by Bradley Stern
filed under: Biff, Dolly Rockers, Girls Aloud, Interview, Lady Gaga, Nigel Barker, Ray Hedges, Spice Girls, Sugababes, Take That, The Paradiso Girls, The Saturdays

78a9e55797e0b3f36ed50761cbc2ff2c Interview With...The Dolly Rockers!
In case you haven’t already caught onto the many posts already written about the Dolly Rockers, otherwise known as the UK’s next up-and-coming girl group on the brink of debut, just remember this: Big voices, big personalities, and really, really big hair.

The Dolly Rockers are three young women on their way to super-stardom, and luckily enough, I got a chance to talk to Sophie earlier today before her photoshoot with the other Dollys for the Gay Times and News of the World. It was obviously glorious and–if possible–made me love the Dollys even more than I already do!

So go ahead and read on to hear about pervy managers, why “Gold Digger” isn’t coming out until the end of August, and the truth behind their “How To” YouTube videos. (Hint: THEY CAN’T REALLY WIRE A PLUG!)


If we’re going to do it, you know you only get one chance. We want to do it properly.


Read it now.


Hello?

Hey Sophie, how are you?

I am fine, thank you. How are you?

I’m great. My name’s Brad, I write for MuuMuse. Literally, I’m so excited, I kept telling everyone this week I was about to get Dolly Rockered. [LAUGHS]

Aww! [LAUGHS] Thank you!

Where are you right now? What are you doing?

We’re just getting for a photoshoot. We’re doing a photoshoot for the Gay Times in London.

Oh my God, are you in outrageous outfits right now?

[LAUGHS] Not yet. At the moment, I’ve got a big, like, hairdresser’s gown on. We’ll be getting ready in like half an hour.

aa890968acb90916235900abb323ef22 Interview With...The Dolly Rockers!
Nice. So, it seems like “Je Suis Une Dolly” got picked up at Radio 1, it seems like things have been just going so super fast. Were you prepared for how quickly things have been going?

No, not really. It was really strange because we actually went into Radio 1 to interview with them, and it was all quite surreal. We didn’t—we didn’t expect that. I’ve only actually heard it once myself but all my friends and family were texting me saying “We can hear you on Radio 1!” In England we’re had quite a bit of press, and we’ve been doing the photoshoots and stuff. It hasn’t really sunk in or anything yet, like we haven’t seen ourselves on TV or anything like that yet.

Still, that’s so cool!

Yeah, it is. It’s really good—it’s nice that people are wanting to write about us. They’re being really positive about it as well.

Yeah, well you guys are really great. Actually, I wanted to ask to take it back for a second—when did you first meet and form the Dolly Rockers?

We met four years ago. It was an audition called The Stage in London, and we all went for it. We got the audition—the three of us. And then, our manager wasn’t very good so we left him, so that’s how we got together. We used to be called Innosense before we left. He was like really pervy and tried to like—he just wasn’t, he wasn’t very good. He just wanted us to do covers and do the club scene.

But what about the transformation into the Dollys today, because obviously you’re very different from when you first appeared on…that show.

Yeah, we got in touch with these amazing songwriters, and we were writing with them trying to find a style. Obviously we’re very loud vocally, so we were like “Why don’t we just, like, be us?” So we started writing all the music, and then we came up with the name ourselves. One of the girls was wearing a t-shirt from an old vintage company which is called the Dolly Rockers, so we saw the name and were like “That’s really cool.” Our styling always, always from day one—we always liked messy hair, we always wanted to be different. We didn’t want to do something that everybody else was doing.

Of course.

So everything we did creatively, down to like our video [for "Je Suis Une Dolly"] which is on YouTube. We’ve got a viral video, we directed it. Everything comes from us. We’re not manufactured at all really.

Really, I did want to talk about the video because that truly is the reason I fell in love you guys. Literally, someone messaged me and asked if I’d heard about the Dolly Rockers, and at first I thought it was going to be like a Dolly Parton tribute band, like I had no idea.

Yeah! [LAUGHS]

And within the first ten seconds, I was just—I was hooked. I knew you were like my new favorite girl group.

Aww, well we did that. We literally got in from a gig and got up at like four or five o’clock to do it ‘cause of hair and makeup and stuff. When we filmed it, no one actually—we didn’t get permission from anybody. So everything that you see is true.

