187 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
187 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
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Milton Beral
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PINK FLOYD
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In my opinion Pink Floyd is the best band musically and theatrically ever to
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bless a stage. Their unparalleled musical talents have led them on their
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seventeen year tour of rock. Their names and music will be seen and heard for
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many, many years to come.
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The band originally formed in England has remained consistent except for the
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replacement of Roger "Syd" Barrett with Roger Waters,and Rick Wright, who
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dropped out in 1983 right before they recorded The Final Cut. Pink Floyd's
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musical career spanned from early in 1966 until their last album, The Final
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Cut, in 1983. For the bulk of their career Pink Floyd consisted of Roger
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Waters on bass, Rick Wright on keyboards, Nick Mason on drums, and David
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Gilmore on guitar. Today Roger Waters, Nick Mason, and David Gilmore are all
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pursuing solo careers.
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Roger Waters was born on Sept. 6, 1944. Nick Mason was born on Jan. 27,
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1945. David Gilmore was born on Mar. 6, 1944. Roger "Syd" Barrett was born
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on Jan. 6, 1946. Rick Wright was born on July 28, 1945.
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Roger Keith "Syd" Barrett was born in Cambridge, England. There he attended
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Cambridge High School for Boys which Waters and Gilmore was going to also.
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When he moved to London, he attended Camberwell School of Art. His main focus
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of study was painting, but he learned how to play a guitar there as well. He
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played with such bands as Geoff Mott and the Mottos, The Hollering Blues, and
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as a folk duo, with David Gilmore, who taught him Stones licks at lunch.
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George Roger Waters studied Architecture at Regent Street Polytechnic in
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London. There he met Nicholas Berkeley Mason and Richard William Wright. The
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three formed a band called Sigma 6, their manager was Ken Chapman, but he never
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got them signed. They also played as The T-Set, The Abdabs, and as The
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Screaming Abdabs.
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Juliette Gale, one of The Screaming Abdabs singers married Rick Wright.
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This broke up the band. Waters, Wright, and Mason along with jazz guitarist
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Bob Close and Roger Barrett formed a new band in 1966. The band was named
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after one of Barrett's records, by Georgia bluesman Pink Anderson and Floyd
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Council. The band was named The Pink Floyd. Musical differences of opinion
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led to the absence of Bob Close. The Pink Floyd began with Waters, Wright,
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Mason, and Barrett.
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The Pink Floyd quickly became the flagship of the London underground. They
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learned how to manipulate electronic feedback in between Chuck Berry songs.
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Their manager, Peter Jenner, saw them in a club. He got them gigs at the
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London Free School's Sound/Light Workshop, here they played under an array of
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special effects and lighting. This is most likely where they got their
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interest in special effects.
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The Pink Floyd was working at a Thriving London club called the UFO club,
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here is where they first met Joe Boyd, the owner of the club, who later went on
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to produce their first single, Arnold Layne. Joe was best known for his work
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at Warner Brothers on movie soundtracks (i.e. Clockwork Orange) and his work
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on the Jimi Hendrix movie.
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Their first big break was a single called See Emily Play. This reached
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number 5 on the U.K. charts and lead to their signing with EMI. On Aug.
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5,1967 they released their first album, The Piper At The Gates Of Dawn.
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Barrett wrote 10 of the 11 songs and drew the back sleeve. Barrett got the
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title from a chapter in "Wind in the Willows" In October the band had their
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first U.S. tour. Barrett took lots of LSD on the tour and slowly became an
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acid casualty. Although he used the drug while writing, it eventually robbed
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him of all creativity. Barrett asked his old chum David Gilmore to play guitar
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with them, which he did on Feb 18, 1968. Barrett and Gilmore played together
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for seven weeks then then inevitable came and Barrett left the band.
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On June 29, 1967 they played a concert with Jethro Tull and released an
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album on the same date. The album, A Saucerful of Secrets had the single, Set
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The Controls For The Heart Of The Sun, which led to their much publicized space
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rock/synthesizer sound. On their next tour they started establishing a
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reputation as a very theatrical band with a full light show. they also came up
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with many unique devices. They most important contribution to todays music is
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they development of quadraphonic sound, or 360 degree sound. they also
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developed a device called the Azimuth, which would rotate the sound around the
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listener in a very psychodelic manner. Floyd also developed many new studio
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techniques and tools which eventually led to in my opinion, the perfect album,
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The Dark Side Of The Moon.
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Floyd released their next album, More in 68. Ummagumma was the next Floyd
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album released in 1969, it was a two album set. Each member of the band had
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one side of the record to write and experiment with. The fifth Pink Floyd
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release entitled Atom Heart Mother included such sounds as male and female
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chorus, a horn section and fireworks. The album, Atom Heart Mother included
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Ron Geesin who's electronic music changed the Floyd sound forever.
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On May 15 1970 they did an "out-do-all-others" concert with fireworks and a
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fifty foot long octopus, which rose out of the lake. In fact the music was so
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loud it killed the fish in the lake. Obviously the fish didn't realize that
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they were listening to the best group of all time.
