Miyuki Nakajima

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Miyuki Nakajima
Birth name 中島 美雪 (Miyuki Nakajima)
Born (1952-02-23) February 23, 1952
Origin Sapporo, Hokkaidō, Japan
Genres Folk, rock, kayokyoku, enka
Occupations Singer, songwriter, radio-DJ
Instruments Vocals
Guitars
Years active 1975–present
Labels AARD-VARK/Pony Canyon
Yamaha Music Communications
Website www.miyuki.jp

Miyuki Nakajima (中島 みゆき Nakajima Miyuki) (born February 23, 1952, Sapporo, Hokkaidō, Japan) is a Japanese singer-songwriter and radio personality. She has released 37 studio albums, 40 singles, 2 live albums and multiple compilations as of May 2013. Her sales have been estimated at more than 21 million copies.[1]

In the mid-1970s, Nakajima signed to Canyon Records and launched her recording career with her debut single, "Azami Jō no Rarabai" (アザミ嬢のララバイ). Rising to fame with the hit "The Parting Song (Wakareuta)", released in 1977, she has since seen a successful career as a singer-songwriter, primarily in the early 1980s. Four of her singles have sold more than one million copies in the last two decades, including "Earthly Stars (Unsung Heroes)", a theme song for the Japanese television documentary series Project X.

Nakajima performed in experimental theater ("Yakai") every year-end from 1989 through 1998. The idiosyncratic acts featured scripts and songs she wrote, and have continued irregularly in recent years.

In addition to her work as a solo artist, Nakajima has written over 90 compositions for numerous other singers, and has produced several chart-toppers. Many cover versions of her songs have been performed by Asian (particularly Taiwanese and Hong Kong) singers. She is the only musician to have participated in the National Language Council of Japan.[2]

Early life

Miyuki Nakajima (中島 美雪 Nakajima Miyuki) was born in February 1952 in Sapporo, the capital city of Hokkaidō. Her grandfather, Buichi, was a Hokkaido politician, and her father, Shinichi, ran a clinic in obstetrics and gynecology. Her family moved to Iwanai when she was five, and lived there for six years. She spent most of her teenage years in the city of Obihiro, where she was one of the most eminent graduates of Obihiro Hakuyou High School, along with singer-songwriter Miwa Yoshida and television announcer Shinichiro Azumi. She graduated from Sapporo's Fuji Women's University in 1974.

Nakajima gave her first live performance during her third year in high school, playing a song she wrote titled "Tsugumi no Uta" onstage at a cultural festival.

In 1972, she played in a folk contest at the Hibiya Open-Air Concert Hall in Tokyo, winning the songwriting prize for her "Atashi Tokidoki Omouno." The song, included in the contest album, became her first recorded material.

After graduating college, Nakajima continued to pursue a career as a professional musician for nearly a year. Reportedly, she wrote more than 100 songs before she debuted.

Career as a recording artist

Early career (1975–1980)

On November 14, 1975, Nakajima performed "Jidai" at the 6th Yamaha World Popular Song Festival

In May 1975, her composition "Kizutsuita Tsubasa (Wings of Love - I Knew Nothing)" won a prize at the 9th Popular Song Contest organized by the Yamaha Music Foundation. After signing a contract with Yamaha and Canyon Records, she debuted with a single "Azami Jō no Rarabai," which was released in September 1975. In October, Nakajima entered the Popular Song Contest with another song, "Jidai", which won the prize. The song also won the grand-prix of the 6th World Popular Song Festival, another award organized by Yamaha, which was held in December.[3]

In May 1976, she released her first studio album, Watashi no Koe ga Kikoemasuka. Since then, she has been a prolific recording artist, producing one album each year. In the 1976, Nakajima composed her first number-one hit single, "Abayo," which was recorded by Naoko Ken, and sold more than 700,000 copies.

Throughout her over 30-year career, she has written 90 songs for other artists, some of them huge hits, such as "Shiawase Shibai" (recorded by Junko Sakurada), "Kamome wa Kamome" (a comeback single for Ken, released in 1978), and "If I Could Take to the Sky (Kono Sora wo Tobetara)" (performed by Tokiko Kato, released in 1978). Nakajima occasionally released retrospective albums, composed of songs written for other artists. The first one, Okaerinasai, released in 1979, has sold more than 500,000 units, and it became one of her best-selling albums.

