Hiljaiset Levyt - PUNKNET 77 - 100 Best Punk Singles - EP's
Hiljaiset Levyt - PUNKNET 77 - 100 Best Punk Singles - EP's
Hiljaiset Levyt - PUNKNET 77 - 100 Best Punk Singles - EP's
It seems lately that there's been a growing trend among those who like independent rock
and
roll to consider the punk and new wave bands of 1976 to 1979 as unhip or irrelevant. At
the
same time, there's been a new acceptance of a lot of the bands of the early 70s that used
to
be classified as the corporate dinosaurs of rock and roll. All I can say is that the people
who
think this way must have not been paying any attention to music at the time to think
this way.
Those punk bands of the late 70s saved us from the total death of rock and roll,
and without
them there would be no independents at all today. There would be no choices
except what
the major labels chose to let you hear, and that's a pretty bleak picture when
you consider
that what they release now is even more useless than it was in 1976.
The only possible reason I can think of that people dismiss the value of those early punk
bands is that they blame them for the fact that the promise of punk was never fulfilled and
the anticipated revolution in rock and roll that punk was supposed to lead never
materialized
on a commercial scale. But at least the punks tried; nobody else even went that
far. So if
some of the anthemic lyrics sound a little silly now, that's only because of historical
perspective. And that still leaves the average punk song with ten times as much to say as
your early 70s sludge rock Zep imitators.
The basic unit of punk was the single. The best bands put out plenty of lps as well, but there
were a whole lot more little bands that only released singles. A lot of the singles were on
major labels, a surprising fact given today's climate where the majors hardly ever release
singles by anybody. In the US, though, the best singles were generally on independents; the
majors' approach was to release singles to hype lps, and they generally chose the safest,
quietest song from a given lp to promote a band. In the UK, the single still held a fair
amount
of stock and lots of good stuff was out on majors. There were a hell of a lot more
British
singles than in the US, so a lot of great American bands aren't represented here and
there
are a lot mroe British bands. But the British bands probably were better at the time,
too.
They had more going for them; a more cohesive scene, better press, more venues, and
more
willing audiences. Wonder what happened?
Since a number of people have written me asking that I give some information on early
punk
bands, I thought it might be fun to list a sort of minimal singles collection or punk
bands from
1976 to 1979. This isn't meant to be a "best of" list; otherwise there'd be piles
more singles
by the top flight bands like the Buzzcocks, Damned, Pistols or Jam. It's
deliberately limited
to no more than two singles by any one band. The attempt is to give a
fairly broad overview
of some of the best punk and new wave singles by a broad spectrum
of bands. Most of these
singles were pretty easy to get when they were released, but no
they'd take a fair amount of
time and money spent at swap meets to scarf up...I didn't have a
lot of them myself and had
to rely on friends collections and taped copies for a lot of it.
These guys did a couple of lps and evolved into the Zarkons, but they never matched the
white hot fury of these two tracks. "Nothing" got massively watered down for a subsequent
lp
take, but both these songs are pure rage on this single.
These guys were sort of a poor man's Sham 69; rather unoriginal, but these are both strong
songs and are part of the beginnings of the splintering of punk into stuff like Oi, so they're
worth giving notice to.
One of the greatest punk bands ever; this was the only record released by them when they
were still playing. Penelope Houston was one of the best female singers of the 70s, and if
the
Avengers had been British they probably would've been up there with the Clash, Pistols,
and the other first division bands. "We Are The One" is probably the best song they ever did.
(Chrysalis)
Sure, Debby Harry is about 90 and Blondie got pretty lame, but those early
Blondie records
were classic power pop and I can still listen to them over and over. "X
Offender" has classic
lyrics and a great tune, while "Presence" is just sheer class.
Part of the second wave of punk bands that came on in the wake of the Pistols, Damned and
Clash, the Boys never really got their due, although a friend of mine says he first heard
them
on the TV show "WKRP In Cincinatti" (the mind boggles). Anyway, "First Time" is great
poppy punk with lyrics that would've been at home in a Buzzcocks song, while "Brickfield
Nights" is a little more sophisticated with piano bits, but still great.
I give up; no matter what two I choose everybody will argue. Take the whole Singles Going
Steady lp and bronze it. I chose both these because although they may not be the best
songs,
as a pairing of A and B sides, they might stand an argument as the best overall
quality. But
they're all brilliant.
