[NEohioPAL] Concert on Nov. 2 to Celebrate the Inauguration of Oberlin College President Marvin Krislov
Marci Janas
Marci.Janas at oberlin.edu
Thu Oct 18 09:40:35 PDT 2007
Media Contact Only:
Marci Janas, Director of Conservatory Media Relations
440-775-8328 (office); 440-667-2724 (cell); marci.janas at oberlin.edu
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
ESTABLISHED AND RISING STARS OF THE CLASSICAL MUSIC WORLD
TO PERFORM AT INAUGURAL CONCERT FOR MARVIN KRISLOV,
OBERLIN COLLEGE’S 14TH PRESIDENT, NOV. 2, 2007
OBERLIN, OHIO (October 16, 2007)—This summer, Marvin Krislov became
the 14th President of Oberlin College. To mark the historic occasion
of his inauguration, Oberlin will host a weekend of symposia,
concerts, and, of course, a ceremony beginning Friday, November 2, 2007.
The inaugural concert that will take place on Friday,
November 2, at 8:30 p.m. in Finney Chapel will feature performances
by some of the most exciting established and rising stars of the
classical music world; nearly all of them graduated from, or
currently attend, the Oberlin Conservatory of Music. The concert is
free and open to the public, and will be broadcast live on 104.9-FM
WCLV, Cleveland’s classical station. The live broadcast, with a
simulcast on www.wclv.com, is sponsored by the Riverside Company, a
leading private equity firm specializing in premier companies.
The inaugural concert is presented by the Oberlin
Conservatory of Music and the Office of Public Programs.
Violinist Jennifer Koh (OC ’97), with pianist Shai
Wosner, will perform Maurice Ravel’s Violin Sonata in G Major.
Pianist Spencer Myer (OC ’00) will perform J.S. Bach’s aria Sheep May
Safely Graze, from his Hunting Cantata, BWV 208; two préludes by
Claude Debussy—Les tierces alternées and Feux d’artifice—from Book II
of his Préludes; and Igor Stravinsky’s Four Études, Op. 7. The songs
performed by baritone Robert Sims (OC ’88) and pianist Cliff Jackson
(OC ’77) will include Lena McLin’s Great Day, Aaron Copland’s Ching a-
Ring Chaw, Jerome Kern’s Ol’ Man River, and Sims’ arrangement of Vera
Hall and Dock Reed’s I’m Goin’ Home on the Mornin’ Train. The Prima
Trio—clarinetist Boris Allakhverdyan (OC ’08), pianist Anastasia
Dedik (OC ’06), and violinist Farhad Hudiyev (OC ’08)—will perform
Peter Schickele’s Serenade for Three and Fleeting Miniatures, an
original composition by Mr. Hudiyev.
Finney Chapel is located at 90 North Professor Street,
across from Tappan Square, on the Oberlin College campus. It is
wheelchair accessible, and free parking is available throughout the
campus. For more information about the inaugural concert, please call
440-775-6933, or visit www.oberlin.edu. A complete listing of
inaugural activities can be found at http://cms.oberlin.edu/
inauguration/.
Jennifer Koh
Violinist Jennifer Koh continues to dazzle audiences with her ability
to fuse intensity of temperament with a classical poise and elegance.
In the words of the New York Times she is a “fearless soloist,” who
has a formidable capacity for “living through” the music she performs
on stage. As a virtuoso whose natural flair is combined with a
probing intellectual acuity, Ms. Koh is committed to exploring
connections between the pieces she plays, searching for similarities
of voice between different composers, as well as within the works of
a single composer. Accordingly, her programs often present rare and
revealing juxtapositions, offering works by composers as divergent as
Mozart and Ornette Coleman, Schubert and Wuorinen. She earned a
Bachelor of Arts degree in English literature at Oberlin College and
a Performance Diploma from the Oberlin Conservatory of Music in 1997,
and she maintains a lively interest in writing and literature. She is
also an alumna of the Curtis Institute, where she worked extensively
with Jaime Laredo and Felix Galimir. A broad educational background
enriches Ms. Koh’s innovative ideas about outreach and her approach
to the study of composers.
