Review: Young UK talent 7AGE makes his debut on Liondub's forever on-point Street Series brand with an album-sized release. Like with so many of the Street Series pieces the full range can be felt in full effect from more soulful, liquid style cuts ('Funk Up') to heavier, more technical numbers ('Never Ever') to all-out jump-up slammers with big riffs and gutter vibes ('Overthink It') via proper heads-down underground bubbly ones ('Muggy'). And that's just the tip of this Street Series iceberg. Don't sleep on this one!
Review: Liondub International keep things Stateside with this special 66th edition of their Street Series collection as SuM takes to the controls. Previously known as SumOne, a US jungle veteran for many years, here he unleashes his grittiest side over a seven track trip. Highlights include the metallic finish and relentlessness of 'Selassie I', the absolute stink-up vibes and amen switches of 'All Massive', the brazen futurism and tension of 'Panic Disorder' and the menacing minimalism and precision steppery of 'Dem Talk'. These are just a few of the many highlights here; Liondub Street Series never fails to disappoint.
Review: Unfold that frown upside down and tune into these exceptional vibes from newcomer Cameron. Big vocal and soul feels dominate the first part of the EP as 'Unfold' takes us on a classic Good Looking vibe while 'DFR' fuses big early 2000s house vibes with a huge overdriven bassline. Elsewhere 'Check It' brings the sunny side reggae vibes, 'Everything' is pure spine-henching drama and a wonderfully bubbled up bassline collection and 'Worlds' is a purring, futuristic monster. Last but not least Cameron asks us to 'Take Stock' of our lives by way of pristine plucked guitar and shimmering keys. Another sick Street Series edition. We've not heard much previous from this man but if these are anything to go by, we're going to hear a lot more of him in the near future...
Review: Following up releases on Logan D's Subway Soundz imprint, Invicta Audio and DNB Allstars, rising Leicester-based producer Froidy is up next on Liondub's Street Series. Vol 64: Power features six upfront drum and bass tracks guaranteed to add power to any DJ set. From the wonky and steppin' jump up vibes of "Sword Style" to the darkside rollers "Power" and "Summon" reminiscent of techstep classics from the turn of the millennium, plus the pulverising low-end theory of "Contact" - this release sees Froidy at the top his game.
Review: Shake what your momma gave ya! Shake your booty to the well-tamed but still vicious vibes on Addicted's addition to Liondub International's long-standing new-talent breaking Street Series. Shake your head at the breathlessness and techno elements of 'You Got', shake your first in the air at how ruff and stampy 'Let It' (with Warhead) is, shake your feet to the bubbly, swampy groove of 'Bop', shake your braincells to the ridiculous roughage of the bassline on 'With You' (with Tee). Wake and 'Shake'.
Review: Berlin banger man Smuggler pinches our souls and takes them across state lines with this exceptional collection on Liondub International's coveted Street Series. You all know the drill here; a generous collection of dancefloor blaze-ups from an exciting new gen artist with no holds barred and a full reflection of where they're at musically. With the breezy emotional euphoria of 'Cherry Blossoms', the despicably ruff funk of 'Some Ain't Right' and the high voltage sizzles and wonky slaps of the finale 'Can't Help It', it's safe to say Smuggler's definitely delivered. And that's only half of the collection. Let's hit the streets once again.
Review: Liondub's wicked Street Series continues in full force and this next instalment is courtesy of Decrypt, a producer who comes with some serious heat on this one. All five of these cuts mean business and our favourites are the steppy bits, 'Make My Day' especially, which combines apocalyptic vibes with urban sonics to create a powerful patchwork of force and energy, all underpinned by a broken percussive line. The other four are also strong and we're definitely looking forward to hearing these out and about.
Review: Fresh from a string of releases on Toronto Is Broken's YANA, Corrupted Mind lands Liondub International for a spot on their coveted 'Street Series' collection, a series that has featured some of the most exciting names in the new generation of D&B artists. Stepping up with gusto, he's dropped a near-album sized project that ranges from brutal dancefloor weight ('Beasts') to addictive, springy, bee-like riff science ('Run') via classic early 2010s style Q&A jump-up ('Technical') With all high octane shades in between, it's another golden street session from the Liondub massive.