Like other popular folk-rock singers in Japan, including Takuro Yoshida and Yosui Inoue, she has refused to appear on television after she gained popularity, except for a handful of specials. However, Nakajima promoted her materials on television early in her career, particularly through Cocky Pop, which was sponsored by her management office, Yamaha.

Miyuki Nakajima's fifth single "Wakareuta (The Parting Song)", released in September 1977, became her commercial breakthrough as a singer. The song reached number one on the Oricon for one week in December 1977, knocking "Wanted (Shimei Tehai)" by Pink Lady from the top of the hit parade. "The Parting Song" has sold more than 700,000 copies and became one of the following year's biggest hits on the Japanese record charts.

Her fourth studio album, entitled Aishiteiru to Ittekure, reinforced her enduring popularity as a performer. The album, which featured "The Parting Song," also included a protest song entitled "Sejou (World's Context)," which became popular after it was used in the well-known TV drama Kimpachi Sensei in 1981.

In addition to her career as a recording artist, Nakajima has appeared as a personality on radio programs. She hosted All Night Nippon, one of the longest-running programs aired by the Nippon Broadcasting System, from April 1979 through March 1987.[4][5]

Most of her compositions, released in the 1970s and 1980s, featured lyrics which exposed grief or explicit hatred. In particular, her 1980 album Ikiteitemo Iidesuka ("May I Live?" in Japanese) has as its lead-off track "Urami Masu," which includes a haunting lyric which translates to "I'll continue having a grudge against you 'til I die," and vocals which sound like sobbing. These recordings brought about controversy because of their extreme titles.

1980s: Commercial peak and decline

Nakajima experienced her commercial heyday in the first half of the 1980s. Seven of her studio albums that were released during this time (from Ikiteitemo Iidesuka to Miss M.) reached number one on the Oricon Charts successively. "Akujo" was released as a single in autumn 1981 and became one of the biggest hits of the following year, her first number one on the Oricon singles chart since "Wakareuta" in 1977. Kansuigyo, her eighth studio album, featured another interpretation of "Akujo," and was her most commercially successful LP.[6] The album peaked at number one on the Oricon for six weeks, and reached the top of the Japanese year-end albums chart of 1982.[7] In the same year, she produced a couple of top three charting singles, "Yuwaku" and "Unrequited Love."

As a composer and lyricist, Nakajima continued to write for other artists, gaining success. "Suzume (Sparrow)," the first solo single for ex-Pink Lady Keiko Masuda, led the performer to the top 10 spot once again. In 1983, Nakajima won the 25th Japan Record Award for her songwriting on "Haru Nanoni," a song sung by then-teenage pop icon Yoshie Kashiwabara.

She continued career as a recording artist regularly during the mid-1980s, though subsequent releases were commercially less successful compared with previous materials. A string of her efforts from that time has featured harder-edged sounds.

"Cold Farewell (Tsumetai Wakare)," released as a single in 1985, was the first song she produced in countries outside Japan. The top 10-charting song features a lengthy harmonica solo performed by Stevie Wonder.[8] He also played the synthesizer on Nakajima's subsequent single "Atai no Natsuyasumi," released the following year.[9]

In 1987, Nakajima contributed lyrics for a composition by Tsugutoshi Goto, a bassist and a record producer who had been a longtime collaborator withr her.

The song entitled "Fu-Ji-Tsu" was released as a second single for teen idol Shizuka Kudo, who was also well known as an ex-member of Onyanko Club. During the late 1980s and early 1990s, Nakajima and Goto wrote 17 songs for Kudo, and some of them topped the chart, including "Dokoku (I Cried All Night)" released in 1993 and certified quadruple platinum by the RIAJ for shipments of in excess of a million copies.[10] Her songwriting partnership with Goto ended in 1993, but Nakajima has continued to write several songs for Kudo in later years.[11]

Project with Ichizo Seo and Yakai

Nakajima worked with longtime co-record producer Ichizo Seo for the first time on the album Goodbye Girl, released in 1988. Nakajima, highly satisfied with the recording of the album, considered Seo to the most appropriate musical partner for her, and she has been working with him since the end of the 1980s.