Since the 1994-95 season, when she won the International Tchaikovsky
Competition in Moscow, the Concert Artists Guild Competition, and the
Avery Fisher Career Grant—all while a student at Oberlin—Ms. Koh has
been heard with leading orchestras and conductors around the world,
including the Cleveland Orchestra, the Chicago Symphony, the
Cincinnati Symphony (under Yakov Kreizberg,) the National Symphony
Orchestra, the Detroit symphony, the New World Symphony, San Diego
Symphony, Hartford Symphony, Tulsa Philharmonic, Jacksonville
Symphony, the Kyushu Orchestra of Japan, the Dortmund Philharmonic of
Germany, Houston Symphony, Charleston Symphony, Chicago Sinfonietta,
Iceland Symphony, Helsinki Symphony, the Polish Chamber Orchestra,
the Moscow Radio Symphony, the Moscow State Academy Symphony
Orchestra, and the Brandenburg Ensemble. In December 1999, Ms. Koh
made her Carnegie Hall debut performing Mozart’s Concerto in A Major
(the “Turkish”) with the New York String Orchestra under Jaime
Laredo, a performance during which “Ms. Koh drew a lustrous tone from
her fine Stradivari, yet kept her sound clear and focused,” according
to Anthony Tommasini of the New York Times.
A prolific recitalist, Ms. Koh appears frequently at major concert
halls and festivals, including Carnegie Hall, the Kennedy Center,
Mostly Mozart, Marlboro, and Wolf Trap, and with Christoph Eschenbach
at Ravinia and Schleswig-Holstein. She is heard annually at the
Spoleto Festival in Italy, where she recorded Menotti's Violin
Concerto live in concert with the Spoleto Festival Orchestra
conducted by Richard Hickox.
A committed educator, Ms. Koh has won high praise for her
performances in classrooms around the country under her innovative
Music Messenger outreach program. Now in its third year, the program
continues to form an important part of her musical activities. “The
majority of children in this country have not been given the
opportunity to learn music as a form of self-expression,” she
asserts, “and I want to share this experience of making and listening
to music with them.” Ms. Koh’s outreach efforts have taken her to
classrooms all over the country to perform challenging music —
whether it be Bach, Paganini, or Bartók — for thousands of students
who have little opportunity to hear classical music in their daily
lives. “Music is a positive outlet for emotions and is much more
creative and constructive than spending hours in a shopping mall,”
she says. She is also a member of the Board of Directors of the
National Foundation for the Advancement for the Arts, a scholarship
program for high school students in the arts.
Ms. Koh is grateful to her private sponsor for the generous loan of
the 1727 Ex Grumiaux Ex General DuPont Stradivari she uses in
performance.
Shai Wosner
Pianist Shai Wosner has been dubbed by the Financial Times as “an
artist to follow keenly.” With a diverse repertoire ranging from Bach
to Ligeti, he enjoys a growing reputation with audiences and critics
alike. Recently named a BBC Radio 3 New Generation Artist, his
upcoming engagements include performances with several BBC
orchestras, the Houston Symphony, and at the Kennedy Center and the
Konzerthaus in Berlin. Recent highlights include appearances with the
symphony orchestras of Atlanta, Chicago, Dallas, San Francisco, as
well as the Los Angeles Philharmonic, Vienna Philharmonic, Barcelona
Symphony, Berlin Staatskapelle and London’s Proms. He made his
Carnegie Hall debut with the Chicago Civic Orchestra under Daniel
Barenboim as well as his acclaimed New York recital debut at the
Metropolitan Museum of Art. An active chamber musician, Mr. Wosner
was a member of the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center Two and
has performed at such festivals as the Ravinia Festival, Hollywood
Bowl, Jerusalem International Chamber Music Festival, and Casals
Festival, among others. For many years he was an annual participant
of the West-Eastern Divan workshop organized by Daniel Barenboim. He
is the recipient of a 2005 Avery Fisher Career Grant. As an inherent
part of his repertoire, he has performed works by renowned
contemporary composers such as György Ligeti, John Adams, and Bright
Sheng. Mr. Wosner studied with Emanuel Krasovsky before moving to New
York to complete his studies with Emanuel Ax. He resides in New York
City.
