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PIZZARELLI BUCKY THE ROMANCE OF THE CHORDAL GUITAR SOUND Mel Bay CD TABLATURE LIBRO

PIZZARELLI BUCKY, THE ROMANCE OF THE CHORDAL GUITAR SOUND. SHEET MUSIC BOOK WITH CD & GUITAR TABLATURE . 

LIBRO METODO DI MUSICA JAZZ CON CD.

SPARTITI PER CHITARRA :

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA E TABLATURE.

Product Description
Bucky Pizzarelli is a giant on today's jazz guitar scene. He has played with virtually every big name in the business. Along the way, he has been a staff musician with NBC, ABC, Skitch Henderson, and Doc Severinsen, has appeared at Carnegie Hall with George Barnes and Les Paul, has performed at the Boston Pops with Stephane Grappelli, and has played a solo concert at Town Hall in New York city. He has countless albums and jazz tours to his credit. In this fine new text, Bucky presents five original solos written specifically to explore the chordal jazz sound unique to the guitar. In notation and tablature. The accompanying CD has 8 samples and 5 original guitar solos as written and played by one of the world's jazz greats, Bucky Pizzarelli.

Foreword
At the same time Andres Segovia was elevating the classical guitar to its proper place, another guitar with metal trings was becoming the "new" instrument in the orchestra, replacing the banjo. Strummed with a pick, the arch-top plectrum guitar made a beautifully subtle, woody acoustic sound. The best of these handcrafted instruments were made by the Gibson and Epiphone Companies and John D' Angelico, a private custom maker. The best players were also emerging. Eddie Lang, backing Bing Crosby; duets by Carl Kress and Dick McDonugh; and solos by George Van Eps were also listened to. These first pioneers were soon to be followed by the likes of Charlie Christian, George Barnes, Les Paul, Johnny Smith, Tony Mottola, etc.
With the advent of the amplifier, favorite guitarists were put into single-string and chordal-style categories and became specialists in one or both fields. Aspiring guitarists were gathering chord formations and single-note runs from every possible means, usually radio, records, teachers, and each other. Published guitar music was not available to all. This guitar was being played chord ally by non-reading guitarists. The hidden beauty of the guitar was being discovered. Opened-string bass notes and chord clusters made the guitar an ideal instrument to accompany another guitar, singer, or any instrument of the orchestra. The guitar range made it possible to duplicate a string quartet. Through the years great melodies have remained the same, only to be harmonized and reharmonized. My quest to find what is inside the guitar has never ended. So give me the harmony to play in a duet setting anytime. There is so much to be explored and discovered. Bucky Pizzarelli

Note
As you work with this exciting material, it would be well to keep a few points in mind. The skeleton chord forms employed will not always contain all of the essential (in contrast to the expendable) ingredients of the chord indicated. These missing notes will usually be present in the melody that follows so that the chord is outlined in the mind's ear. Occasionally this will not be true, but the chord will be a part of a progression where the missing part of the chord is easily imagined. An example of this is the Db dim in the first bar of "I Had Picked You" where the diminished triad is incomplete. When playing a chord, the bass note can usually be held longer than indicated while the other fingers are making the melody. This gives a richer sound and provides a stable anchor for the left hand. Finally, there are places where there are redundant accidentals in the same measure. These are for clarity and do not indicate double sharps or flats. The Publisher

About the Author
John "Bucky" Pizzarelli has enjoyed a career that spans the years from the Vaughn Monroe Orchestra to White House Concerts with Benny Goodman and Frank Sinatra. Along the way, he has been a staff musician with NBC, ABC, Skitch Henderson, Doc Severinson, Mitch Miller, and appeared at Carnegie Hall with George Barnes and Les Paul, performed at the Boston Pops in duet with Stephane Grappelli, and played a solo concert at Town Hall in New York City. An active performer in jazz rooms and college concerts, he is also a Faculty Member Emeritus of William Paterson College in Wayne, in the New Jersey.

Contents
Foreword .
Constructing a Chord Solo .
Smoke Eyes .
Red Beans and Rice .
Over and Over Blues .
Happy Bass Note Waltz .
I Had Picked You .
About the Author .