CHELSEA - Look At The Outside/Don't Get Me Wrong (Step Forward)
Chelsea were far from the most talented or heralded, but their brand of dole-queue punk
could at times rise to pretty good heights, especially on singles, where they had five or six
good ones. This one has two really good sides with some snarling vocals from Gene
October.
It's interesting to note that the original Chelsea was October and all of Generation
X except
Billy Idol! Wierd.
These guys were one of the best neo-mod bands, coming along in 1979 just as punk was
really splintering into a dozen different camps. This isn't their best record...that would
either
be "Maybe Tomorrow" or "Something's Missing", but they came out in the 80s. This
one's
damn good stuff...Jam fans would love it.
There's a big Clash backlash now, since they've all gotten so stupid, but the Clash in their
heyday could almost really claim the title of THE ONLY BAND THAT MATTERS. Singles
weren't their big thing; their best song, "Safe European Home" isn't even on 7". People will
pan me for not picking "White Riot", but I think that has more historical significance than
musical quality, while these four tracks are all great tunes that show the best attribute of
the
Clash; the blend of Mick Jones and Joe Strummer.
Hard to believe now, but in the 70s one of the big issues was the way radio didn't play
anything interesting. Nowadays nobody even expects them to...anybody who likes good
music ignores radio altogether. This song shows Costello with the Attractions when they
were fresh and angry...I'll never forget them cutting from "Watching The Detectives" to this
song on Saturday Night Live because this one was so much more relevant to the US, and
pissing off the SNL producers royally in the process.
I guess everybody knows about the Damned. "New Rose" was an easy choice; it's pretty
close to the best punk song ever made as far as I'm concerned. The crazed version of the
Beatles "Help!" doesn't hurt, either. The second single was tougher...could've opted for
"Neat
Neat Neat" or "Smash It Up", but "Love Song" marked the return of the Damned after a
long
hiatus with as much power as when they left, and although "Suicide" is a klunker, "Nosie
Noise Noise" is a cool one.
These guys didn't have as many singles as they should've, but "Sonic Reducer" is a great
piece of metallic punk. This group was America's answer to the Pistols while they lasted.
THE DEAD KENNEDYS - California Uber Alles/Man With The Dogs (Fast)
THE DEAD KENNEDYS - Holiday In Cambodia/Police Truck (Cherry Red)
When I first heard "California Uber Alles" I thought I'd finally found a band to match the
fury
of the Pistols, since they had already split. Alas, subsequent Kennedy's records leaned
more
towards the thrashy or experimental and lacked the power of these two. By the way, if
you
only have these on lp, you really haven't heard them, because both these singles have
far
superior versions.
In my estimation, the Dickies were the first to play hardcore, although they made it more
poppy with brighter tunes than most subsequent bands. But they certainly had the pace.
These two songs are the Dickies at their best...the only better song they ever did was their
cover of "Paranoid".
The Diodes were a Canadian group that actually did about 4 lps. Their first one is the only
good one, and it included both sides of this single. The A side is a great, hard edged power
pop version of the sixties classic. The flip is their own and equally punchy.
The Drones records used to sit in the record shop bins all over and get marked down until
they were sold for ridiculous prices like 49 cents. Everybody who even thought of them
hated them in the 70s...but they played classic dole-queue punk and now their records are
pretty highly sought after. This one has four of their best.
EDDIE AND THE HOT RODS - Do Anything You Wanna Do/Schoolgirl Love
(Island)
EDDIE AND THE HOT RODS - Quit This Town/Distortion May Be Expected
(Island)
This poor band went from penthouse to outhouse in about 9 months; when they first started
pub-rock was the rage and they rocked harder than anybody, but when real punk came
along
they sounded a little slow. Still, they wrote some great tunes (like the whole Life On
The Line
lp). "Do Anything" is an all time classic in my book...an essential record.
The start of the garage band revolution was actually before 1980 with bands like DMZ, the
Lyres, and the Fleshtones. This is the first Fleshtones single, and it's a great one, both sides.
These guys were press darlings for quite a while as the first real post-punk band. Their mix
of funk with punk and politics was pretty intriguing for quite a while, and their first ep,
along
with the later "At Home He's A Tourist" probably contain the best examples of it all on
45.