Spencer Myer
Garnering stellar audience and critical acclaim from around the
globe, Spencer Myer is rapidly establishing himself as one of the
most outstanding pianists of his generation. In 2004, he captured
first prize in the 10th UNISA International Piano Competition in
Pretoria, South Africa, as well as special prizes for the best
performances of Bach, the commissioned work, the semifinal round
recital and both concerto prizes in the final round. He is also a
laureate in the 2007 William Kapell, 2005 Cleveland, 2005 Busoni
(where he was also awarded the Audience Prize), 2004 Montréal, and
2003 New Orleans International Piano Competitions. Winner of the 2006
Christel DeHaan Classical Fellowship from the American Pianists
Association, Mr. Myer was awarded both of the competition’s special
prizes in Chamber Music and Lieder Accompanying. He is also the
winner of the 2000 Marilyn Horne Foundation Competition, and
subsequently enjoys a growing reputation as a vocal collaborator. Mr.
Myer’s orchestral, recital, and chamber music performances have been
heard throughout North America, Canada, Europe, Africa, and Asia. He
has been soloist with the Cleveland Orchestra, Indianapolis Symphony
Orchestra, Louisiana Philharmonic Orchestra and Beijing’s China
National Symphony Orchestra, and has collaborated with, among others,
conductors Nicholas Cleobury, Jacques Lacombe, Jahja Ling, Maurice
Peress, Klauspeter Seibel, Arjan Tien and Victor Yampolsky. In May
2005, his recital/orchestral tour of South Africa included a
performance of the five piano concerti of Beethoven with the Chamber
Orchestra of South Africa. Mr. Myer made his debut at the famed
festival of the Blossom Music Center during the summer of 2007. His
recital appearances have been presented in New York City’s Weill
Recital Hall, 92nd Street Y and Steinway Hall, Philadelphia’s Kimmel
Center for the Performing Arts, and London’s Wigmore Hall, as well as
in Chicago, Cincinnati, Fort Worth, and China, while many of his
performances have been broadcast on WQXR (New York City), WHYY
(Philadelphia), WCLV (Cleveland), and WFMT (Chicago). An avid chamber
musician, he has also performed with the Blair and Pacifica string
quartets. In January 2007, Mr. Myer performed Gershwin’s Rhapsody in
Blue at the Inaugural Festivities of Ohio’s Governor Ted Strickland
and Lieutenant Governor Lee Fisher. An enthusiastic supporter of the
education of young musicians, Spencer Myer has been a frequent guest
artist at workshops for students and teachers, including Indiana’s
Goshen College Piano Workshop and the Texas Conservatory for Young
Artists in Dallas, and has served on the faculty of the Baldwin-
Wallace College Conservatory of Music. He is also an advocate of
contemporary music and inter-arts collaboration, and has worked with
the Chicago- and New York-based ICE (International Contemporary
Ensemble), Indianapolis’ Dance Kaleidoscope, Ohio Dance Theatre and
New York City’s New Triad for Collaborative Arts and The Juilliard
School’s “Composers and Choreographers” series. Spencer Myer is a
graduate of the Juilliard School, where he studied with Julian
Martin. He earned a Bachelor of Music degree in piano performance
from the Oberlin Conservatory of Music, where he studied with Peter
Takács and Joseph Schwartz. He has also studied with Christina Dahl,
and he spent two summers at the Music Academy of the West, studying
with Jerome Lowenthal and, later, vocal accompanying with Warren
Jones and Marilyn Horne. During the course of his undergraduate
studies at the Oberlin Conservatory of Music, he was the recipient of
numerous awards from that institution, while, in 2000, he was named a
recipient of a four-year Jacob K. Javits Memorial Fellowship from the
United States Department of Education. He earned a Doctor of Musical
Arts degree from Stony Brook University in 2005. Mr. Myer can be
heard on the Dimension Records label, performing music of the late
Cleveland composer Frederick Koch and on a composer-conducted Naxos
CD in performances of three concerti from Huang Ruo’s Chamber
Concerto Cycle. His debut CD for harmonia mundi usa — music of
Busoni, Copland, Debussy, and Kohs — was released in the fall of 2007.
