues the more experimental tone of many of the songs on Asphalt Meadows while also having a vaguely electronic vibe to it that at least echoes Gibbard’s work with his Postal Service side project. The song was somewhat overlooked but is another very good song from the boys in Death Cab For Cutie.

  1. “Bauhaus Staircase” – OMD     From the album Bauhaus Staircase  

Orchestral Manoevres in the Dark have had an incredible late-career revival over the past few years with albums like History of Modern, English Electric, The Punishment of Luxury, and the single “Don’t Go” (which is included on their 2023 album Bauhaus Staircase even though it was first released in 2019). OMD’s new album Bauhaus Staircase is not quite as consistent as those other records in my opinion but it is still a solid listen with several excellent songs. One of the more noteworthy songs is the title track “Bauhaus Staircase” which finds OMD trying to find a happy midpoint between their more experimental artistic side and their more pop-oriented dance/club music. “Bauhaus Staircase” is a bright, uptempo number that still manages to feel like it is connected to their weirder, more artistic and experimental detours.

  1. “Your Side Of Town” – The Killers     From the compilation album Rebel Diamonds 

The Killers were always rooted in the electronic and new wave music of the 1980’s but they have never felt quite so connected to the disco sound of the late 70’s and early 80’s as they do on their new single “Your Side Of Town”. It is a sound that is both familiar for The Killers and, yet, a little bit new and different as well. A welcome addition (along with last year’s “Boy” and another new song called “Spirit”) to a new best-of compilation that The Killers released.

  1.  “Ghosts Again” – Depeche Mode     From the album Memento Mori 

Depeche Mode released their best album in years with 2023’s Memento Mori, an album that seemed to draw on nearly all eras of the band’s career and find a way to blend the various sounds and styles into something interesting. A variety of factors may have helped Memento Mori be a stronger album than their recent records. Perhaps Martin Gore and Dave Gahan, the two remaining members, were refocused by the unexpected death of their friend and fellow bandmember Andy Fletcher early in the recording of the album. Gore’s choice to work with an outside songwriting partner for the first time (Richard Butler of Psychedelic Furs) also possibly brought a new spark to the songs. Certainly, the lead single “Ghosts Again”, co-written with Butler, feels like a near-classic Depeche Mode single with its pulsing electronics, defiantly optimistic lyrics, and chiming synths. Indeed, it was a perfect lead single for the album, which deals with themes of mortality and life, darkness and light, across the record. All themes that are made more poignant with the loss of Fletcher. It is unclear if this is the end of Depeche Mode or just the start of another new chapter, but either way, Memento Mori is a fitting record.

  1.  “Alife” – Slowdive    From the album Everything Is Alive  

Shoegaze music is another 90’s genre that is having a revival of sorts and Slowdive, always among the more melodic of the shoegaze bands, put out one of the best albums of their career with 2023’s Everything Is Alive. “Alife” wraps its pop-oriented hooks and melody in a gauzy film of sound and production, while Neil Halstead and Rachel Goswell intertwine their voices over and through it. In the process making “Alife” feel both strangely current and like a perfect throwback to when alt rock ruled the radio.

  1.  “Vampire” – Olivia Rodrigo     From the album Guts 

On one level Olivia Rodrigo is undoubtedly a pop singer, but it is undeniable that Rodrigo also is playing a large role in reviving many older alt rock styles as she knowingly draws on nervy new wave like Elvis Costello, bratty pop-punk like Avril Lavigne, and Lilith Fair alt rockers like Alanis Morissette, for a new generation. “Vampire” takes the teenage drama of her earlier hits “Drivers License” and “Traitor” and pushes them a little farther, making them a little bigger and a little stranger. “Vampire” is rewriting the alt rock playbook but it is introducing those rules to a new group of young fans. And it is undeniably catchy.

  1.  “i/o” (Bright Side Mix) – Peter Gabriel      From the album i/o 

2023 saw Peter Gabriel release his first album of new material in 21 years with i/o. Like most Gabriel projects there is more to the album than just a collection of new songs, and i/o is no different as each of the album’s twelve songs has two different mixes, a “bright side” mix and a “dark side” mix (although in most cases the different mixes are relatively similar). Anyone looking for the art-pop of Gabriel’s 80’s work like So won’t find a lot here to love, but to fans who like Gabriel’s deeper and more reflective work, especially Up and the more thoughtful moments of Us, there will be a lot to discover on i/o. Indeed, the title track is a quiet and subtle, yet warm song about life’s interconnectedness that will get under your skin with a few listens. It might not be worth the 21 year wait but it is a good song and a good album.