Billy Idol may be a laughable fool now, but when he started in Generation X as a teenager
he
fronted a band that played some of the most tuneful and exciting punk rock anywhere.
The
first five Generation X singles were all great, and one can only speculate as to what
would
make them lose it so totally later.
Part of the CBGB crowd, Richard Hell played in Television before striking out on his own.
This stuff is definitely art-punk, and althoug a lot of Hell's stuff is a bunch of crap, "Blank
Generation" was a great song about alienation. Hell often gets credit for being the first to
wear ripped shirts with safety pins in them, by the way.
These songs were really recorded in 1974 or 75, but this single came out in 1979. It's great
New York Dolls sounding guitar rock. The flip is really the ace cut; the Boys redid it on their
first lp (Casino Steel was in both bands), but it sounds miles better here.
Probably my favorite band ever; the Jam went through about six different sounds in their
career and put out a huge pile of great singles. "In The City" was their first...a great Who-like
punk song with a killer guitar riff later stolen by the Pistols for "Holidays In The Sun".
"When
You're Young" is quite a lot later, and is a much more refined sound, still bristling
with
energy. The flip is different from the lp, too...no strings.
People who saw these guys in Boston in the 70s tell me that they were just fantastic. For the
longest time, this great single of dark sounding punk was all there was to hear of
them...now
there's a cool lp of a radio show that you can find, too.
THE LAST - She Don't Know Why I'm Here/The Bombing Of London (Bomp)
One of the earliest LA power pop bands...they weren't as good as Paul Collin's Beat, but they
did get out this great single...two cool sides.
London were definitely a minor league band on the UK punk scene, but they were MCAs try
to enter the punk marketplace, so they got a good push for a while. "No Time" is really the
only good song I've ever heard by them, but it's really good...hot melody, good singing and
lots of energy.
THE LURKERS - Ain't Got A Clue/Ooh, Ooh I Love You (Beggars Banquet)
It took me a long time to get to like the Lurkers, but when they finally hit me, I loved them.
Their records are very simple, basic, underproduced stuff that makes the Ramones sound
like Queen. But they had a knack for really catchy, singalong choruses and they've got this
amateurish charm that you just have to fall for eventually. I now rank these guys as among
the greats.
Magazine were Howard Devoto's band after he left the Buzzcocks. They were arty and
pretentious as all hell, and there was never a Magazine lp that didn't have at least a few
tracks that I hated passionately. But they also did some great ones; "Shot" is the same
music
as the Buzzcocks' "Lipstick", but played much more like a threat and with much darker
lyrics. "Cruelty" is also mean sounding, but has a great guitar line.
Another basic, stupid second tier punk band that never made it, but they did put out this
smashingly catchy piece of aggro punk that should make any Sham lover smile.
I don't understand how this band is still around; when they started they were best mates of
Gang Of Four and played similar music, though not as consistently good. This is their
second
single, and it's probably the best thing they ever did.
I loved these guys; I still remember buying "Sound Of The Suburbs" at Tower because I
thought the sleeve looked cool (it's a die cut thing shaped like a TV screen with a clear vinyl
record to look through at the picture behind). I was especially happy to find that the song
was
so great...songs of yobbo working class suburban life with great tunes behind. "Solitary
Confinement" was their first...it's even better.
The Monochrome Set were a wierd mix of arty new wave and comedy with lots of
keyboards.
It's the sort of thing I normally hate, except these guys wrote such cool tunes.
This was one
of them.
Another Boston band; these two tracks sound like power pop at first, but they're a little too
awkward for that. But they grow steadily on you if you let them, and I still find this a fun
one
to go back too.
These guys were really no better than punk bands like the Maniacs or UK Subs, but through
perserverence they managed to occassionally do something pretty good. "Nasty Nasty" is
the
best with some fairly ripping guitar parts. Nick Cash's singing may annoy you or make
you
love 'em, depending on how you like strange voices.
Were they really a punk band, or were they a confused early 70s band? They had members
with a dinosaur band heritage, but they did some really cool songs. Peter Perrett sang
through his nose better than anyone with these really down and out lyrics, and there's great
guitar and tunes.
If they had been in London instead of Cleveland, the Pagans would've reached much higher
heights, because they could sure write an amazing punk tune, as you can see from any of
their lp. "Not Now, No Way" is my favorite for its instantly memorable chorus.