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JUMP JIVE 'N' SWING GUITAR Keith Wyatt Learn styles Freddie Green CD TABLATURE chitarra METODO

JUMP, JIVE 'N' SWING GUITAR. Keith Wyatt. Learn styles of Freddie Green. SHEET MUSIC BOOK WITH CD & GUITAR TABLATURE .

LIBRO DI MUSICA SWING, CON CD. 

SPARTITI PER CHITARRA : 

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA, TABLATURE. 

METODO PER CHITARRA .

By Keith Wyatt
SERIES: Jazz Masters Series
CATEGORY: Guitar Method or Supplement
FORMAT: Book & CD
In this book, Keith Wyatt leads you through all the techniques you need to play swing rhythm guitar. Keith covers blues progressions, swing chord voicings, comping patterns, rhythm feels, bass lines, horn-style riffs, and much more! The included CD contains full demonstrations of all the music examples, complete with a full swing band that you can play along with. All music examples are written in standard notation and tab. All you need is the Zoot suit!

Learn the styles of :

T-Bone Walker

Freddie Green

Gatemouth Brown

Brian Setzer

and all the Swing greats ....

Swing comping Techniques

2, 3, 4 note Swing Chord Voicing

Major and minor Swing blues progressions

Turnarounds

intro and endings

Freddie Green style

jump, jive and Swing Guitar. More than a studied technique, swing gets down to a feeling. It's how you play, how you move your whole body rhythmically in time with the band. In this book, you'll learn how to play with the band, understand what the band members are doing, and how the guitar fits in with them to create the rhythm section. A basic knowledge of chord voicings and some study of harmony and theory are essential; however, regardless of your level of ability, you will enjoy this exploration into the world of jump, jive and Swing Guitar. 

The Swing Rhythm Section IOne of the first steps to playing swing guitar is having some knowledge of the construction of the rhythm section. The role of the rhythm guitarist is to work with the other musicians: support the soloist and the singer and complement the drummer, pianist, and bass player. Listen how each individual band member plays his part in a typical Iz-bar blues in this CDtrack example. The basis of the whole rhythm section lies in the kick drum, which plays on every beat. The pattern played on the cymbal typifies the swing style, and in big band arrangements, the snare drum can accent various parts of the rhythm or can emphasize the steady swing feel to drive the band. In jump blues, the snare pattern is a hard-hitting backbeat. This is the groove that gave birth to rock 'n' roll. The role of the bass is to outline the notes of each chord in the progression with a note on every beat. This is called a walking line. The piano typically plays a walking line in the left hand, as the bass does, and plays upbeats in the right hand synchronizing with the drummer and the bass player to emphasize the swing feel. Horn sections supply the color and variety in swing or jump blues arrangements. There are endless variations on patterns like the simple punchy riff demonstrated here. I Nowthat you have heard each instrument individually, listen to them all together as a band. Listen how each part comes in and complements one another as they build up the groove for the guitarist to step in.

 

 

CONTENTS

 

Page CDTrack

INTRODUCTION

TUNING NOTES

PREFACE

SECTION ONE:

RHYTHM AND THE I2-BAR BLUES

Examples 1-2

Chord Voicings

Examples 3-6

SECTION TWO: THE RIGHT HAND 9

Examples 7-9

The I2-Bar Progression

Examples 10-12

Freddie Green

Examples 13-14

SECTION THREE: BLUES IN Bb

Example 15

SECTION FOUR: BLUES IN Eb

Examples 16-19

Example 20: Swing Blues in Eb

SECTION FIVE: . IMITATING THE PIANIST'S RIGHT HAND

Examples 21-22

Example 23: jump Blues in F

SECTION SIX: IMITATING A HORN SECTION

Examples 24-27

Example 28: Horn Section Blues in Bb

SECTION SEVEN: INNER STRING RIFFS

Examples 29-33

Example 34: Swing Blues in Bb

SECTION EIGHT: MINOR BLUES

Examples 35-37

Example 38: jive in G Minor

Example 39: jive in G Minor (Explained)

SECTION NINE: CLOSING 

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HENDERSON SCOTT THE BEST Guitar & Bass TABLATURE LIBRO SPARTITI-Black Cherry-Jakarta-Root Food

HENDERSON SCOTT, THE BEST. SHEET MUSIC BOOK WITH GUITAR TABLATURE .