Robert Sims
The lyric baritone Robert Sims has been highly praised for his moving
interpretations of African American spirituals, and critics have
hailed his rich luxuriant tone, his energetic performances, and his
convincing stage presence. The gold medal winner of the Enmark
American Traditions Competition, the Friedrich Schorr Opera Award,
and the National Opera America Award, Mr. Sims has given numerous
recitals throughout the United States, Europe, and Asia. He recently
made his recital debut at Carnegie Hall, and has performed in concert
at Lincoln Center in New York, the Smithsonian Institution, the Los
Angeles African American Museum, Grace Cathedral in San Francisco,
the Chicago Historical Society, the Latour de France International
Music Festival in France, and the celebrated American Church in
Paris. Under the auspices of the Community Concerts and Live On Stage
Series, Mr. Sims performed more than 150 recitals throughout the
United States. He has appeared several times in performance on the
Hour of Power from the Crystal Cathedral in Garden Grove, California,
which is broadcast internationally, and he was the focus of a Public
Broadcasting Service special Artbeat Chicago. Included among the
summer festivals that he has sung for are Chautauqua, Yachats, Grant
Park, Big Arts, and the Ravinia Music Festival. He also toured
nationally in the ensemble Three Generations, a celebration of
American spirituals and folk songs with renowned artists George
Shirley, the late William Warfield, and Benjamin Matthews. He has
performed in duo recital with folk legend Odetta and recently debuted
with Simon Estes and Jubilant Sykes in the trio Simon, Sykes & Sims,
singing spirituals and American songs. Mr. Sims earned a Bachelor of
Music degree in vocal performance from the Oberlin Conservatory of
Music in 1988. He is also an alumnus of SUNY Binghamton, Northwestern
University, and the American Conservatory of Music.
Cliff Jackson
Pianist Cliff Jackson earned a Bachelor of Music degree in piano
performance from the Oberlin Conservatory of Music in 1977, and
pursued graduate studies at the Manhattan School of Music. Cited for
his sensitive accompaniments and insightful musicianship, Mr. Jackson
has been the pianist for many internationally renowned artists,
including Kathleen Battle, Renata Scotto, Simon Estes, Edda Moser,
Felicia Weathers, and Gwendolyn Bradley. His work as a highly sought-
after collaborative artist has brought him to the stages of Carnegie
Hall, the Kennedy Center, the Wiener Musikverein, the Teatro Colon,
the Teatro Municipal in São Paulo, and the Royal Opera House at
Covent Garden. Having studied with such esteemed pianists as Leon
Bates, Frances Walker, Martin Katz, and Warren George Wilson, Mr.
Jackson has not only been recognized as a leading pianist, but he has
also gained a wide reputation as an outstanding coach of vocal
repertoire, ranging in scope from Baroque through 20th-century opera,
and song literature encompassing the vastly divergent stylistic
periods. Mr. Jackson was awarded a coaching fellowship by the
American Opera Center at the Juilliard School, where he was a coach
for two years, and was a member of the musical staffs of Miami Opera,
Tulsa Opera, and the Mobile Opera. He was the recipient of the Gramma
Fisher Scholarship by the American Institute of Musical Studies in
Graz, Austria, and he has performed as piano soloist for the Dance
Theatre of Harlem. In 1992, Mr. Jackson joined the faculty of the
University of Kentucky’s School of Music, where he is currently an
Associate Professor serving as Vocal Coach for the University of
Kentucky Opera Theatre and Voice Curriculum.
The Prima Trio
The Prima Trio, which features violinist Farhad Hudiyev, clarinetist
Boris Allakhverdyan, and pianist Anastasia Dedik, was formed in 2004
at the Oberlin Conservatory of Music. The Prima Trio’s performances
throughout the United States including appearances at the Kennedy
Center for the Performing Arts and the Oakton Chamber Music Series in
Washington D.C., and in Virginia, Indiana, Oregon, and California,
among other states. In June 2006 the ensemble participated in the
Hampden-Sydney Chamber Music Festival (Hampden-Sydney, Virginia). As
grand-prize winners of the prestigious 2007 Fischoff National Chamber
Music Competition, their future engagements include appearances at
the Emilia Romagna Music Festival in Modena, Italy, in 2008, and
concerts in Illinois, Indiana, and Michigan in October 2007. In
February 2008, they will present a recital in Cleveland, Ohio, under
the auspices of the Cleveland Chamber Music Society.