Plastic Bertrand caused a minor sensation in 1978 when his first lp came out accompanied
by this single. His nasally French singing over these catchy three chord buzz songs was a
total revalation. People forgot him pretty fast, though, but I still love this song, which he
later
redid with new words as "Jet Boy Jet Girl" (later covered by millions) under the name
Elton
Motello. But the original is the best.
PIL suck. One of the things punk rock was supposed to be about was destroying this elitist
pretentious attitude that so many musicians have. But the press went to Johnny Rotten's
head, and PIL has been guilty of some of the worst excesses in music over the years. But
"Public Image" as a song about the end of the Pistols is a great epitaph; the one PIL song I
even have any desire to hear.
Like the Chords, the Purple Hearts were part of the neo-mod thing. Both these songs were
great pieces of moddish power pop that Jam fans should swallow in large unchewed
chunks.
First Irish punk band? Why, the Radiators From Space, of course! Way before SLF or the
Undertones, these guys did one really great but ignored lp (TV Tube Heart), and then
followed record company advice into oblivion trying to change over to power pop. Their
best
songs are on the lp, but "Enemies" is pretty good.
More old timers that cashed in on punk by switching styles...but they still did it well and
that's
really the question, right? A lot of their stuff was kind of limp power pop, but
"Nervous
Wreck" is great stuff.
The Gods. The band that gave the tablets to Moses. You know 'em. You love 'em. I won't
argue anyone's choices with them...just let me say that my fave Ramone's song is "I'm
Against It" and I searched a long time before I found the French release with "Needles And
Pins" on the flip. The other one is a cheat...it's a British single that combines three of their
best tracks onto one record.
bad timing is all that seperated the Real Kids from greatness. Everybody else was cutting
their hair short and they appeared on their lp jacket with hair down their backs. Nobody
bought it. But in the grooves is some of the greatest garagey power pop ever made. "All
Kindsa Girls" is the best of it all, an absolute classic.
The Records were a Trouser Press fave, but I never got to like them as much because they
were wildly inconsistent. They made two fabulous power pop records; this one and
"Teenarama", but their lps was pretty spotty. A classic example of why you need to buy
singles.
Best Scottish band ever bar none. The Rezillos brand of science fiction power pop/punk was
the pinnacle of the form. The singing duo of Fay Fife and Eugene Reynolds was a pairing
made in heaven, and the band behind them was guitar power to the max. These singles
prove it.
The first punk rock supergroup formed with members of other name bands (Matlock from
the
Pistols, Midge Ure from Slik). Eventually they collapsed under the weight of unbearable
expectations, leaving a spotty track record, but these two singles at least were great pieces
of hard edged power pop with some hot guitar and cool songwriting.
TOM ROBINSON BAND - Rising Free ep: Don't Take No For An Answer/Glad
To Be
Gay/Martin/Right On Sister (EMI)
Tom Robinson started out in the wimpy Cafe Society, and he's a wimp now, but in between
he went through some sort of transitional phase that had him fronting this great political
band.
Fired by Danny Kustow's hot guitar playing and Tom's Cockney vocals, they were at
their
best on these two records...after the first lp it was just downhill.
More Irish mod stuff. Rudi never got the chance to make an lp, but all their singles were
really solid and stand up to lots and lots of playing. This single was a good theme song for
them...it basically says the band wants no part of musical success.
I still don't understand how the Ruts weren't more highly regarded...they made some of the
most ferocious records ever. I wouldn't be without either of these singles, especially the
first,
which has two top drawer go for the throaters. "Society" isn't near their best stuff, but
"Babylon" is absolutely their top track...fantastic.
It was hard to leave out "This Perfect Day", but "I'm Stranded" was a no-brainer choice and I
decided I had to have "Know Your Product" because of the great shouted bits like "Where's
the professor!". Nobody ever made the word "Alright" sound so important in a song as Chris
Bailey, either. Massive three chord punk brilliance.
I really wanted the Scientists ep for this, but even though it was recorded at the same time,
it
didn't come out until 1980. But I'll take "Shake Together" any day, thank you...it's
brilliantly
poppy punk. "Frantic Romantic" is a little too cute for my tastes.