So those reactions are really real.

Those reactions are actual people. Nobody knew we were gonna do it—we just ran out. We had this big van that we just ran out and did it in.

Were you absolutely terrified?

I think…we’d had so much Red Bull since we were really tired that I think we were just delusional.

19d452ec28c69cf8ba3e684bf38d3906 Interview With...The Dolly Rockers!

[LAUGHS]

It didn’t really matter. It just seemed normal. It wasn’t like—when people see it and they’re like “Oh my god, it’s crazy!” Obviously we thought it was good but we never—we were just acting ourselves.

Wow. And then, in the massive dance scene where everyone’s dancing behind you, was the song really playing in their headphones and did they learn it?

Yeah. Basically we all had headphones on and we—like, we didn’t have a budget for the video because we didn’t have a record deal then—so we posted a link online and it was like a clip of us teaching the dance routine, we did it in like four steps, five steps. And we just posted it on YouTube and said “If you like it, come on and be in the video.” We didn’t know how many people would turn up, and then loads of people turned up so we gave them headphones and they all had the music. Nobody else in the station could actually hear the music so we looked crazy—we looked like we were just dancing to nothing.

[LAUGHS]

People were just stopping and staring. We did it in a big museum called Tate Modern in London. The people who worked there thought we were part of the workshop project or something they were doing there, so we just pretended we were.

[LAUGHS] Oh my God.

[LAUGHS] Yeah, it was really fun, and it’s had a really good reaction as well.

Yeah, no, definitely. Every time I show people they’re just like “Oh my God, this is fantastic.” [LAUGHS]

[LAUGHS] Aww, thank you.

Also, you have the viral videos on YouTube which are amazing, and thanks to you I finally know how to wire a plug and do my hair really big.

[LAUGHS] Can I actually tell you the truth about the wiring the plug scene?

What?

We couldn’t do it, and that was the only one that we really didn’t know how to do.

Really?

So what happened was, I shouldn’t really tell you, someone actually did that for us. We undid it, and then they re-winded it. It makes it look like we did it. It looks us like—‘cause I kept saying to the Girls, like, they said “Who wants to do the plug?” and I said “I do, ‘cause I’m really good at things ‘round the house and the Girls were like “No, you’re not.” And I was like “Yeah, I am!” When it came down to it, I didn’t know what to do, so there’s one bit where I scream and I’m like “I never said I knew how to wire a plug!!” They’re both like “Oh, you know how to do it. You do it.” And I couldn’t do it.

[LAUGHS] No, it definitely looked like you were having some difficulties.

[LAUGHS] Yeah.

So do you guys live with each other, or are you just friends, or?

We—me and Lucie lived in Manchester, she still stays with me when she comes down, but we’re getting a Dolly House in the next week or so. We’ve just been looking for one but we’ve been so busy that we haven’t had time. We finally just put in for a house, so we’ll be living together as of next week.

Oh, that’s cool!

Should be a bit crazy.

Is there going to be a lot of fighting?

[LAUGHS] Yeah, there will be. It’ll be fun though.

Yeah.

Should be good.

Also, what’s coming up is “Gold Digger.” Got the video and the single coming out. I saw some pictures from the video, it looked fantastic. When are we gonna see it?

You know that actually we’re re-shooting a new video. We did that video, and then we got it back and it wasn’t really right, so we’re re-shooting a new video which is a secret, but you’ll probably see it when it’s out. We actually haven’t done it yet—we’re doing it next week. When we did the video, and we got it back and—obviously, you know, this our launch, we’ve been working for four years—we got it back and we just weren’t…you know, we let a director do it, we didn’t direct that one and he—it just didn’t really work for us for some reason. We didn’t love it, and we said “We want our first one to be amazing.” So we said to them that we wanted to do another one and have more input in it.

So then I guess that makes sense as to why the single’s not coming out until the very end of the summer.

Yeah, yeah, that’s why it got pushed back, ‘cause obviously we want to get it perfect. This was rushing it. And if we’re going to do it, you know you only get one chance. We want to do it properly.

No, definitely. It’s going to be an entirely different concept?

Um…yeah. Completely different, so it’ll be a surprise.

Ooh! I’m excited. [LAUGHS]

[LAUGHS] Hopefully it’ll have a bit more of a feel like the first one. We just need to—we just want to have fun with it, really and be proud of it.