Boris Allakhverdyan, clarinet
Boris Allakhverdyan was born in Baku, Azerbaijan, in 1984. He started
taking clarinet lessons from his father at the age of 9, and later
entered the Moscow Conservatory Pre-College Division. Upon his
graduation in 2001, he was accepted to the Moscow Tchaikovsky
Conservatory, where he studied with Professor Raphael Bagdasarian and
earned a Bachelor of Music degree (with honors) in 2006. He is
enrolled in the Artist Diploma program at the Oberlin Conservatory of
Music, where he studies with Associate Professor of Clarinet Richard
Hawkins. Mr. Allakhverdyan has won numerous competitions, including
first prize at the Hellam Young Artist’s Competition (Springfield,
Missouri, 2007) and second prize awards in 2000 at the Rozanov
International Clarinet Competition (Moscow) and the Rimsky-Korsakov
Clarinet Competition (St. Petersburg, Russia). He has performed as a
soloist and with orchestras in Russia, Germany, Denmark, Venezuela,
and the United States. He has also participated in numerous music
festivals, including the International Music Festival (Offenbach,
Germany, 1999); the Musical Kremlin Festival (Moscow, 2003); and the
Hampden-Sydney Music Festival (Hampden-Sydney,Virginia, 2006). In
2007, Mr. Allakhverdyan will attend the Lucerne Festival Academy in
Switzerland, under the direction of Pierre Boulez, in August, and the
Norfolk Chamber Music Festival of the Yale School of Music in July
and August. In March 2007 he won an audition for the second clarinet
position of the Youngstown Symphony Orchestra in Ohio. A 2007 winner
of Oberlin’s Concerto Competition, he is also a member of the Oberlin
Chamber Orchestra.
Anastasia Dedik, piano
Anastasia Dedik was born in 1981 in St. Petersburg, Russia, to a
family of musicians, and started taking piano lessons from her mother
at the age of 5. In 1999 she graduated from the pre-conservatory
division of the St. Petersburg Conservatory (under the instruction of
Asya Rubina) and was accepted to the Conservatory without any exams,
studying at first with Professor Elena Shishko and then Professor
Valery Vishnevsky, under whom she earned a Bachelor of Music and a
Master of Music degree in 2004. She has participated in the master
classes and studied with Yoheved Kaplinsky, Natalia Trull, Andrey
Diev, Lev Naumov, Vladimir Krainev, Edith Fisher, Russell Sherman,
Vladimir Viardo, and Mario Delli Ponti. In 2006 Ms. Dedik earned an
Artist Diploma at the Oberlin Conservatory of Music, following
studies — on a full talent scholarship — with Professor of Piano
Sedmara Z. Rutstein. Ms. Dedik has won top prizes in numerous
international piano competitions dating back to 1994, when she took
second prize in the Music de France International Piano Competition
in Paris. Her first prize awards include those from the Frederic
Chopin Piano Competition (St. Petersburg, Russia, 2000); the Maria
Judina International Piano Competition (St. Petersburg, Russia,
2002); the Oberlin Concerto Competition (Oberlin, Ohio, 2004); the
Russian International Piano Competition (San Jose, California, 2005);
the Lee Biennial Piano Competition (Sioux Falls, South Dakota, 2006);
the Rovero d’Oro International Piano Competition (San Bartolomeo,
Italy, 2006); and the Buono and Bradshaw International Piano
Competition (New York, New York, 2007).
Her 2006 performances include concerts in Portland,
Oregon; San Francisco; and Washington, D.C. at the Kennedy Center for
the Performing Arts, representing the Oberlin Conservatory of Music
under the auspices of the center’s Conservatory Project Series. In
April 2006, she was featured on the Steinway Society of the Bay
Area’s Young Artists Concert in San Jose, California. David Beech, a
critic for Peninsula Reviews, wrote that her playing “brought tears
to the eyes. … This was highly accomplished and authentically Russian
pianism.” Ms. Dedik has performed as soloist and featured pianist
with orchestras in Russia, Germany, Italy, Greece, Slovakia, Poland,
Finland, Estonia, Holland, and the United States. Her 2007-08 concert
season will include an October 2007 performance at Carnegie Hall (as
part of her first prize award at the Buono and Bradshaw competition),
and other venues throughout the U.S. as well as concerts in Italy,
Germany, and Russia. She will be participating in the Van Cliburn
Piano Festival in Fort Worth, Texas in June 2007.