Review: We're barely knee-deep in to 2021 and already Joley has appeared on the likes of Bagged & Tagged, DnB Allstars, Invicta and Helix. Now he takes a bite out of the illustrious Liondub Street Series pie with this savage sextet of soundboy killers. From the panning effects and rear-end groans of opening track 'B-Line' to the final bone-shuddering breaks and siren echoes of the finale 'Badman' by way of Burnzy and Stillz co-labs and a whole lot more, Joely's got a roadmap from here to post-lockdown rave freedom all locked off and popping. Street talk.
Review: Street Series EPs on Liondub are always big, but this one from Yatuza climbs to new heights as it reaches full album-length, with 15 full-length cuts for you to sink your teeth into. It kicks off with the stripped back urban sounds of 'Good Old Days', a tune that packs a hefty low frequency line with dancefloor atmosphere in its core. There are a number of features, and 'Bubbler' with Alex SLK is one of the best, a gargantuan head-nodder with a finger clicking snare and a wide, wobbling bassline. It's an album that will please anyone who knows anything about Liondub or Yatuza - fantastic work.
Review: Flex for the B-PLEXX! Next up on Liondub International's Street Series, this young UK maestro hits hard with the jump-up hybrids. All tastes, all corners, all vibes covered; highlights include the XL wobbles and staccato hits on 'The Scientist', the early Hazard-style looseness and grizzliness of the bassline on 'Don Gargon' and the incendiary banger craft and high levels of drama on 'Mic Check'. Six slices of pure future science, the Street Series never fails to hit the spot.
Review: Lifting us up through the darkest of times Hydrolikz secures his place in the Street Series hall of fame with five examples of French jump-up brutality. As always with this Liondub International series, the energy is set to max and the artist is given a blank canvas to showcase their widest of styles. In the case of Yung Hydro here the styles range from savage, gnarling power tool funkery ('Lift Off') to tripped-out melting laser bass a la Belgium ('Octopus') and all jump-up styles in between. Raw!
Review: It's been a big year for J.O.E with proper scuds on the likes of Sub-Heavy, Calypso Muzak, 24 Karat and Dubplate Dread, now he seals the deal with a spot on the hallowed halls of Liondub International's Street Series. Seven tracks in total, J.O.E's gone in every angle with highlights hitting hard: 'Wait' is a nod towards the catchy, intoxicating Q&A style of Serum, 'Watch Me Dance' flips between a cheeky house sample and a savage coiled spring bassline while 'Patch This' strips things right back to the bare essentials - a sexy sub and rattling drums. And that's not even half of it. 90 thumbs up.
Review: Last spotted burning up the place with Blackout JA on Original Key, Speaker Louis continues his inner-city damagement with a coveted spot on Liondub International's long-standing, future talent celebrating 'Street Series'. It's demolishment from off as the flabby bass of tracks like 'Foundation' and 'Lift Off The Roof' go all-in with the bubble butt bass swings while cuts like 'From The Top' flex that classic Urban Shakedown bouncy Q&A funk and 'Soundboy Gonna Cry' just wormholes from Speaker's speaker right into your hips and won't quit until you've won at least six skanking contests. Lord a mercy.
Review: Rumour has it that Margaman got his name from his love for margarita cocktails. Some say he got his name for his love for margherita pizzas. There are others who say he loves margarine over butter. Meanwhile at Juno Download we have no idea how this longstanding man who came through on the likes of Dread, Mix & Blen and Mac 2 in the mid 2010s, and been on some of the most on-point new-gen labels in the game in recent years, got his name. But boy do we love his sounds. From the bubble and bounce of the title track 'Jungle Trek' to scorching BC-esque inferno 'Earthbound' via the gorgeous harmonic subs of 'Deep In The Jungle', Margaman hits like a fine cocktail, fills you up like a proper pizza and is as smooth and fat free as margarine. Yet another perfect addition to Liondub International's ever-collectable Street Series.
Review: After a slew of slugs and rattlers on Cre8, west country monster slam-dunks his way onto Liondub International's ever-coveted Street Series collection. As always, the canvas is blank and the size is XXL as the young producer goes in deep with seven cuts ranging from the pure venomous rifle bass filth of 'Spirits' (with Toxinate) to the dreamier euphoria of 'Heartbeat' by way of the laser bass mischief of 'Selecta'. All cuts primed for the dance - whenever those golden times return - if you're looking for 'Trouble', you've got it!