  1.  “Los Angeles” – Lol Tolhurst, Budgie & Jacknife Lee (featuring James Murphy)      From the album Los Angeles 

Los Angeles is the work of the unlikely post-punk supergroup consisting of former Cure drummer and keyboardist (and punching bag) Lol Tolhurst, Siouxsie & The Banshees’ drummer and percussionist Budgie, and producer and multi-instrumentalist Jacknife Lee. This trio of post-punk survivors and their producer came together to create musical soundscapes and then invited an array of guest vocalists and instrumentalists in for various songs. “Los Angeles”, the first song released from the trio, features LCD Soundsystem’s James Murphy on vocals and is somewhat indicative of much of the record. While the album does have dark and brooding moments, much of Los Angeles sounds like a modern echo of the psychedelic and strange post-punk of The Cure’s post-Pornography singles, the Banshees’ A Kiss In The Dreamhouse, or more psychedelic and experimental Cure and Banshees’ side projects like The Glove or The Creatures. Indeed, the song “Los Angeles” feels like a modern descendant of Oingo Boingo, Nick Cave, and The Cure’s run of quirky pop singles from the early 80’s like “Let’s Go To Bed” and “The Love Cats”. It is a weird but welcome melange of early 80’s influences reimagined for a new era. 

  1.  “Shame” – Lauren Mayberry       From the non-album single “Shame” 

Lauren Mayberry, singer and frontwoman for Chvrches, decided to try her hand at some solo work and released the singles “Are You Awake?” and “Shame” in 2023. The second of these, “Shame”, is the more interesting of the two. “Shame” draws on peers like St. Vincent, Hayley Williams, and Lorde, and inspirations like the Eurythmics to create a twisted slice of synthpop that is funky, danceable, and just a little dark. “Shame” is the kind of song that likely would have been a radio hit in the 80’s or early 00’s but today is largely lost outside of Mayberry and Chvrches fanbase. And, pun intended, that is a shame.

  1. “Blame Brett” – The Beaches       From the album Blame My Ex 

The Beaches are an all-female Canadian rock band that draws on a variety of alt influences from the 80’s, 90’s and 00’s to create a sound that is somewhat akin to Wet Leg. However, these Canadians are not copycats as they began making music together in 2013 and have released a series of EP’s and an album in the years since; even being awarded Canada’s Juno Awards for Breakthrough Group of the Year in 2018 and Rock Album of the Year in 2022. 2023 saw The Beaches release Blame My Ex which featured the single “Blame Brett”. On “Blame Brett” vocalist and bassist Jordan Miller says to blame all of her bad behaviors and insecurities on her ex-boyfriend, not her. It’s a clever twist of a song that comes across as both tough and vulnerable; she’s broken, but it’s not her fault. The Beaches are another in the long line of young female bands and artists that seem to be reviving rock music over the past few years.

  1.  “Edging” – Blink 182          From the album One More Time 

Early 2000’s styled pop-punk has been in a full revival over the past few years. A string of new bands have helped to revive the style (not to mention several pop stars have at least played around with the style), while several bands from the early 2000’s, such as Paramore and Avril Lavigne, have made a comeback. Another band from that era that had new music in 2023 is Blink 182, who reunited the classic line-up of Mark Hoppus, Tom DeLonge, and Travis Barker, to release One More Time. A few moments on One More Time find the boys in Blink 182 showing some signs of maturity, but the lead single “Edging” consciously plays up the bratty, immature, ear candy style that made the band famous in the first play. 

  1.  “Atomic City” – U2     From the non-album single “Atomic City”

More than forty years after their debut album Boy announced their arrival U2 are still playing a significant role in the world of rock (and old enough to be showing up on the same list as Bono’s son’s band). While one could debate whether or not the non-album single “Atomic City” is worthy of a spot here – although the song is a catchy stab at fizzy pop-punk with a clever, knowing nod to Blondie’s classic “Call Me” – U2 has once again shown themselves to be a band that matters. 2023 saw the opening of Las Vegas’ new, immersive concert venue The Sphere and U2 was tapped to open it with a residency celebrating the anniversary of their career-altering album Achtung Baby. “Atomic City” was a new song recorded and released to help promote the residency. In theory, “Atomic City” is a song written to be in the style of their 90’s work found on Achtung Baby and Zooropa, but truthfully it sounds more like something that would have been on their early 00’s album How To Build An Atomic Bomb (a cousin to “Vertigo”, perhaps). Either way though “Atomic City” is a fun and energetic song from a band that sometimes takes itself too seriously and forgets that rock should be fun and energetic.

  1.  “The Narcissist” – Blur       From the album The Ballad Of Darren 

“The Narcissist” is the lead single from Blur’s 2023 acclaimed album The Ballad Of Darren. In recent years Blur leader Damon Albarn has been better known for his work with his post-modern music side project Gorillaz than for his work with Blur. Blur had scored a well-received comeback with 2015’s The Magic Whip but the release of The Ballad Of Darren shows that Blur is back as a working band. “The Narcissist” finds Blur exploring the melancholy, British Invasion influenced side of their sound and doing it as well as they ever did. Indeed, “The Narcissist” is among the best things Blur has done in quite a while. 