Upcoming teaching engagements include the Casalmaggiore
Music Festival in Italy in July 2007 and a master class and recital
at the University of South Dakota and at Augustana College (Sioux
Falls) in October 2007.
Ms. Dedik was accepted with full tuition scholarships to Yale
University’s School of Music, the Mannes School of Music, and the
Juilliard School. In fall 2007 she will continue her education at
Juilliard, pursuing an Artist Diploma under the tutelage of
Professors Matti Raekallio and Yoheved Kaplinsky.
Farhad Hudiyev, violin
Farhad Hudiyev, a native of Ashgabad, Turkmenistan, studied violin
and composition with Vera Abaeva at the Special Music School. He
distinguished himself at the age of 10 as the youngest performer ever
selected to play with the National Violin Ensemble of Turkmenistan,
and at 12 he won a scholarship to attend the New Names Festival in
Suzdal, Russia, which was sponsored by the Moscow Conservatory. He
was named the most promising young musician at the festival, and
earned the top award, the Golden Apple. Mr. Hudiyev has performed in
Ashgabad, Suzdal, Moscow, and Odessa (Ukraine) as both a soloist and
as a member of the violin ensemble of Turkmenistan. He came to the
United States in 2001 under a full scholarship with the Interlochen
Arts Academy, where he studied with Paul Sonner and Michael Albaugh.
Currently in his second year of study with Professor of Violin Milan
Vitek at the Oberlin Conservatory of Music, Mr. Hudiyev won an
honorable mention in the 2004 ASCAP Foundation Morton Gould Young
Composer awards, held in May 2004 at Lincoln Center in New York, for
his symphonic work Turkmenistan. In June 2006, he won third prize and
a $1,000 scholarship at the 30th Annual Glenn Miller Competition,
held in Clarinda, Iowa, the legendary musician’s birthplace. His
other awards include the Neil Rabaut Composition Prize from the
Interlochen Arts Academy. He is a member of the Oberlin Orchestra.
President Marvin Krislov
Marvin Krislov, Oberlin College’s 14th President, came to Oberlin
from the University of Michigan, where he had been vice president and
general counsel since 1998. Mr. Krislov led the University of
Michigan’s legal defense of its admission policies, resulting in the
2003 Supreme Court decision recognizing the importance of student
body diversity. A Rhodes Scholar, he earned a doctor of laws degree
from Yale Law School, a master’s degree in modern history from Oxford
University’s Magdalen College, and a bachelor’s degree from Yale
University.
The Oberlin Conservatory of Music, founded in 1865 and situated
amid the intellectual vitality of Oberlin College since 1867, is the
oldest continuously operating conservatory in the United States. The
Conservatory is renowned internationally as a professional music
school of the highest caliber and has been pronounced a “national
treasure” by the Washington Post. Oberlin’s alumni have gone on to
achieve illustrious careers in all aspects of the serious music
world. Many of them have attained stature as solo performers,
composers, and conductors, among them Jennifer Koh, Steven Isserlis,
Denyce Graves, Franco Farina, Christopher Robertson, Lisa Saffer,
George Walker, Christopher Rouse, David Zinman, and Robert Spano. All
of the members of the contemporary sextet eighth blackbird, most of
the members of the International Contemporary Ensemble, and many of
the members of Apollo’s Fire are Oberlin alumni. In chamber music,
the Miró, Pacifica, Juillard, and Fry Street quartets, among other
small ensembles, include Oberlin-trained musicians, who also can be
found in major orchestras and opera companies throughout the world.
For more information about Oberlin, please visit www.oberlin.edu/con.
CALENDAR LISTING
CONCERT CELEBRATING THE INAUGURATION OF
OBERLIN COLLEGE PRESIDENT MARVIN KRISLOV
Friday, November 2, 2007, at 8:30 p.m.
Jennifer Koh, violin
Spencer Myer, piano
Robert Sims, baritone
The Prima Trio
FINNEY CHAPEL
90 North Professor Street
(across from Tappan Square)
Oberlin, OH 44074
440-775-6933
www.oberlin.edu
FREE ADMISSION
Free parking
# # #
Marci Janas
Director of Conservatory Media Relations
Oberlin Conservatory of Music
39 West College Street
Oberlin, OH 44074
www.oberlin.edu/con
(P) 440.775.8328
(F) 440.775.5457
marci.janas at oberlin.edu
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