After enlisting a new collaborator, Nakajima launched the experimental musical Yakai at the Bunkamura Theatre Cocoon, in Shibuya, Tokyo. Yakai was composed of intricate story lines she wrote, and it started initially as jukebox music mainly comprising her previously released songs. Her idiosyncratic efforts gradually became stage performances which she performed every December for 10 years. Since the 7th act, entitled 2/2, in 1995, Yakai was composed of new songs she composed especially for the performance. Most of these performances have been released on DVDs.

1990s

Since the 1990s, Nakajima gradually began to appear on several television programs and commercials, although she continuously rejected offers to appear on the pop music television shows. In 1992, Nakajima appeared on the television drama Shin'ai Naru Mono e (titled after her 1979 studio album), performing a role as a doctor on the first and last episodes.[12]

From 1993 through 2000, Nakajima appeared regularly on TV commercials for the Japan's Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications. The commercials (most of them featuring a new rendition of her early song, "Time Goes Around," recorded in 1993) were aired during the Bon Festival and holiday seasons in Japan.

"Asai Nemuri (Shallow Sleep)," a theme song Nakajima wrote for the drama Shin'ai Naru Mono e, was released as a single and found success, selling more than a million copies and peaking on the charts at number two. It was included on her studio album East Asia released in October 1992. The album also featured "Ito (Tapestry)," one of her songs that has been covered by many artists, especially famous for the interpretation by Kazutoshi Sakurai and Takeshi Kobayashi's charity supergroup Bank Band.

In the middle of the decade, she wrote a couple of theme songs for Ienakiko, the TV drama series starring Yumi Adachi, which was aired on the NTV. The song, titled "Sora to Kimi no Aida ni (Between the Sky and You)," was released as a single in May 1994, and debuted at number one on the Japanese Singles Chart. The song became her most commercially successful record to-date, selling in excess of 1.4 million copies. The other song, her composition "Wanderers Song," was featured on the sequel of the drama series aired the following year. It also gained similar success, reaching number one on the charts and selling over 1 million units.

Daiginjo, her compilation which was released in March 1996, became her last number one song on the albums chart, making her the oldest female artist to produce a number one album on the Japanese music chart at that time (the record was overtaken by Yumi Matsutoya and Mariya Takeuchi in later years).

However, each of her studio albums released in the 1990s were commercially lackluster, and some of them failed to reach the top 10 on the charts. Tsuki, Wings and Hi; Wings released in 1999, were the least-selling albums for her. Both albums have sold less than 50,000 copies.[6]

Lyrics written by Nakajima have been acclaimed both literarily and educationally. She is known as the first and the only musician who was a participant of the National Language Council of Japan, in which she took part in the late 1990s.[13]

2000s

A quarter of a century after her debut, Miyuki Nakajima left the Pony Canyon label and moved to the newly founded Yamaha Music Communications. There, she released a double A-side single "Earthly Stars (Unsung Heroes)"/"Headlight Taillight," which later became her most well-known songs. She wrote the songs as theme songs for Project X, a television documentary program which premiered on NHK in March 2000. The single debuted at number 15 on the Oricon in July 2000, and it continued charting for over two years. To express her thanks for the unexpected commercial success of the theme songs of Project X, Nakajima decided to appear on the 53rd annual music program Kōhaku Uta Gassen, aired by the NHK on New Year's Eve of 2002. It gained public attention because it was her first live performance on television since the late 1970s.

In 2006, Nakajima wrote the song "Sorafune (Ship in the Air)" for the boy band Tokio. The song was used as the closing theme for My Boss, My Hero, the TV drama starring the group's frontman Tomoya Nagase. It became the second most commercially successful material for the band, which followed their debut single, and remained on the Oricon chart for more than a year, selling approximately 480,000 copies. "Ship in the Air" was also the first chart-topper to which Nakajima contributed both lyrics and melody for other artists in 30 years, since "Abayo" was recorded by Naoko Ken in 1976.[14] A month after the release of her studio album Lullaby Singer, which featured her own interpretation of "Ship in the Air," her contribution for the Tokio won "best lyrics" of the 48th Japan Record Award.[15]

The studio album entitled I Love You, Do You Hear Me? was released on October 3, 2007. The album debuted at number four on the Oricon with in excess of 39,000 copies sold in its first week of release, and it provided Nakajima with her 34th top ten hit on the Japanese albums charts.