  1.  “Swimming Pools (Drank)” – Trevor Horn (featuring Tori Amos)      From the album Echoes – Ancient & Modern 

Alternative music has become very post-modern by 2023. Influences can come from anywhere and unusual combinations of styles, genres, and even collaborators are often the rule, not the exception. That said, the new covers album from noted producer Trevor Horn, a one-time member of new wave band The Buggles and prog rock outfit (gone pop) Yes, is a strangely effective mix of styles and artists. The best of the bunch is probably Horn’s reimagining of Kendrick Lamar’s “Swimming Pools (Drank)” which features Tori Amos on vocals. Horn’s production and orchestration lends the song a dark, haunted majesty and Amos’ vocals work perfectly for the song. It is an unexpectedly effective cover version of the song.

  1.  “A&W” – Lana Del Rey      From the album Did You Know That There’s A Tunnel Under Ocean Blvd? 

Lana Del Rey continues her recasting of the corruption and decay of our modern, urban culture as Camelot-era America (or is it the other way around?) and she continues to find new and interesting ways to do it. By blending modern hip-hop influences and production with the witty, literate, and maudlin observations of Smiths’ era Morrissey, and the candy-coated pop of 60’s girl groups, Lana Del Rey makes lonely, oversexed modern music that feels like a corrupted version of a more innocent time. “A&W” – both a reference to the Root Beer soda chain and burger joint that evokes 50’s nostalgia with its car side service and initials for “American Whore” – is a song suite that transitions from an icy, orchestrated ballad to a pulsing electronic bridge that finally segues into a hip hop section that finds Del Rey directly drawing on the late 50’s R&B song “Shimmy, Shimmy, Ko-Ko-Bop”. “A&W” is a perfect balance of the innocent and the corrupt, of the old and the new, of naivete and sexuality, of pop, indie, and hip hop. Another classic from LDR. 

2. “Hey Ladies” – Beastie Boys: An Artist A Week/A Song A Day – A History of Alternative Music

2. “Hey Ladies” – Beastie Boys

(From the album Paul’s Boutique)

1989

Beastie Boys debut album Licensed To Ill was one of the most successful rap albums of all time at the time of its release but the period after its release was fraught with problems. The ensuing tour was plagued by arrests, lawsuits, and a riot during a show in Liverpool, England. The Beastie Boys also ran into problems with their record label Def Jam. Label boss Rick Rubin was directing Tougher Than Leather, a film meant to be both a star vehicle for Run DMC and a promotional vehicle for Def Jam Records. The Beastie Boys were part of the stable of acts on Def Jam and were included in the film, but when they weren’t paid for the work they had done for the film the Beastie Boys exited their contract and signed with Capitol Records. The Beastie Boys then got to work making their second album Paul’s Boutique. Working with the Dust Brothers as producers the Beastie Boys Paul’s Boutique was an innovative and creative work that relied heavily on samples to create the soundscape of the album. While the reputation of Paul’s Boutique as both a groundbreaking work and a masterpiece album has only risen over the years the album was originally mixed critical reviews and was a commercial flop. To some degree this is understandable as the record was experimental; a baroque collage of rap, rock, funk, and extensive use of samples that was very different from the frat boy party rap/rock of Licensed To Ill. It also didn’t help that the Beastie Boys were seen as a novelty act and little more than a one-hit wonder and Capitol didn’t promote the record very much. Indeed, lead single “Shake Your Rump” didn’t chart in the US or the UK (not even on the R&B chart or the new rap chart) which seemed to validate the belief that these white frat boy rappers couldn’t follow up the unexpected success of Licensed To Ill or grow up and evolve their sound. What everybody seemed to initially miss was that the kaleidoscopic music was complex and interesting and that the actual rapping was both skilled and clever (all traits that would slowly come to be recognized over the years). Despite the lack of success Capitol did allow the release of a second single, “Hey Ladies”. While “Hey Ladies”, a clever mix of the Beastie Boys new style and their older party vibes, was not a major success the song did find just enough success to keep Paul’s Boutique from vanishing without a trace when it briefly cracked the US Top 40, peaking at #36 (although it did hit #10 on the rap chart). However, somewhat unexpectedly, “Hey Ladies” also hit #18 on the relatively new US alternative/modern rock chart. Having largely failed to score hits on the pop charts, this surprise success with an alternative rock audience suggested a possible way forward for the group; a direction that would make even more success with the rise of alternative rock in the early 1990’s.

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