What can I say? The Ramones may have started it all, but the Sex Pistols rubber
everybody's
face in it. Coming out with "God Save The Queen" on the week of the
celebration of the
Queen's 25th anniversary on the throne was a masterpiece of timing. The
A and B side of
both these singles are all great, and the flips are not on Bollocks, although
they probably are
on any of half a dozen other reissues by now.
Sham were a band that forged a strong bond with working class fans in their heyday; it
gave
'em a lot of problems at gigs, which were likely to turn into full scale riots when fans of
several different football teams would show up at the same gig. They had a great aggro style
of playing, and Jimmy Pursey's hoarse, shouted vocals made their songs sound like soccer
cheers. All four sides of these two singles are excellent stuff; they got lame later in their
career, but there was a lot of good stuff for a few years.
Siouxie originally was one of the first Sex Pistols fans, but she grabbed onto the anyone-can-
do-it ethic and started her own band. Even the early Banshees tended to be too arty for me,
and for the past ten years they haven't done anything I'd want to hear, but there were some
good singles (check out the Once Upon A Time singles lp). "Hong Kong Garden" is a great
pop track and their first single.
Skids frontman Richard Jobson was an odd sort with a disturbing tendency to talk in
positive
terms about concepts like master races and things like that. In their songs you could
never
understand the words through his thick Scotts accent, so it didn't matter so much, but
the
Skids martial, anthemic songs could be a real kick.
SLAUGHTER AND THE DOGS - I'm The One/What's Wrong Boy/Hell In New
York (This Record Co.)
These guys have nothing to do with the present day metal band Slaughter, but they did have
a fairly glittery sounding approach to their brand of punk rock. They came from
Manchester,
England, home of the Buzzcocks, and they actually had quite a few good
records besides this
one. They never achieved much popularity, which is probably mainly
because they didn't
sing with pronounced English accents as was the hip style then. But this
has tons of energy
and three really great tunes.
The Specials were, for a fleeting moment, a rare band that created a fairly original sound
that
worked. Most of the bands that were popular when ska was in weren't really very good,
but
the Specials really had it on their first lp. This was the single that kicked it off, and
though I
can't say much for the Selecter track, "Gangsters" was great.
The Starjets were at least as good a power pop band as the Records, yet they never had
anybody champion them, so they were pretty much ignored. Their two singles "War Stories"
and "Schooldays" are a match for the two best Records singles, though...soaring tunes that
can grab you in one play.
It's really hard to leave "Suspect Device" off this list, and taking both sides into
consideration
it may be a better single than either of these, but these are SLF's two greatest
A-sides for
sure; great punk tracks with catchy singalong tunes and Jake's ripped up throat
singing. The
single version of "Gotta Gettaway" is different from the lp take, too. These guys
are damn
near the top of the stack in my book.
I hated the Stranglers when they first appeared because they sounded so much like the
Doors, who I also loathed. But more listenings began to reveal the differences, and I came
to
like their first three lps quite a bit. The four song ep was a US release, and packs together
four great tracks on one record, while "No More Heroes" is just their best ever. Vicious
vocals and swirling keyboards with loud bass marked their sound.
SWELL MAPS - Let's Build A Car/Big Maz In The Country (Rough Trade)
All the rules were thrown out, and in walked Swell Maps as a result. They played windup
toys, vacuum cleaners, alarm clocks, washboards and whatever other junk they could find
to
make a noise, and most of the time it didn't sound forced or pretentious. Some of their
songs
could turn into a mess of disjoint sound, but others had a brilliant naive charm to
them. Nikki
Sudden couldn't really sing...he just sort of chanted over the top of everything.
Their high
points are best documented in the Collision Time lp, which has both of these A
sides.
Another CBGB band that probably needs no introduction; they were best on their first two
lps
where the music they played was their own, as opposed to later when they spent all
their time
searching for new forms and then copying them. This was their first UK single.
Punk rock's number one junkie managed to come up with a fabulous set list in 1977 and has
spent the rest of his career issuing different live versions of the same stuff, it seems. Still,
the originals of those songs were totally great with that trademark slashing and sloppy
guitar
and Johnny's nasal vocals. All five songs on these two records are great, and it's
probably
only his addiction that kept Thunders from getting to be one of the biggest names
in the
business. Of course, without dope, what would he sing about? The lyrics to "Chinese
Rock"
are the best tribute to the love-hate relationship of a heroin addict with himself that
you'll ever
hear.