LIBRO DI MUSICA ROCK - JAZZ, FUSION.
SPARTITI PER CHITARRA, BASSO E SYNTH. IN PENTAGRAMMA.
ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA E TABLATURE

GRIGLIA DEGLI ACCORDI .

CHITARRA: TABLATURE
BASSO: PENTAGRAMMA.
SINTH: PENTAGRAMMA.

TITOLI: 

- Black Cherry

- Jakarta

- Revenge Stew

- Root Food

- Slidin' Into Charlisa

- Stella By Infra

- Red High Particle Neutron Beam

- Susie's Dingsbums

-The Crawling Horror

-Torque

- Worlds Waiting.

 

Chitarra TABLATURE, Basso (no Tab.). 

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HALL JIM JAZZ GUITAR CD BOOKK CHITARRA LIBRO SPARTITI All Across the City - Something Special - Something Tells Me

HALL JIM, JAZZ GUITAR ENVIRONMENTS. SHEET MUSIC BOOK FOR GUITAR WITH CD.

LIBRO METODO DI MUSICA JAZZ, CON CD. 

SPARTITI PER CHITARRA CON :

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA. 


Series: Guitar
Medium: Softcover with CD
Artist: Jim Hall

Artist Transcriptions: An in-depth study of Jim's unique approach to music in ensemble and solo settings. Includes complete transcriptions taken from his instructional Star Licks video, also available from Hal Leonard. Tunes include: All Across the City - Something Special - Something Tells Me - and more. 71-minute accompanying audio includes actual live performances from the video by Jim Hall. 40 pages

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FITE BUDDY FINGESTYLE JAZZ GUITAR SOLOS CD TABLATURE BOOK CHITARRA SWING LIBRO MEL BAY

FITE BUDDY, FINGESTYLE JAZZ GUITAR SOLOS. Comprende anche pezzi per 2 chitarre. SHEET MUSIC BOOK with CD & GUITAR TABLATURE. 

 

LIBRO DI MUSICA JAZZ SWING, CON CD. 

SPARTITI PER CHITARRA CON : 

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA, TABLATURE.

 

https://youtu.be/rmpDn4c0FZs

 

https://youtu.be/sa2pCp8BEi0

 

https://youtu.be/2tkO1bIgz38

 

https://youtu.be/_lnlZMAlt8c

 

https://youtu.be/63SNjHdJS3Q

Prezzo: €99,95
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ELLIS HERB BLUES SHAPES FOR GUITAR IN TAB BOOK & CD TABLATURE CHITARRA LIBRO METODO

ELLIS HERB, BLUES SHAPES FOR GUITAR IN TAB. SHEET MUSIC BOOK WITH CD & GUITAR TABLATURE.

 

LIBRO METODO DI MUSICA JAZZ, CON CD.

SPARTITI PER CHITARRA : 

ACCORDI, DIAGRAMMA DELLA TASTIERA, PENTAGRAMMA, TABLATURE . 

Prezzo: €59,99
€59,99

DI MEOLA AL CIELO E TERRA GUITAR SHEET MUSIC BOOK SPARTITI LIBRO CHITARRA HAL LEONARD

DI MEOLA AL, CIELO E TERRA. SHEET MUSIC BOOK FOR GUITAR.

 

LIBRO DI MUSICA JAZZ FUSION.

SPARTITI PER CHITARRA CON:

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA.

TRANSCRIPTIONS FROM THE ALBUM CIELO E TERRA.
FOR ACOUSTIC, CLASSICAL, OR ELECTRIC GUITAR.

ANCHE PER DUE CHITARRE.

 

MUSIC TRANSCRIPTIONS BY BARRY ENNIS

TRANSCRIPTION OF ETUDE BY KEN NAVARRO.

TITOLI.