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On November 13, 1970 Floyd released Meddle a collection of jazz/blues
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rhythms unlike much of their previous material. Two years later in 1972 they
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released their next album, Obscured by the Clouds.
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During this time the band was busy recording what was to be a rock classic,
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Dark Side Of The Moon. Pink Floyd spent nine months in 1972 making this album,
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they released it on march 1973 at a special presentation at the London
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planetarium. The album defined the band's views of alienation in our modern
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society. Dark Side Of The Moon went on to become the longest charted rock LP
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ever on billboard's charts. Pink Floyd produced the album themselves, the
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album was years ahead of it's time in production techniques, stereo separation,
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and special effects. This was considered THE album, and still today is
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considered the definitive Pink Floyd. Floyd finally got their long awaited
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U.S. F.M. airplay. The album rocketed to number one on both U.S. and U.K.
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charts almost overnight.
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The band would now have a difficult time trying to match or top their
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performance on Dark Side Of The Moon. Later that year they toured the U.S. in
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what is considered one of the biggest stage shows of all time with crashing
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aircraft, dry ice, an inflatable man with glowing green eyes, and a gong which
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burst into flames.
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In 1975 the band had many problems on their U.K. tour which led to the
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announcement that they would no longer perform in the U.K.
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On September 1975 they released their follow-up album to Dark Side of The
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Moon. The album was called Wish You Were Here. The album was dedicated to
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Barrett.
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In 1979 they lapsed out of musical silence with one of the best albums of
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their career, a double album set entitled, The Wall. The Wall is a
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semi-autobiographical account of Roger Waters life. The album was followed up
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by the critically acclaimed film of the same name a year later. The film
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stared the lead singer of The Boomtown Rats, Bob Geldorf as "Pink Floyd", the
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story's main character alias Roger Waters. The wall is a psychological
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euphemism for the emotions Waters felt. According to Waters it symbolizes
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compulsory socialization, the masks men assume, the barriers of communication
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and the limits of being alone. The Operetta, The Wall, leads us through the
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non linear journey through Water's mind. The movie was Directed by Alan
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Parker, who has also dome such works as Bugsy Malone, Midnight Express, Fame,
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and Shoot The Moon. Also included in the idealistic, symbolistic film are
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short but powerful bursts of animation as done by British artist Gerald Scarfe.
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Waters was criticized about the film saying it lacked warmth, and sketches a
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world where individualism is non-existent. I disagree, I thought it was the
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beast film I have ever seen.
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The year following the release of the movie, the band toured again in the
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U.S. making use of their theatrical background, they built up a wall in
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between the stage and audience then in massive grand finale the destroyed it
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with guitars and explosives. To date The Wall has sold 12 million copies.
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The Band, minus Rick Wright whose synthetic synthesizer textures gave them a
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unique and elite sound, recorded on last album in 1983. The Final Cut, Pink
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Floyd's last album was, according to Waters, dedicated to his father who died
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on a battlefield. He refers to this many times, an example is in the song The
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Gunners Dream, in which he sings "going round and round is my brain/his dream
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driving me insane" In the album he said we're victims of world leaders in The
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Fletcher Memorial Home. Waters makes a strong statement about nuclear war in
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his last song ever recorded with Pink Floyd, Two Suns In The Desert.
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Pink Floyd has been on the cutting edge of rock for their seventeen year
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career by not moving too deeply into the realms of intellectual expression as
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many of the other "artfull rock" bands of the 60's and 70's have done (i.e.
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David Bowie). Pink Floyd's gently contoured melodies and sweet harmonies,
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still make them one of the best groups today. They used synthesizers,
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cathedral singers, colorful chord progressions, composed guitar parts, with
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heavy drums and hard edged vocals to convey their messages. Pink Floyd was one
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of the few bands with enough guts to deviate from the traditional popular
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music. No doubt, we will never ever see a group of musicians like Pink Floyd.
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BIBLIOGRAPHY
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San Francisco, Nov. 82 p54
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Los Angeles, Oct. 82 p247
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Nation, Sept. 11, 82 p219
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California Magazine, Sept. 82 p141
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Los Angeles, Sept. 82 p264
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Variety, Sept. 82 p80
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Dow Jones News and Report, Jan. 84
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High Fidelity, Aug. 81 p74
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Library Journal, Feb. 15, 81 p425
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New Republic, July 19, 80 p23
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Seventeen, Nov. 82 p92
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Rolling Stone, April 3, 80 p76
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Boy's Life, April 80 p19
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People, March 17, 80 p18
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People, Feb. 11, 80 p14
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Surfer, Feb. 85 p28
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Stereo Review, Nov. 83 p102
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Seventeen, Aug. 83 p261
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High Fidelity, July 83 p91
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Guitar Player, July 83 p138
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Rolling Stone, April 14, 83 p65
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Christianity Today, Jan. 7 83 p56
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