Review: Premium Belgian business right here. And we're not talking about the beer; Skankage makes his debut on Liondub International's check-on-sight Street Series with five serious sonic assaults. Easing us in softly with the roughhouse tech slams and grizzles of 'Rollin Since 99', we're then hurled into a maze of contemporary dancefloor danger; 'Feel The Vibe' is a Gee'd up salute to the modern day bassline singalongs, the minimal croaky dark-out 'C2H6Cd' is every bit as toxic as its title suggests while 'Broken Wings' flips the flavours for a deeper, prowling take on D&B. Last but not least 'Over The Horizon' brings the EP to a grand conclusion with epic high frequency riffage that celebrates everything that's great about Belgium's D&B sound both past and present.
Review: Numa Crew's T-Kay joins the ever-increasing talent troops on Liondub's Street Series for their all-guns-blazing 50th edition. In-keeping with the Street Series style, the remit is totally open and the vibe is set to max as we range through the darker shades of T-Kay's repertoire. The twisted bass tone of "Badboy Tune" and raw horn blasts of "Hold On" are particularly gnarly while tracks like "Ganjah" and "Acid Bath" play with space to create drama and nervy tension. Looking for a really trippy kick in the sarnies? Head for "Get Mad" and get dutty. Hold the phone.
Review: Long-distance thing: Runnah continues to bubble up the ranks with a debut on Liondub Internatty's long-coveted Street Series collection. Packing five tracks in total, each one reps a different Runnah style. "Avatar" is the good old 800 metres. Stately, pacey and no frills fun. "Gypsy Gang" is the 100m sprint; those technoid synths and that rasping bassline getting you quick off the blocks. "Emergency" is a half marathon; its weight is measured, considered but hard as nails. "Secret Weapon" is the ultra marathon. Freaky, relentless and full of surprises. Finally "Avocado" is the 200m hurdles, jumpy, fast and full of grunty bumps. On your marks...
Review: Freeze is the next artist to join the hallowed group of producers who have come through via Liondub's Street Series, one of the scene's longest running exemplars of how to push new talent and a constant source of filthy underground bangers. Dangerous is certainly within that category and all seven tunes here don't mess around in instantly reaching for the big red button marked 'naughtiness'. 'Touch Me' is especially potent, a vocal sample leading its hook of belching bass stabs that wobble in tandem with its irresistible energy. The toughness continues with the foghorn majesty of 'With You', which rolls out with pure abandon, and the low frequencies are even better on 'Socialite', which isn't the most social piece of music - it's far too dark and heinous for that. This is a proper shakedown from the Liondub crew.
Review: Bass Junk bossman Mamoet steps out from his Belgian laboratory for a feature on Liondubs' super-respected Street Series. He's brought a whole bundle of spiky, aggy jumpery with him for the ride. "New York" wriggles with bee swarm strings, "Kingston" is all about the ruded out bass riff while "Mad Ting" is the sketchy, dramatic prize centrepiece. Rounding up the EP we have "Fire" and "Higher". The former flexes some dreamy flutters before hurling us into the gutter while the latter hits with some hardcore wobble and preach. Amen to that.
Review: Liondub Street Series continue their consistent assault on the dance with one of their biggest series editions to date: a full LP length collection from Birmingham OG Jinx. 10 tracks in totally, the full spectrum of vibes are on offer right here as Jinx demolishes everything in sight... From carnage rave juice like "Blow Your Horn" to the much funkier, elasticated rubber ball bass of "Get With The Groove" by way of the space-aged grizzles of "Eliminate Sound", it's Jinx at his broadest, baddest and heaviest. Essential Street Series business.
Review: Veak is the latest artist to jump onto the LionDub Street Series and it's hard to believe that we're on number 45 now. A 'Best Of' for number 50, perhaps? Anyway, this one by Veak is properly sick and he's strayed away from his more regular jump-up haunts to offer something a bit more stripped back and barebones. 'Murdarah' is the highlight, as rich brass textures lead you into a furious flurry of amen breaks and stabbing basses and the overall vibe on this tune is so crisp, so well defined that we're desperately sad that we can't hear it out live. Top stuff.