- TRACES OF A TEAR

- VERTIGO SHADOW

- CIELO E TERRA

- ENIGMA OF DESIRE

- WHEN YOU'RE GONE

- ATAVISM OF TWILIGHT

- ETUDE

- SOLACE
 

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CARLTON LARRY FINGERPRINTS GUITAR TABLATURE EDITION CHITARRA LIBRO BOOK-lazy susan-chicks with kickstands-gracias

CARLTON LARRY, FINGERPRINTS, GUITAR TABLATURE EDITION. SHEET MUSIC BOOK WITH GUITAR TABLATURE .

LIBRO DI MUSICA FUSION,

SPARTITI PER CHITARRA CON :

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA, TABLATURE.

Ed Lozano

Description
All ten tracks from the album arranged for guitar in standard notation and tablature. Includes Silky Smooth, Til I Hurt You and Crying Hands. 120 Pages.

TiTOLi : 

Fingerprints -silky smooth -the storyteller -Ôtil i hurt you -slave song -all thru the night -lazy susan -chicks with kickstands -gracias -crying hands.
 

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LARRY & LEE RITENOUR & CARLTON GUITARS TABLATURE SPARTITI CHITARRA TRASCRIZIONI BOOK

LARRY & LEE - LARRY CARLTON & LEE RITENOUR. SHEET MUSIC BOOK WITH GUITAR TABLATURE .

LIBRO DI MUSICA JAZZ FUSION.

SPARTITI PER CHITARRA :

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA, TABLATURE  . 

2 PENTAGRAMMI, E 2 LINEE DI TABLATURA.

103 PAGES.

SUPER TRANSCRIPTIONS !

LARRY CARLTON e LEE RITENOUR
(YEAR ALBUM: 1995)

Crosstown Kids - MUSIC BY LEE RITENOUR. 
Low Steppin' - MUSIC BY LEE RITENOUR and LARRY CARLTON. 
L.A. Underground - MUSIC by LEE RITENOUR. 
Closed Door Jam - MUSIC BY LARRY CARLTON.  
After the Rain - MUSIC by LEE RITENOUR. 
Remembering J.P. - MUSIC by LARRY CARLTON. 
Fun in the Dark - MUSIC by LEE RITENOUR. 
Lots About Nothin' - MUSIC by LARRY CARLTON. 
Take That - MUSIC by LEE RITENOUR. 
Up and Adam - MUSIC by LARRY CARLTON. 
Reflection of a Guitar Player - MUSIC BY LARRY CARLTON. 

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CARLTON LARRY TABLATURE ROOM 335-NITE CRAWLER-POINT IT UP-RIO SAMBA DON'T GIVE IT UP-(IT WAS) ONLY

CARLTON LARRY, LARRY CARLTON. SHEET MUSIC BOOK WITH GUITAR TABLATURE . 

LIBRO DI MUSICA JAZZ FUSION,

SPARTITO PER CHITARRA :

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA, NOTE, TABLATURE.

Room 335 - Musica di: Larry Carlton - 1973
Nite Crawler - Musica di: Larry Carlton - 1977
Point It Up - Musica di: Larry Carlton - 1978
Rio Samba - Musica di: Larry Carlton - 1978
Don't Give It Up - Musica di: Larry Carlton - 1978
(It Was) Only Yesterday - Musica di: Larry Carlton - 1978

 

A longtime Nashville resident, Larry Carlton will perform a special hometown show at the Schermerhorn Symphony Center on Friday, September 30. Carlton spoke to Examiner.com about the upcoming show, his long career, playing with Michael Jackson and Dolly Parton, his continuing passion for music and more in the following interview.

Special thanks to Larry Carlton, and to Laurie Davis of the Nashville Symphony for arranging this interview.

 

You're playing at the Schermerhorn on Friday. Is this in conjunction with the Larry Carlton Plays the Sound of Philadelphia project?

That will be part of the show. The show I'm putting together is . . . I don't know if you'd call it the landscape of my career, but I'm going to do some things that I haven't done before, and the people are gonna be excited. They're gonna go, "Wow, I didn't know he played on that," or "Really? He was involved in that?"