2fbb14bc6b08a15397669e796078ec3f Interview With...The Dolly Rockers!

And then you’ve got the album coming afterward, right?

Yeah, we’re just focusing on the single now. The second single will probably be released around Christmas time, and an album to follow.

Okay, so maybe next year?

Yeah, probably like around New Years or—maybe around Christmas, it depends how the singles do. If they do amazing, we can release it straight away, but we’ve got it ready to go.

I know you’re still recording because you said something on your Twitter that you were recording a song called “Boys Will Be Boys” yesterday?

Yeah. We just got in this morning from Jersey. It’s a really good new song which might be our second or third single.

Oh really?

Yeah. It’s really, really good. Really cool. We haven’t actually got the finished mix back yet, but it’s different from “Gold Digger.”

Are you working with any well known producers or writers?

We wrote with this guy who wrote all the Spice Girls’ stuff. He’s called—we called him Biff. We’ve done a couple album tracks with him, but the people that we write our main stuff, our singles with, are two guys called Ray Hedges and Nigel Butler, and they did a lot of the pop in the ‘90’s, like Take That and things like that, like really big British bands.

Yeah, that’s really classic writers. Okay, so maybe this will give a feel for the kind of music we’re about to hear, but what kind of music are you girls listening to lately?

Well, I personally love—you know the Veronicas?

Yes.

I really like them.

They’re great.

We love people like Lily Allen. Have you got La Roux, do you know who La Roux is over there yet?

Oh, yes, yes.

Yeah, we like her—just quite current stuff really.

How about Little Boots?

Yeah, Little Boots. We like her, we like Pixie Lott. We’re on the same label as Lily Allen, so we like her stuff. Do you like her?

Oh, I love Lily Allen, she’s great. And I think the second album—I like it better than the first one even.

Yeah, we like—we sort of really love her stuff and follow her stuff. We prefer people like that, we love Lady Gaga. Obviously they’re completely different, but just in regards to like they’re sort of self-made, you can tell that they have a big input into what they do.

So that’s really important to you—creative input.

Yeah, like we think like what’s the point in doing something if you can’t speak to people and tell them what you think. There’s no point in just doing something that someone else has written or someone else has told you to because they might not do it.

So then do you write your own lyrics?

Yeah, we co-write all of our stuff. We’ve written a couple of album tracks, but all of our tracks we co-write. We have a say in everything, because obviously we want to agree with what we’re talking about and if someone just writes us a song and we don’t actually know about that subject, there’s no sense in singing about it. That’s like with “Gold Digger”—we’ve been out in London in the West End clubs for years, we used to go all the time, and we’ve seen all the kinds of girls we write about which sort of inspired us. We’ve seen like all the gold diggers hanging outside over at the big clubs waiting for footballers to come out, and like…

And snag ‘em.

And you can see it if you go out in London.

Wow, well that’s good. I’m glad that’s so important to you guys because I think that’s important to being an artist.

I think that’s the only thing that makes people warm to you and actually see personality, otherwise…do you know what I mean?

Definitely.

People like you. Or hate you, it depends upon the person you are, but I think it’s really important to sort of like—it sounds really stupid—but stay true to yourself. I sound like a gang member. [LAUGHS]

Whether they like you or hate you, that’s all that matters as long as you’re getting a reaction really.

Yeah, yeah.

I saw your schedule for tour dates. You’ve got like forty or fifty shows you’re doing up until October.

Yeah.

That’s going to be a lot!

Yeah! [LAUGHS] I actually haven’t seen that yet.

Oh really? [LAUGHS]

Yeah.

Yeah, you’re doing a lot.

Okay. Well, that’s good!

You’re actually performing at my friend Raj’s show on Friday, it’s called ElectroQueer.

Oh, yeah.

And you’re doing a few Pride fests, and you’re doing G.A.Y., so I have to ask: Do the Dolly love their gays?

Yeah, we love them. They’re like—we love performing at gay clubs the most, I think. It’s because we get a really good reaction and I think that we just—I think they quite like us, which is obviously great.

Yeah, well speaking as a representative, I have a feeling they like you too.

[GIGGLES] Thank you.

464cb9116d966724a9c0572819659060 Interview With...The Dolly Rockers!