Honors

In November 2009, Nakajima was awarded a Medal of Honor with purple ribbon by the Government of Japan.[16]

Discography

Studio albums

  • Watashi no Koe ga Kikoemasuka (私の声が聞こえますか) (1976)
  • Minna Itte Shimatta (みんな去ってしまった) (1976)
  • A Ri Ga To U (あ・り・が・と・う) (1977)
  • Aishiteiru to Ittekure (愛していると云ってくれ) (1978)
  • Shin-ai Naru Mono e (親愛なる者へ) (1979)
  • Okaerinasai (おかえりなさい) (1979)
  • Ikiteitemo Iidesuka (生きていてもいいですか) (1980)
  • Month of Parturition (臨月 Ringetsu)" (1981)
  • Kansuigyo (寒水魚) (1982)
  • Hunch (予感 Yokan) (1983)
  • How Do You Do (はじめまして Hajimemashite) (1984)
  • Change (御色なおし Oiro Naoshi) (1985)
  • miss M. (1985)
  • 36.5°C (1986)
  • Miyuki Nakajima (中島みゆき Nakajima Miyuki) (1988)
  • Goodbye Girl (グッバイ ガール Gubbai Gāru) (1988)
  • Kaikinetsu (回帰熱) (1989)
  • Yoru wo Yuke (夜を往け) (1990)
  • Utadeshika Ienai (歌でしか言えない) (1991)
  • East Asia (1992)
  • Jidai (時代~Time Goes Around Time Goes Around) (1993)
  • Love or Nothing (1994)
  • 10 Wings (1995)
  • Paradise Cafe (パラダイス・カフェ Paradaisu Kafe) (1996)
  • Be Like My Child (わたしの子供になりなさい Watashi no Kodomo ni Narinasai) (1998)
  • Sun: Wings (日-WINGS Hi -Uingusu-) (1999)
  • Moon: Wings  (月-WINGS Tsuki -Uingusu-) (1999)
  • Short Stories (短編集 Tanpenshū) (2000)
  • Lullaby for the Soul (心守歌 Kokoromoriuta) (2001)
  • Otogibanashi: Fairy Ring (おとぎばなし -Fairy Ring- Otogibanashi -Fearī Ringu) (2002)
  • Love Letter (恋文 Koibumi) (2003)
  • Ima no Kimochi (いまのきもち) (2004)
  • Ten-Sei (転生 Tensei) (2005)
  • Lullaby Singer (ララバイSINGER Rarabai Shingā) (2006)
  • I Love You, Do You Hear Me? (I Love You, 答えてくれ Ai Ravu Yū, Kotaetekure) (2007)
  • Drama! (2009)
  • Midnight Zoo (真夜中の動物園 Mayonaka no Dōbutsuen) (2010)
  • From the Icy Reaches (荒野より Kōya Yori) (2011)
  • Night-light (常夜灯 Jōyatō) (2012)

Filmography

Year Title Role
1985 Yousei Florence Fairy Musica (voice)
1997 Tokyo Biyori Bar hostess
2005 Sayonara Color Doctor Iwaodake
2005 Glass no Tsukai (Dreaming of Light) Itoko, the Fortune-teller
2006 The Mamiya BrothersJunko Mamiya

Live performances

Tours

  • 1977 Spring Concert
  • 1977 Autumn Concert
  • 1978 Spring Tour
  • 1978 Autumn Tour
  • 1979 Spring Tour
  • 1979 Autumn Tour
  • Miyuki Nakajima Concert (1980 Autumn Tour)
  • Sabishiki Tomo e (寂しき友へ) (1981)
  • Sabishiki Tomo e II (寂しき友へII) (1982)
  • Utahime (浮汰姫) (1982–83)
  • Nakajima Miyuki Concert Fuku Koro ni (蕗く季節に) (1982–83)
  • Nakajima Miyuki Concert '84 Asu wo Ute! (明日を撃て!) (1984)
  • Nakajima Miyuki Concert '84 Gekkou no Utage (月光の宴) (1984–85)
  • Nakajima Miyuki Concert '85 No Thank You (のぅさんきゅう Nousankyu) (1985)
  • Nakajima Miyuki Concert '85 Utagoyomi (歌暦) Page 85" (1985)
  • Nakajima Miyuki Concert '86 Gobanme no Kisetsu (五番目の季節) " (1986)
  • Nakajima Miyuki Concert '86 Utagoyomi (歌暦) Page 86 "Koiuta (恋唄) " (1986)
  • Miyuki Nakajima Concert '87 "Suppin Vol.1" (1987)
  • Nakajima Miyuki Concert 1989 Nousagi no You ni (野ウサギのように) " (1989)
  • Concert Tour '90 "Night Wings" (1990)
  • Concert "Carnival 1992" (1992)
  • Concert Tour '93 "East Asia" (1993)
  • Concert '95 "Love or Nothing" (1995)
  • Concert Tour '97 "Paradise Cafe" (1997)
  • Concert Tour '98 (1998)
  • XXIc. 1st. (2001)
  • Concert Tour 2005
  • Concert Tour 2007

