Mick Unplugged - Bonus Episode 14 | Sculpting Sounds and Emotions with Patrick Leonard - Mick Unplugged
Episode Date: June 28, 2024In this captivating episode, Mick Hunt delves into Patrick Leonard's artistic journey. From his early days influencing the pop music landscape to embracing a solo path, Patrick shares the deep connect...ion between his life experiences and his music. He offers a glimpse into the creative process behind his new album, emphasizing the personal and emotional depth that defines his work.Patrick Leonard's Background: Renowned for his collaborations with Madonna, Elton John, and other stars, Patrick enters a new chapter with his solo album.Defining Moments: Patrick discusses vital turning points in his career, including his decision to prioritize his music following notable collaborations.Discussion Topics:Insights into Patrick's illustrious career and his creative evolution over the years.The inspiration behind his solo album was driven by changes in his environment and personal growth.The transition from working with legendary musicians to focusing on his music.Key Quotes:"Music connects us to emotions directly, unlike anything else.""Leaving a successful path to follow my artistic voice was liberating and challenging."Next Steps:Listen: Explore Patrick Leonard's new album to experience his latest musical expressions.Reflect: Consider how environmental changes have influenced your creative or professional pursuits.Engage: Share your favorite Patrick Leonard collaboration or solo piece using #MickUnplugged.Connect & Discover:Website: patrickleonardmusic.comInstagram: instagram.com/patrickleonardigVimeo: vimeo.com/954492896 ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★ See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Are you ready to change your habits, sculpt your destiny, and light up your path to greatness?
Welcome to the epicenter of transformation.
This is Mic Unplugged.
We'll help you identify your because, so you can create a routine that's not just productive, but powerful.
You'll embrace the art of evolution, adapt strategies to stay ahead of the game,
and take a step toward the extraordinary. So let's unleash your potential. Now, here's Mick.
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to another episode of Mick Unplugged, the podcast that drives deep
into the hearts and minds of inspiring leaders and creatives. And today, I'm here with someone that I looked up to for many, many years of my life.
So I'm thrilled to have with us a legend known for his iconic collaborations with the
likes of Madonna, Elton John, Roger Waters, Leonard Cohen, just name a few.
But now he's stepping into the spotlight with his solo album, All Comes Down to the Mood. We're here to explore his new project,
his illustrious career, and his unique creative process. Without further ado,
please welcome me in joining the great Mr. Patrick Leonard. Patrick, how are you doing today, sir?
Hi, Mike. You flatter me.
It's all true. It is all true. I mean-
You're too kind, man. You're too kind.
No, you were the kind one for,
for taking a moment to spend some time with me and the listeners and,
you know, all the collaborations, you know, we,
we just highlighted Madonna and Elton John and Roger Waters,
but now you're doing your own. Yeah. You're doing your own.
All comes down to mood. It's going to release soon.
What inspired you for this project?
Well, as you and I were just talking, you know, my wife and I relocated from the West Coast to the East Coast.
So we're in a very different environment and a very open environment.
We're in the country and it's very open.
And being a kid from Michigan, from rural Michigan, I thrive with trees and streams much more than
stoplights and cars, you know? So there's that. And I think what got me to this point is after
Leonard Cohen passed away in 2016, I'd worked for Leonard for about seven years and done almost
nothing else in that time. No records or anything with anybody else or no writing with anyone else.
And at that point, you know, for collaborations, it felt like kind of the last house on the block,
you know? I mean, I really couldn't imagine going in and writing pop songs with anybody or doing
anything. It just seemed like a good, complete circle. And then as this stuff was going on,
we were doing a little hiding from COVID a couple of years later, Roger Waters and I started talking about a project
that we sort of started picking at a little bit just remotely.
And then when we moved here,
that project turned into the Dark Side of the Moon redo,
which I worked with him for some time on, a few months.
And then I don't know why.
Well, I do know why, but I decided I didn't want to do it and I think it
just had something to do with having all this music I'd been working on myself and the new
environment and the new studio and it just didn't feel right to me and Roger had his whole band and
he was all set up and it wasn't going to leave him hanging or anything he's gonna he's gonna do it
and he did it anyway and he did a great job. And so I kind of said, I'm not doing
that. And maybe I didn't have that much of a purpose right at that point. But then and this
is just it sounds like nonsense, but it's not. Then David Gilmour called me and said, I want to
make a solo record. And I'd like you to help me with it. And I went, OK, because you need your
reaction when these people call us not to say no. Right.-jerk reaction is yes, yes, childhood idol, yes, let's go.