Review: Liondub's renowned Street Series continues in full force and this next instalment is courtesy of Niterider, a producer who got his name making bangers and who comes with some serious heat on this one. All five of these cuts mean business and our favourites are the steppy bits, 'Illegal Op' especially, which combines apocalyptic vibes with urban sonics to create a powerful patchwork of force and energy, all underpinned by a broken percussive line. The other five are also strong and we're definitely looking forward to hearing these out and about.
Review: Liondub's Street Series is one of the longest running and best introductory series' in the business, pulling through some lesser known talent on an almost monthly basis with condense yet expansive collections of music. This time it's the turn of Danny The Wildchild, who lays down the gauntlet from the outset with 'Fresh' - a huge number with towering high points that tumble down into jarringly cool low points. It's a bit of a ballad to be honest. 'Body Moves' is the other highlight, a pummelling roller with a wobbling sub and deliciously satisfying percussive snaps. Big.
Review: Liondub's Street Series is one of the longest running and best introductory series' in the business, pulling through some lesser known talent on an almost monthly basis with condense yet expansive collections of music. This time it's the turn of Higher Sector, who lays down the gauntlet from the outset with 'Kill A Rat' - a huge jungle number with towering high points that tumble down into jarringly cool low points. It's a bit of a ballad to be honest. 'Forces' feat. Sam Harris is the other highlight, a pummelling roller with a wobbling sub and deliciously satisfying percussive snaps. Lovely stuff.
Review: Liondub's Street Series is one of the longest running and best introductory series' in the business, pulling through some lesser known talent on an almost monthly basis with condense yet expansive collections of music. This time it's the turn of Cool Hand Flex who lays down the gauntlet from the outset with 'London Groove' - a huge rolling number with towering high points that tumble down into jarringly cool low points. It's a bit of a ballad to be honest. 'Sight & Sound' is the other highlight, a pummelling jungle tip with a wobbling sub and deliciously satisfying percussive snaps.
Review: Liondub's renowned Street Series continues in full force and this next instalment is courtesy of Dispoze, a producer who comes with some serious junglist heat on this one. All five of these cuts mean business and our favourites are the steppy bits, 'Doubts' especially, which combines apocalyptic vibes with urban sonics to create a powerful patchwork of force and energy, all underpinned by a broken percussive line. The other four are also strong and we're definitely looking forward to hearing these out and about.
Review: Liondub's renowned Street Series continues in full force and this next instalment is courtesy of Dez, a producer comes with some serious junglist heat on this one. All five of these cuts mean business and our favourites are the steppy bits, 'Burundanga' especially, which combines apocalyptic vibes with urban sonics to create a powerful patchwork of force and energy, all underpinned by a broken percussive line. The other four are also strong and we're definitely looking forward to hearing these out and about - the Liondub crew kill it yet again.
Review: Liondub's ever-on-point Street Series heads to Bristol to shine the spotlight on Subcriminal. He delivers the EP of his life so far.... Building on releases via the likes of Run Tingz, Deep In The Jungle, Random Concepts and Nuusic, "Lock & Load" is a stinking brew of jungle, jump-up, roller and rave elements, slow-cooked for ultimate dancefloor damagement. Seven tracks heavy, highlights include the far out wonkiness of the bass on "Next", the groaning bass sizzles and sweeping reese basses on "Fly Kick" and the crucial tear-out finale "Power Up". You ain't ready.
Review: Liondub's renowned Street Series continues in full force and this next instalment is courtesy of Stranger, a producer who comes with some serious heat on this one. All five of these cuts mean business and our favourites are the steppy bits, 'Bad' especially, which combines apocalyptic vibes with urban sonics to create a powerful patchwork of force and energy, all underpinned by a broken percussive line. The other four are also strong and we're definitely looking forward to hearing these out and about.
Review: Conrad Subs is rising up the ranks so rapidly, some people are using his name as rhyming slang for 'naughty dubs'. Chow down on this edition to Liondub's ever-sick "Street Series" collection and you will be too as some of his most beautiful and his most sharpest and unruly designs are on display right here. The title track "Magnify" is a gilded dreamer laced with soul but behind the vibes there's a whole cannon of gully locked and loaded. From the stripped back minimal funk and style of "Transfixed" to the absolute breakbeat bombardment of the brilliantly-titled "Splurt", highlights swing from every possible rafter.