I want to do a special show that night. It won't be just me and a sax player. (Laughs).

How did this come about? Did they approach you, or were you looking around for an appropriate venue for a particular type of show?

I was approached. I guess they finally got around to me. (Laughs). No, I was excited when I got the call. It's hometown for me, and the venue, if you will. I'm really excited.

I saw on your web site that you're going to be appearing with Steely Dan in New York City. Did you see them when they were in town?

No, I was actually out of town. Last year, or a year and a half ago they invited me to do seven shows with them. So I did a couple of nights in New York, one in Chicago, a couple of nights in LA. It was the first time . . . well, I'd never played live with them, and it was the first time in 35 years, since we cut The Royal Scam, that I went back and learned my solo from "Kid Charlemagne."

What's it like going back and re-visiting a part of your own career like that? Is it strange for you?

They're great memories. The weirdest thing for me is, I've never learned one of my own solos. (Laughs). I knew I had to play it note-for-note, and when I did, I got a standing ovation. People wanted to hear Larry play that solo.

After the long career you've had and all the various things you've done, what is it that keeps you active and excited about music?

That's a difficult question in that, at four years old I was fascinated with the guitar. At six years old I started taking lessons. I was passionate about it through the next fifty years, and that passion still exists.

Do you still keep an active practice regimen? Do you have the guitar in your hand every day?

No, normally I do about 125-150 a year touring around the world. So when I come home - and this is not new to me, I did this way back in the seventies - it's not unusual for me to not touch the guitar for a month, and just live my life; go horseback riding, go fishing.

I find that's good for my soul, good for my mind, and then when I come back to the guitar it's time to go again. It's a balance, I think.

You came up in an era where everything about the business was different. With all the changes in recording and distribution, do you think it's easier or harder for an artist in your position than it used to be?

Well, I have a unique situation, so I'm going to say it's easier. I have my own label now, and for the last four-and-a-half years. It was the first time in 17 years that I wasn't on a major label, and it was by choice. With the Internet I can talk to, play for, make music for the whole world, not just the US. When I was on a major they were very focused on the US.

Of course my albums were distributed overseas, and I have a great career in Japan and Europe. But now, I get an idea for a project . . . maybe it'll come from someone on Facebook saying, "Larry, have you ever thought of something with strings?" It could happen like that. So I'm enjoying the freedom of getting to make those choices.

What about the downside of the Internet, which is illegal downloading. Has that impacted you in the same way that it has rock and pop acts?

Well, of course. My numbers are down, like most artists, because everybody's exchanging files back and forth. That affects not only your record royalties, but your publishing and writing royalties. But it's just a new day, and I'm going with it. On my web site I'm sharing how I learned the guitar, how I play it . . . I want to be part of this new scene, and not avoid it and resent it.

You've obviously done a ton of recording, but two names jumped out at me from all that you've done that I wanted to ask you about, one of which is Michael Jackson. What did you do with Michael Jackson?

Quincy [Jones] called and said, "Larry, I have a special song, and it's got to be you." Because I wasn't doing a lot of dates, I'd already discontinued doing a lot of dates back then. So I went in and recorded what became a single, "She's Out of My Life."

In fact I'm looking at a three-foot plaque in my office right now that says, "Michael Jackson Off The Wall, over five million albums sold. We got all the marbles on this one, thanks for your help, Quincy." And there's four marbles in the bottom of it. It has a picture of Michael and the album cover. So yeah, I played on one cut on that album as a favor to Quincy.

The other one that popped out at me was Dolly Parton. I didn't know you'd done anything with her.

I don't remember the date, to tell you the truth. Whoever was producing her in LA in probably the early-to-mid seventies called me as the guitar player. So I know that I played on some stuff for Dolly, but I don't know what it was. (Laughs).

When you're doing that many different dates in so many different styles as you used to, is there any rational way to prepare for that, or do you just walk in and do it?

You walk in cold.

Versatility has served me well, and I think one of the reasons that I'm so versatile as a musician is because of the era and time that I was brought up. You figure, I was born in 1948, so by the time 1958 came around I'm ten, and I'm listening to doo-wop music on the radio. And that transitioned into the sixties, and rock and roll became very big.