I don’t want to stir up too much drama, but I’m genuinely interested in knowing—of the girl bands around the U.K. right now, which ones do you actually like and enjoy? Sugababes? Girls Aloud? The Saturdays?

Which ones do we like?

Yes.

Um, we love—there’s a new band called the Paradiso Girls in America. We actually know one of them, Lauren. We love them. Have you seen their video?

Yes, with Eve.

It’s amazing, isn’t it?

It is. It’s great.

They’re all so amazing, we really like them. We like Girls Aloud, we’ve sort of grown up around the music. Our main influence of the girl bands are the Spice Girls for us, really.

Well, I think you guys are—I’ve not seen such energy and amazing, just…fun, since the Spice Girls really, and I do think you are on that level.

They’re sort of our inspiration, really. We watch old videos of them. We YouTube it, and they just have so much fun. I think it’s so important, like, when you’re young and you get this opportunity. What’s the point in being a diva or pretending like something that you’re not? I’m twenty years old, and I get to have photoshoots and gigs and see all these amazing things. So we just have fun with it.

You can tell.

I think that’s what they did, and they were themselves. Like with a lot of girl bands, you don’t know who’s who, they’re just known as the blonde one or the brown-haired one. Do you know what I mean?

Yeah, that’s true.

Which works for some people, but you know, that’s fine. A lot of bands make a lot of money from that and keep their private lives private, which is fine, but I just think if you’re going to do something, you might as well try and make it different or…be yourself.

Absolutely, and I think that’s why we knew the Spice Girls members so quickly, is because they had such distinct personalities.

Mmm. Yeah.

8e534ce2ca54df30b5f0856cdc77209e Interview With...The Dolly Rockers!

And especially since you’re going to be living with each other, that’s just like how they started out too.

Well, to be honest, we have been anyway. We share a bed, the three of us. Like, I used to have a house, and we’d share a bed. We’re all very close and we’re all like—we’re not best friends, but we do argue. We’re human. We’re more like sisters.

Aww, that’s great.

It’s good!

I know you’re probably really busy with the photoshoot and everything if you have to go, so…

I have to get my hair done. I’m not actually doing anything, I’m actually looking in the mirror. [LAUGHS] I shouldn’t tell you that.

[LAUGHS] Okay! Well, I’m gonna let you go.

Are you in America or are you here?

No, I’m in America.

Oh, I was gonna say you should come to our gig on Friday.

Oh, I really want to! I feel like you should come to America.

I think that we’re—[TO MANAGEMENT] are we doing that gig in New York? Oh no, we were going to do a gig in New York, but apparently we’re not doing it now. It might be postponed or something.

Aw! I would love to see you guys.

Whereabouts in America are you?

Well, I’m close to New York. I’m in Connecticut.

Oh, okay. Well if we ever do anything…

Absolutely!

We’ll be sure to let you know.

Do you have any plans to go international, or is that just…

Well, yeah. We’d love to, of course we do, but at the moment we’re just going to concentrate on releasing the single and hopefully it going well, ‘cause we are like a Marmite band, you either love us or hate us. We just hope that we do well, and if we do do well and if we get the opportunity to, then we’d love to come to America or Japan and everywhere.

Yeah, well Japan’s becoming the best music market actually, so that would be great.

Mm, we’d love to go anywhere. We want to see the world as well. Anyone who’ll have us, we’ll come there.

One more question. I know that your look is like big hair, cinched waist, puffy skirt, accessories and things like that. Did anything in particular inspire that or did you just sort of like grow into that look?

No, we always just thought like we want to be like Dolls. We always wanted to be a bit theatrical and a bit different and to stand out, like we wear these outfits sometimes and just go to parties. People tell us to come over and we’ll turn up like that, and people just stare at us like “What are they doing?” but at least they know that they can remember us. We just like big hair, literally. And the puffy skirts and stuff, I think we just came up with it, ‘cause it was like Dolly-fied. We just sort of think it’s different and we want to eventually have a clothing range. That’d be really cool to design loads of things for kids, and these outfits and stuff for people.

That would be really cool, yeah. You should look into doing a thing with TopShop or something.

Yeah, we’d love to! [LAUGHS] So yep, that was why we decided to do that. We just thought—we’ve always done that, I don’t even know where it came from, it was just what we did from day one.