Review: Liondub's Street Series is one of the longest running and best introductory series' in the business, pulling through some lesser known talent on an almost monthly basis with condense yet expansive collections of music. This time it's the turn of Lost City, who lays down the gauntlet from the outset with 'All Rude Boy' - a huge jungle number with towering high points that tumble down into jarringly cool low points. It's a bit of a ballad to be honest. 'The Way You Move' is the other highlight, a pummelling roller with a wobbling sub and deliciously satisfying percussive snaps.
Review: Liondub's Street Series continues, as ever, now in its 33rd instalment and still as fiery and energetic as always. It's quite rare you see a release series hit that sort of number, so shoutout to the Liondub crew for giving a platform to some of the sickest lesser known acts around. Jayline isn't exactly lesser known, instead he's been tearing up dance floors for a few years and this release shows you why. 'Network' kicks the release off with fat synth lines that simply don't care what you think, an attitude which continues into the jungle stutters of 'Bacardi & Coke', 'Anglo Saxxon' and 'Like A Bird'. The latter of these three is the highlight, with a soaring sample that overpins a bouncing, stabby back end that reminds us of a Fracture cut. Overall, big tunes - Liondub continues the onward march.
Review: With releases on the likes of Euphonique's Subwoofah and Bou & Dutta's Diamond Audio to his name, Motiv continues to rocket up the ranks with this generous trove of rollers and groaners on the ever-on-point Liondub. Covering his full spectrum, the EP is one of the most comprehensive and heaviest showcases so far. Highlights include the tsunami tidal wave bass moan on "Vultures", the spacious introspective piano on "Unforgiven" and the jittering funk on the dense high pressure roller "Time Of Darkness". Motivation to get back on the controls; Motiv ain't messing around.
Review: Liondub's renowned Street Series continues in full force and this next instalment is courtesy of NC-17, a producer who got his name making liquid but who comes with some serious junglist heat on this one. All five of these cuts mean business and our favourites are the steppy bits, 'A Better Tomorrow' especially, which combines apocalyptic vibes with urban sonics to create a powerful patchwork of force and energy, all underpinned by a broken percussive line. The other four are also strong and we're definitely looking forward to hearing these out and about.
Review: Volume 30 of Liondub's Street Series is courtesy of Kumo, the latest in a long line of artists to participate in this well-known EP saga. Liondub's sound is rooted in the underground of the UK urban scene, drawing especially heavily on jungle and ragga influences and this release is no different, if not slightly heavier. 'Technique' is an absolute slammer, moody wobbles of basic bass force curl and slide underneath a stuttering percussive line, injecting loads of groove into a proper weighty number. The other tracks all conform to this; 'Wiretap' has superb drums and a genuine sense of attitude to its bassline; 'Identification' takes things minimal over the top of a head-nodding double kick drum. Sick release.
Review: LionDub's Street Series has to be one of the most on point and consistent V/A EP series in recent D&B times. Every collection comes from a genuinely exciting name in the modern game, they're loaded with shades and stank and roll and slap in equal measure. Now hot on the heels of DJ Hybrid and RMS (among many others) comes Dread affiliate Mr Explicit with five more potty mouth party pieces; "Dub Lion" actually roars, "Iron Maiden" has a bassline that does actually sound like heavy metal... Actual metal, though. Being melted at over 1000 degrees. Elsewhere "The Mash" steps and sizzles with a cheeky nod to Virus while "Warfare" drones ominously like the sky is falling under a nuclear cloud. "Who's Laughing" closes yet another excellent street session with true dark style theatre.
Review: Chasing the chem trails left by his label mate and peer RMS last month, the mighty DJ Hybrid makes his Liondub debut with this precision six tracker. As always with the Coventry killer, there's no filler in sight and a full range of flavours on offer; "Stay High" eases us in with soulful west coast finesse before "Prime Time" gets busy with sinewy alien funk and early 2000s Dope Dragon hookiness, "Breathe" brings the sunny side dubwise feels before hurling us into a deep jungle swamp, "No Way" is all about the Critical style stripped back minimal rollage before "Shockin Out" hits us upside the chops with some absolutely foul jungle wobbles before "Special Request VIP" brings us home on a rocket made of sirens and classic reverse basses. No stone left unturned; this is DJ Hybrid at his broadest and baddest.