And it was a little bit the same thing.
We worked for a while, and I just felt like I can't bring what I need to bring to this.
And so I backed away from that one, and now I find myself really with kind of the ultimate nothing to do.
Because once for me in my world and my background, once I've said
no to that, there's nothing more. There's nothing more. There's nothing. I won't say yes to anything
if I say no to that. And it's with the deepest respect for those two guys. So I'm going to make
a record of my own. And I started picking through the pieces and bits and bobs of things that I had
to see if I could come up with enough material. And I started
to construct things. I assemble right from the beginning when I'm doing things. I make, because
I see things as records, not as singles. I start assemblies right away. First songs, you know,
side one, I do that. And I've always kind of done it. And I just went, I don't have anything. So
I started writing. And it all comes down to mood, or all new songs that were written as a body of work,
intended to be a body of work as a vinyl.
So I just dug into any chops and every chop that I have
and applied it to my own work for the very first time in my life.
And it was, you know, these things are never easy.
If it's not a near-death experience, it's probably not very good.
So there you go.
And that's really where it came from.
It was a lot of writing.
I think I wrote over 30 songs for the 16 that are on there. It's a double album. It's a very long piece of
work. It's 84 minutes of music, but I threw out more than I used and, you know, lyric rewrites
and lyric rewrites, and then take a lyric that's good and write a different song to it. And just
the process until it felt finished. People always go, you're never going to be done. I said, no,
yeah, I am. I really am.
I really am.
Like, I'm really good at, like, I'm done now.
That's it.
But people don't understand.
Like, this is great.
Why isn't it done?
It's like, well, it's whatever little voice says, no, you can be better.
Anyway, that all said, it's done now, coming out.
The artwork was done by Storm Studios.
The cover, which is the old Hypnosis guys.
Yeah.
And no connection to the fact that I was just talking to Roger and David for all that time.
Just that when I came to doing this, I just wanted people that made album covers.
Yeah.
So I reached out to them and developed a really nice relationship.
And they did a tremendous job.
And the cover was almost more work than the album.
It took longer. It did. It took longer. But it's a thrill job and it was the cover was almost more work than the album you know it took longer it did it took longer but it's a thrill to have it you know and especially in vinyl you know
that's how i listen to music is you know so there you go there's nothing like dropping down a 45
and like bang it on vinyl right sounds different sounds it like touches your soul yeah well it's
it's a it's a very different technology.
And the simple explanation is when you put a needle in a groove, the needle is vibrating based on what the groove's doing to it. And that vibration is being amplified and the speakers are vibrating the same way the needle's vibrating, but bigger.
And when you listen to digital music, it's zeros and ones going by convincing you you're hearing music.
It's a totally different experience.
One is your mind and the other one's your body.
Correct.
You know, no despair, nothing despairing about any of it.
We've consumed digital music for a long time.
But if I'm going to go listen to something in our little music room, I put on a vinyl.
I mean, I can't in my room here in my studio.
I can't because I, you know, I'm not doing that down here.
This is the workshop.
And so it's the instruments are all analog, but the computer, you know, I'm not using tape right now, although I, I'm now threatening the idea of getting a multi-track
tape machine and making a record on tape. I don't know that it's worth it, but anyway,
digital analog, big difference. Totally agree. And you hit on a couple of things.
No, I have a vinyl player and my wife was like, why did, why do you have that? And I'm like,
hey, music just feels different. I promise you. And so it was like, why do you have that? I'm like, hey, music just feels different.
I promise you.
And so I was like, what's your favorite song of the vinyls that I have?
We're going to play it on iTunes and then we're going to play it on vinyl and you're going to feel the difference.
And within 10 seconds, she's like, oh my God, I almost forgot what this felt like growing
up, right?
Like Saturday mornings when your parents are having you clean the house and they throw
the vinyls on,
like it brought you back to a place.
And that's what I love about your music.
And more importantly, this album, right?
You hit on 16 songs, 80, 84 or 80 plus minutes.
And I got to hear a sample
and I'm going to tell you like,
here's what I heard in the sample.