Yeah. Hmm! Very cool.

Thank you.

So, alright, I’m going to let you go. I just wanted to say that I’m very excited to see what you guys do next. I’m excited for the single, I’m excited for the album, and I’m going to do all I can to help promote because I do think you guys are like the next big thing, and I think there’s going to be a lot of wonderful things happening. I’m a huge fan, so I wish you all the luck!

Aw, thank you so much!

You’re welcome.

Alright then, well nice talking to you.

Nice talking to you too! I hope to meet you soon! Come to America.

Yeah, well I’ll try! Okay, thank you!

Bye!

Bye!

Click here to listen to the Dolly Rockers’ “Gold Digger.”


by Bradley Stern
filed under: Björk, David Bowie, Kylie Minogue, Marina And The Diamonds, Video Premiere


Is there ever a time when too much glitter is a bad thing?

Answer: No. As Marina & The Diamonds demonstrates in the lusciously dazzling video accompaniment to her single, “I Am Not A Robot,” being the lovechild of Ziggy Stardust and Kylie “X” Minogue can only be a good thing. Though not a lot actually happens, the video still manages to intoxicate…perhaps because I can do nothing but wonder how she managed to get all the glitter out of her orifices after this shoot.

Oh yeah, and it’s almost like some of Björk‘s “slow pan” videos a la “Cocoon” and “Hunter.” Not as good, but close.

UK Muusers, click below to hear “I Am Not A Robot” from Marina & The Diamonds’ Crown Jewels EP.
badgeitunes61x15dark Marina And The Diamonds: I Am Not A Robot (Video Premiere)


by Bradley Stern
filed under: Sneaky Sound System

700a95a00b03ec78a4610d27b33c611e Sneaky Sound System Are Getting A Bit Lazy And Want You To Do Something About It
So the brilliant Aussie electro-squeakers Sneaky Sound System don’t really feel like making a proper video for “It’s Not My Problem.” Therefore, it’s now your problem.

Make a video for Sneaky Sound System’s #1 UK club smash IT’S NOT MY PROBLEM and you could pick up £5,000 (approx A$10,500, US$8,200) and launch your career along the way.

We’ll provide a beautiful, single-take green-screen shot of Miss Connie singing the song. From there it’s up to you to go crazy with your creative vision, creating backgrounds, graphics, animation or anything else you think will make an amazing video. The only restriction is that you use the entire one-take of Connie and be able to supply your video in a broadcast-quality format.

Look at that, I got a little lazy too!

Interested? Then sign-up here! You really ought to give it a shot–they sound desperate. Plus, there’s five runner-up wins too! JUST DO IT. You can give Connie a silly hat or something.

DL: Sneaky Sound System – “When We Were Young” (Juan Maclean Remix)

For UK Muusers, click below to hear more from Sneaky Sound System.
badgeitunes61x15dark Sneaky Sound System Are Getting A Bit Lazy And Want You To Do Something About It


by Bradley Stern
filed under: Ciara, Melina, Tyra Banks, Video Premiere


Here now is the video for “Work” directed by Melina, Ciara‘s second international single off of Fantasy Ride. (The US will be receiving “Like A Surgeon” shortly.)

Honestly, bitch be fierce in this video. All that hair whipping and jelly knee skipping she’s doing up and down the sand? And in THOSE heels? GRLLLL…Tyra must be z-snapping all over the place right about now. Actually, did anyone else kind of feel like this was one long America’s Next Top Model promotional clip? I kept wondering when Miss Jay was going to come sashaying out of a bulldozer in a giant sequined banana or something.

I do truly believe Ciara is one of, if not the best dancers in the entertainment industry today. And while there’s not nearly enough choreography to really underscore that fact, the video does a nice job of showcasing her penchant for unorthodox dance moves and an ability to pose without flaw.

FIERCE, FABULOUS, AND FLAWWWWLESS.


by Bradley Stern
filed under: Madonna, Paul Oakenfold

24211339ccb301ca97cdd9374565587c Break Out The Neon Binkies: Its Time For A Paul Oakenfold Album
On July 7, renowned DJ, producer, and collaborator for Madge‘s upcoming Greatest Hits collection Paul Oakenfold will release Perfecto Vegas, a 21-track double disc meant to establish an “Ibizan-styled club experience” in celebration of his residency at the Palms Resort in Vegas. In other words, best served with some E and a side of chilled glow sticks.