Review: Liondub continue to squeeze near album-sized collections out of their mates. And this one comes courtesy of the currently unavoidable RMS, a man often spotted on the likes of Deep In The Jungle, Hocus Pocus and Dubsoul. Here he makes his Liondub debut with seven soudboy slayers and highlights include the subtle gamey flutters and stripped back steppery of "Woldwide Tingz", the dark shreds and lasers of "Insiders" and the carnal urgency of "Gutrot" where the vocal washes over the grunting bass with mesmerising trippy effect. Cool and deadly.
Review: Weighing in at a naughty seven tracks, Liondub have effectively squeezed the best part of an album out of Raz right here for their 26th "Street Series" volume. Unlike most albums, however, this is 100 percent floor damagement. From the metallic robobloodclart call to arms on opener "Blood" or the sudden drop into dusty orchestration on "Not Ready" through to finale fire pieces such as the sci-fi shoot out "Short Cut" and the glitched-out drum wriggles of "You Make Me" via dubbed out technoid synth ripples of "Murder You", Raz is on the roll of his life right here. Enough bangers to keep you sweet till Christmas.
Review: Dutta's doing the business harder than a tonked up Lord Sugar this year, and this seven track LionDub EP could just be one of his biggest releases to date. All battle stations manned, all bass bases covered, highlights include the rampant stabs and psychotic triplet swagger of "Boxes", the warm chords and slurring riff of "Bristol", the sweet sticky laser stabs of "Jaffa Cake Cookies" and the low-down skankology and cheeky Mario samples of "My Style". Powerful.
Review: LionDub hit the streets of Berlin for some guttural gully pressure from long-standing producer/singer partnership Phantom Warrior and Soultrain. You might recognise Soultrain's ruffstuff throaty flow from "Mo Fire", made famous in the early 2000s with a Bad Company remix. You may also feel strong parallels with Ragga Twins or what Run Tings do with Blackout JA - a perfect balance between industrial strength beats and dancehall toasting. From the Enei-style future funk of "Raver" to the early Clipz style midrange bass textures on "Blood" to heads-down rule-ripping bassline roll out "Heavy Like Tank", this is proper soundsystem-shaking material from start to finish.
Review: Last spotted on Liondub showing us no mercy whatsoever, Cologne's Brainstorm returns the label's Street Series with another fistful of fire. Rich variety is clear from the off as we glide to the smooth subby sounds of opener "Brooklyn Dub" before getting hurled headfirst into a Hoogs-level jump-up riff bash. Further on we shock out to whistling, breezy jungle on "Right Now" while things get pure ugly with two gritty early-2000s style riff cuts with Ricky Tuff. Serious street smarts.
Review: San Diego badmen Sub Killaz take the wheel for Liondub's not-stop EP joyride. It's gnarly business from the off as "Raised By The Block" and "Faces Of War" both hit hard with devilish riff dynamics. "Only You" strips the vibe back to a '99 sharp step and a well-tamed cushiony sub while "9 Pound Hammer" pokes and stabs gleefully with Annix-style keenness and "Salt Water" winds us down with shimmering piano strokes and hazy R&B style vocal snippets. Something for everyone.
Review: LionDub's Street Series continues its regular fresh talent dispatches with Scottish upriser Rize taking care of business on their 18th chapter. Flexing between standard D&B tempos and a classical 160 jungle pace and covering everything from dubwise rollers ("Babylon") to breezy hardcore breaks ("Bad Habit") to stark metallic tech ("Hydra") Manchester-style percussive murkage ("Maasai") deep space halftime ("Umbra") and cosmic hip-hop, this is one of the broadest Street Series collections so far... And a solid reason to keep Rize well and truly on your radar.
Review: Climbing up the camo netting with stealth, Spanish duo follow up their assassin IM:LTD EP with their broadest bounty to date. Full focus on the drumwork, "Badman" does that rolling halftime thing that Om Unit does so well, "All Kind Of People" and "Just A Herb" take us even darker into the dance with raw tribal spaciousness where the heart-stopping kicks command the situation. "Rainy Riddim" continues the visceral drum patterns but with a subtle and floaty jungle icing while "Selassie I" is straight up jungle naughtiness, all rattling amens and twisted mentasms. Finally "Kill It Properly" bids us adieu with a wonked percussive agenda similar to Digital. This isn't called the "Badman" EP for nothing.
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