Yakai

  • Yakai (夜会) (1989)
  • Yakai 1990 (夜会1990) (1990)
  • Yakai Vol.3 Kan-Tan (邯鄲) (1991)
  • Yakai Vol.4 Kinkanshoku (金環蝕) (1992)
  • Yakai Vol.5 "Hana no Iro wa Utsuri ni keri na Itazura ni Waga Mi Yo ni Furu Nagame Seshi Ma ni" (「花の色はうつりにけりないたづらに わが身世にふるながめせし間に」) (1993)
  • Yakai Vol.6 Shangri-La (シャングリラ) (1994)
  • Yakai Vol.7 2/2 (1995)
  • Yakai Vol.8 Tou Onna (問う女) (1996)
  • Yakai Vol.9 2/2 (1997)
  • Yakai Vol.10 Kaishou (海嘯) (1998)
  • Yakai Vol.11 Winter Garden (2000)
  • Yakai Vol.12 Winter Garden (2002)
  • Yakai Vol.13 24-ji Chaku 0-ji Hatsu (24時着0時発) (2004)
  • Yakai Vol.14 24-ji Chaku 00-ji Hatsu (24時着00時発) (2006)
  • Yakai Vol.15 Ganso Konbanya (元祖・今晩屋) (2008–09)

Awards

Japan Record Awards
Year Title Category Personnel
1976 (18th) "Abayo"[17] Vocal Performance (Performer: Naoko Ken / Composer and lyricist: Nakajima / Arranger: Kuni Kawauchi)
1978 (20th) "Shiawase Shibai"[18] Gold Prize (Performer: Junko Sakurada / Composer and lyricist: Nakajima / Arranger: Kei Wakakusa)
1981 (23rd) Month of Parturition (Ringetsu)[19] Best 10 Albums (Performer, composer, lyricist and producer: Nakajima / Arrangers: Katz Hoshi, Hiromi Yasuda, Mitsuo Hagita, Masataka Matsutoya)
1982 (24th) Kansuigyo[20] Best Albums/Best 10 Albums (Performer, composer, lyricist and producer: Nakajima / Arrangers: Nozomi Aoki, Masataka Matsutoya, Tsugutoshi Goto)
1983 (25th) "Haru Nanoni"[21] Best Songwriting (Lyricist and producer: Nakajima / Performer: Yoshie Kashiwabara / Arranger: Katsuhisa Hattori)
1984 (26th) "Saiai"[22] Gold Prize (Performer: Yoshie Kashiwabara / Lyricist and composer: Nakajima / arranger: Nobuo Kurata)
1988 (30th) "Mugo, n... Iroppoi"[23] Gold Prize (Performer: Shizuka Kudo / Lyricist: Nakajima / Composer, producer and arranger: Tsugutoshi Goto)
1992 (34th) East Asia[24] Best 10 Albums (Performer, composer, lyricist and producer: Nakajima / Co-producer and arranger: Ichizo Seo)
2006 (48th) "Ship in the Air (Sorafune)"[25] Best Lyrics (Performer: Tokio / Lyricist and composer: Nakajima / Arranger and producer: Motoki Funayama)
Japan Gold Disc Award
Year Song Category Personnel
1989 (4th) "Kousa ni Fukarete"[26] Five Best-selling Singles of year (Performer: Shizuka Kudo / Lyricist: Nakajima / Composer, producer and arranger: Tsugutoshi Goto)
1994 (9th) "Between the Sky and You (Sora to Kimi no Aida ni)"/"Fight!"[27] Five Best-selling Singles of year (Performer, composer, lyricist and producer: Nakajima / Co-producer and arranger: Ichizo Seo, Takayuki Inoue)