So I'm part of that whole history, and I was playing the guitar the whole time. Every time something new came out in a style, I was aware of it. It was part of my hunger to learn how they did that. I wanted to learn the solo on an Elvis Presley record, and then The Beatles came along. So I lived through that transition, and the one thing that really made me a little bit different is that I fell in love with jazz when I was 14, but I didn't neglect pop music.

Back then every genre lived side by side, whereas now it's become divided and everything is micro-marketed to a very narrowly defined target demographic. How has that impacted you?

Obviously because I'm an instrumentalist, I was very happy in the mid-eighties when that format came along called the quiet storm, which transitioned into smooth jazz. All of a sudden there was a place on the radio for those of us that don't sing.

But I think it's run its course, I think it's boring now, and most of the stuff on those stations all sounds the same. You can't tell one sax player from another. But it was a neat thing that happened, and it exposed a lot of us to people that otherwise wouldn't have known us.

Are you finding that there's any good that's coming to you from any of the various alternatives, like satellite radio?

Yeah, I think so. You know, my songs are on those stations, and I'm sure there are people at home that keep those on sometimes, and listen to them while they're living their lives in their house or car, so it's just a nice place where someone might discover an artist.

You're offering interactive lessons on your web site. What gave you the idea to do that?

I was doing a guitar seminar in New York, and a producer was there who produces teaching DVDs. He has the largest Internet site, called True Fire. Anyway, he was impressed with my seminar and the way I communicate, so he approached me and said, "I'd like to produce a teaching video with you. It's been twenty years since you've done one." So that's how it started, and it still continues. I'm flying out tomorrow to speak to him about another project. So having a great producer helps me expose what I want to give to the guys out there.

What do you think is the most important thing to know for a kid who wants to play guitar?

I think what you just said: if a kid wants to play. I think motive is really important. What's your motive to play the guitar? Mine was always to make music. I can say this honestly: I never thought about being a star. It never entered my mind. I wanted to play the guitar. My dream as a teen was to be like my jazz heroes and play jazz in smoky clubs my whole life. I didn't know I was gonna become a session guy or any of that stuff.

So it's motive. Are you doing this because you want to be a star, or do you want to be a musician? If you're doing it because you want to be a star, then you'll go that direction, and that's okay. Both avenues are fine, but I think you've got to be honest, because I think truthfulness comes out of you when you're playing your music.

I read this online; is it correct or incorrect that your niece is Vanessa Carlton?

Nope. Incorrect! (Laughs).

I suspected that.

 

Your son Travis is a bass player. Is it something that gives you pause, to see him go into the business? Because you have a decades-long bird's eye view of how difficult it can be.

All I can tell you is that he's gifted with music, and then he worked very, very hard as soon as he got out of high school. He went to GIT, graduated top of the class, Best Performer . . . he's a gifted, gifted musician who's worked very hard, and now he's reaping the rewards of that.

When he was a little boy sitting on my lap, and I'd be mixing a song in my studio, his body was always in time with the song. As a little kid. The stuff you can't teach, Travis got. I'm very proud of him. He plays in my band, he plays in Robben Ford's band, and he plays in Scott Henderson's band. People like grooving to Travis. It's a beautiful thing.

I wanted to ask you about Christianity and the music business. Do you ever find that being a Christian and being in the music business are at fundamentally cross purposes?

Personally, I have never had a struggle. When I became a reborn Christian in 1983, the Holy Spirit never told me, "Change what you're doing, Larry. Don't do that anymore." I mean musically. I was never called to that, "All right, now you only play religious songs." So I'm very comfortable with my relationship with God, and I just make my music, and my testimony is my music, and how I live my life.

I know some other Christian musicians that have been called to do it a different way, a more aggressive way, a more out-front way. I haven't been called to that, so I'm just growing where I was planted.

Is there anything else you want to say about the Schermerhorn show or whatever else is coming up?

I'm just excited to play at the Schermerhorn in my hometown, and I plan on bringing the best show I can.

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