TV21 - Playing With Fire/Shattered By It All (Powbeat)
Another fairly minor Scottish band with mod tendencies; these guys made some great
songs,
especially their first two singles on Powbeat. Both these tracks are emotionally
charged with
some excellent heartfelt vocals. TV21's strength was in writing songs that built
from fairly
quiet parts into full on anthemic crescendos, and here's some prime examples.
Persistence is the main attribute of the UK Subs; they just played in San Diego the other
night, as a matter of fact. But when punk was happening in the late 70s, there weren't many
people who really paid attention to the Subs, and they were somewhat outside of things.
Singer Charlie Harper has a good hoarse shout, but they only occassionally did a song that
rose up much. "Stranglehold" was one such track.
They really should have changed the name after Midge Ure replaced John Foxx, because
there sure isn't much similarity between the raving "Young Savage" and later wimpy synth
sounds that Ultravox became best known for. Early Ultravox records were pretty cool, and
this one is the best.
A classic example of a young band with great power pop instincts of their own who listened
to
their press instead and didn't stick to what they did best. But for two lps they were pretty
damn great. "You Got My Number" towers over all their other stuff...it's by far the hardest
and nastiest production they ever got, and a killer song. "Jimmy Jimmy" is from their first
lp,
and though it probably isn't as good a song as "Teenage Kicks" or "Get Over You", the
pairing with "Mars Bars" makes it their second best single.
The Vibrators were one of my faves of all time, but since their label made a habit out of
picking their softest stuff for singles, they don't have such a great 7" legacy. These two
tracks
are cool because they're live takes; I love the intro to the A side "This is a song about
girls in
London, and it's called...London Girls!" Both takes are rough and sloppy, but they've
still got
that great chugging drum sound.
Really minor league here...the Vice Creems were fronted by Kris Needs, the guy who single
handedly dragged Zig Zag magazine kicking and screaming from progressive rock hype to a
full on punk coverage. His band didn't get beyond a couple of singles, but I still love this
one;
two super pop/punk tracks with catchy singalong choruses.
I'd stack this single up against just about anything...the Wierdos were hard edged and
deadly
when they did this...much different from their later lps where the had mutated into
some kind
of funny punk joke band. This one has fat, fat, fat powerhouse guitar and tough
singing plus
two full on tunes to boot. Awesome.
Even at the start the Wipers had that spacey guitar feel to them, but it's a much rougher and
more energetic production. Great singing from greg Sage, too...a real dark and moody feel
powers "Better Off Dead". The guitar on these songs is way too sophisticated for the
average
punk songs, but it works fantastically. If they had come from anywhere other than
Portland,
Oregon, the Wipers would've gotten credit for being one of the greatest US bands
ever...they
deserve it.
Wire weren't really a singles band, but they were one of the most original and greatest
bands
of their day. Their first three lps are crucial to any collection; all three are different
from each
other, and each is inventive and creative throughout. The fact that they later fell
into the new
wave dance music sewer is irrelevant; lps like Pink Flag, Chairs Missing, or 154
will endure
forever. "12XU" is to my mind their greatest moment. Short, to the point, raw
and powerful,
it's Pink Flag era Wire at their finest. The other two are no slouches, either.
It's hard to take a full lp of Poly Styrene's screeching, but for a single track here or their it's
pretty cool. I'll take either this single or "The Day The World Turned Dayglo" as the best
examples of X Ray Spex doing their revolt-in-plastic punk. Wierd arty stuff with saxophone.
Definitely new wave and not punk, XTC had a rough edge to them that made them a lot of
fun when they started. They later got more polished and left me behind, but I really like
tracks like "Statue Of Liberty" or this one. I always thought of XTC as being a British version
of the Talking Heads...maybe a little goofier and more fun.
An odd band to be ending up one...the Yachts are universally derided where anyone can be
found that even knows anything about them, but I really loved their first lp S.O.S. for the
way
they hammered out these rocking power pop songs surrounded by swirling washes of
cheap
keyboards. Lots of their songs strung together common threads of boating and
strange tales
of love, and they had some hysterically funny lyrics, like "I wouldn't climb any
mountain for
you/Ford any stream that's a daft thing to do/'Cos I'm cynical cynical cynical
through and
through" from the A side of this one.
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