See also

Notes and references

  1. "List of best-selling music artists in the history of Japanese Oricon Charts" (in Japanese). Retrieved 2007-10-09. 
  2. 国語を考える「時代」に. Tokyo: Mainichi Shimbun. December 15, 1998 
  3. "List of the Performers at the 6th World Popular Song Festival". 
  4. "List of the personalities of All Night Nippon during the 1970s". allnightnippon.com (in Japanese). Nippon Broadcasting System. Archived from the original on 2001-08-17. Retrieved 2009-01-14. 
  5. "List of the personalities of All Night Nippon during the 1980s". allnightnippon.com (in Japanese). Nippon Broadcasting System. Archived from the original on 2001-08-17. Retrieved 2009-01-14. 
  6. 6.0 6.1 "Yamachan Land (Archives of the Japanese record charts) - Albums Chart Daijiten - Miyuki Nakajima" (in Japanese). Retrieved 2008-01-24. 
  7. "Yamachan Land (Archives of the Japanese record charts) - Albums Chart Daijiten - 1982 Oricon Year-end Albums" (in Japanese). Retrieved 2008-01-24. 
  8. "Overview and Cover art of "Cold Farewell" cited on Japanese Stevie Wonder Fan Site". wonderlove.jp (in Japanese). Retrieved 2007-10-09. 
  9. "Personnel of Miyuki Nakajima song "Atai no Natsuyasumi"" (in Japanese). Retrieved 2007-10-09. 
  10. "A nice relationship between Shizuka Kudo and Miyuki Nakajima". oricon.co.jp (in Japanese). Retrieved 2008-11-24. 
  11. "Shizuka Kudo new single "Night Wing" will be released on November 5". oops-music.co (in Japanese). Retrieved 2008-12-04. 
  12. "TV 親愛なる者へ - allcinema" (in Japanese). Retrieved 2008-01-24. 
  13. 朝日新聞 【青鉛筆】. Tokyo: Asahi Shimbun. February 20, 1999 
  14. "Miyuki Nakajima composition topped the chart for the first time in 357 months". oricon.co.jp (in Japanese). Original Confidence. Retrieved 2008-09-09. 
  15. "List of the 48th Japan Record Award winning songs". Tokyo Broadcasting System (in Japanese). Retrieved 2008-09-09. 
  16. "678 individuals, 24 groups awarded Medals of Honor," Mainichi Shimbun. November 3, 2009.
  17. Japan Composer's Association "History of the Japan Record Awards - List of the 18th Award Winners" (in Japanese). Retrieved 2008-12-28. 
  18. Japan Composer's Association "History of the Japan Record Awards - List of the 20th Award Winners" (in Japanese). Retrieved 2008-12-28. 
  19. Japan Composer's Association "History of the Japan Record Awards - List of the 23rd Award Winners" (in Japanese). Retrieved 2008-12-28. 
  20. Japan Composer's Association "History of the Japan Record Awards - List of the 24th Award Winners" (in Japanese). Retrieved 2008-12-28. 
  21. Japan Composer's Association "History of the Japan Record Awards - List of the 25th Award Winners" (in Japanese). Retrieved 2008-12-28. 
  22. Japan Composer's Association "History of the Japan Record Awards - List of the 26th Award Winners" (in Japanese). Retrieved 2008-12-28. 
  23. Japan Composer's Association "History of the Japan Record Awards - List of the 30th Award Winners" (in Japanese). Retrieved 2008-12-28. 
  24. Japan Composer's Association "History of the Japan Record Awards - List of the 34th Award Winners" (in Japanese). Retrieved 2008-12-28. 
  25. Japan Composer's Association "The 48th Japan Record Award - Best Lyricist" (in Japanese). Retrieved 2008-12-28. 
  26. Recording Industry Association of Japan "List of the 4th Gold Disc Award Winners" (in Japanese). Retrieved 2008-12-28. 
  27. Recording Industry Association of Japan "List of the 9th Gold Disc Award Winners" (in Japanese). Retrieved 2008-12-28. 

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