I’ve got an exclusive 20-minute “teaser mix” of sorts. It gets pretty promising once the vocals start dripping in after two minutes, and then all shades of epic by the ten minute mark. Great, classic Oakenfold.

Fair warning: Heavy trance ahead. Mind your step!

DL: Paul Oakenfold – Perfecto Vegas (Teaser Mix)

Click here Break Out The Neon Binkies: Its Time For A Paul Oakenfold Album to pre-order Perfecto Vegas, or below to hear more from Oakenfold.
badgeitunes61x15dark Break Out The Neon Binkies: Its Time For A Paul Oakenfold Album


by Bradley Stern
filed under: Alexis Strum, Kylie Minogue, Nerina Pallot, Xenomania

8696f57d001d3f2cb4000a1d58eace65 Kylie Minogue Selects Writers For Upcoming Record
This should come as a surprise to no one really, but Kylie Minogue has chosen to go ahead with the massively successful, massively talented ‘production haus’ Xenomania to pen tracks for her upcoming post-X record, due early next year.

According to an article in The Sun, Kylie’s already recorded a few tracks, including “Better Than Today,” which an exec described as an “‘awesome, Scissor Sister-style tune.’” Apparently, the Xeno team will be responsible for six tracks on the record.

I don’t give a damn if they’re everywhere on the UK scene right now–they’ve yet to disappoint. Happy days!

But–there a zinger thrown in! The writer responsible for the remainder of the album is Nerina Pallot, a BRIT-award nominated singer-songwriter who hasn’t been all that successful with her own career but is quite underrated and talented as a writer in her own right. You know, a real Alexis Strum sort of deal. (Has anyone heard from her lately?!)

Additionally, kudos to mikegray on the PopJustice! forums for drawing this possible connection: Nerina Pallot just so happens to be playing an uptempo ditty live called “Better Than Today” lately.

Think that’s a mere coincidence? Add an electro-bass line behind that guitar and tell me that’s not the slowed down version of a classic Kylie track. I mean, come on: “What’s the point of living if you don’t want to dance?” COME ON. That’s Kylie material.


by Bradley Stern
filed under: Bat For Lashes, Björk, Introduucing..., Mikky Ekko

5aec0986b2152a7c0394c010b1c110a3 Introduucing...Mikky Ekko!
This is Mikky Ekko.

Last week, I received a track in my SoundCloud entitled “Sedated,” a crawling, mysterious mixture of moans, claps, finger snaps and a barely-there electro tingle reminisicent of something from Bat For LashesTwo Suns and a hint of Björk‘s Medulla. Very sexual, yet minimal and organic.

In short, I was intrigued.

Listening to Ekko’s MySpace tracks only kept the curiosity rolling, offering unlikely helpings of ambient rhythms and multicultural influences all backed by a pop-noir vocal spook offered by Mr. Ekko himself. Songs like the gorgeous “I Love You I Always Have” (which sounds a bit like a solo take on a classic Beach Boys number) and the cross-breed between country twang and otherworldly echoes of “It’s Only You” offer additional post-pop diversity, all lending themselves to perhaps the most interesting and eclectic finds of 2009.

DL: Mikky Ekko – Sedated

Click below to preview and purchase Mikky Ekko’s Strange Fruit EP on iTunes now.
e44ff8af163a6bb76f90aee00bc5fe54 Introduucing...Mikky Ekko!


by Bradley Stern
filed under: Dolly Rockers

c01d59c8bb9c60c95d6b3523e47ceb9b MuuMuse Is About To Get Dolly Rockered
Yes, you read that title line correctly.

Tomorrow morning, I WILL BE SPEAKING WITH THE DOLLY ROCKERS THEMSELVES.

Undoubtedly, I will stumble all over my words, insult one of the girls, and make a huge mess of the situation. But before I do that, there’s a chance I’ll manage to fumble out some questions properly. In that case–I want your input!

Send me an e-mail or leave me a comment with anything you’d like me to ask the Dollys–from which member of The Saturdays they like the least to how many cans of hair spray they go through on a weekly basis! I AM SO UNBELIEVABLY JAZZED RIGHT NOW.

To celebrate, you can listen to the proper HQ version of “Gold Digger” streaming right here.


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