I heard some 80s pop, some 80s soft rock. I heard some funk.
What's your creative process? Because just in that sample, I'm like, I can't wait to hear the
whole thing because it's probably going to be my favorite album because I just felt like I heard
music. And no disrespect on today, but I heard music just listening to that quick sample that I had.
My directive on it was the writing is going to be my writing, which my writing never feels time related.
Like it doesn't feel like now or then or it's it's always been the same.
So when I sit down to write something, my process is the same.
I have a keyboard here in case we want to. But I usually just start with improvisation for everything at the piano, not an electric piano, my regular piano.
But in this case, my conditions were no keyboards that were made after 1979.
So there's no 80s anything.
There's no polyphonic synthesizers, no drum machines, no sequencers, none of it. Everything is pianos, electric pianos, Hammond organ, Mellotron, Minimoog synthesizer, because that was around.
And some modular synthesis, because that was around at the time.
And so I kept it so that it's basically a 70s record in that sense of it.
And there is almost no electronic anything.
It's guitars and keyboards. And so it's
very much that. And then thematically, as I started writing, the lyrics started to present
certain themes and certain groupings for sides, you know, because when you make your favorite
records, you better believe those guys planned that side and the other side. And if there's a
double album, all four sides were planned
so they did a thing you know so that construct influenced it a lot it's not fixed it's not
quantized it's just raw and raw in a record making sense like it's not playing in a bar
right i mean like it's not that it's very polished but it's still people playing music so that's that part
of it the creative process part of it i have a small issue when it comes to these things
this record now i wrote over a year ago and since then i've written two more records and so i'm
obsessing about the latest thing i'm working on because it's definitely going to be the next
record and it's always been a problem for me because I write every day. If this record had come out the day I finished it, I could have been very, you know,
very engaged in it. Now it feels like that old thing. And I don't mean that literally, but
my process is the same. I write at a piano and I start with improvisation and I find chord
progressions or I wake up at two in the morning with a lyric idea and I dictate it into my phone
quietly in the other room to not wake my wife. And the next morning I come in and at two in the morning with a lyric idea and I dictate it into my phone quietly in the other room to not wake my wife.
And the next morning I come in and put it in the computer and get it in some sort of shape and print it out and sit at the piano and write from lyrics.
And I would say on this record, it's about half and half, maybe more lyrics than music.
And that doesn't mean a complete lyric. It just means the initial thing came from a lyric.
I think it was Leonard that really informed me of the power of starting from a lyric. I think it was Leonard that really informed me of the power
of starting with a lyric. It was my relationship with Leonard was he'd email with Ding and it would
just have a title and I'd open it up and print it out and it would be a lyric from Leonard.
And I'd write something right on the spot and sing it and send it back to him, usually within
15 minutes. And he'd go, yes or no, try something more bluesy or more
country. And that was how it went. So responding to a lyric is very different than the songs I
wrote, say, with Madonna or other artists I work with, which was also always kind of the same thing
as I go in the studio and I write music and they show up and I show it to them and then they can
do what they want with it or not like it or like it or whatever it is but that
process of sitting down in isolation and writing a chord structure with some sort
of melodic thing and beats and stuff give it a drum beat that's the other
method and in this record it went both ways there was quite a few songs where I
had a melody and I had chords and I can make a demo version that sounds fairly
convincing on my own fairly
quickly and then look search for that theme of like what's this about you know so that's kind
of the process and then as the songs start to reveal themselves sequencing and then you go this
theme doesn't feel right here but the feel feels right and that's when sometimes you just take the
lyric and throw it out and write another piece of music. So it's that it's that fearlessness to make sure that the structure is really what I want.
You know, it's really what I'm looking for. It's strange to say I.
It's strange to say I. I get it. I get it.
You know, we for 50 years. Right. It's all about Patrick now. It's all about Patrick. And I personally feel like this today. We throw around the terms genius and legend a little too loosely.
Yes.
But I need Patrick Leonard to know you are a genius and you are a legend.
Oh, man. Like that creative process is genius.
I mean, that's amazing.
And it's not just me saying that, right?
So, and I'm going to read this quote because it came from Sir Elton John
and I have to do it justice, right?
So, Elton said,
this album by Patrick will make you sit up
and take notice.
Surprising melodies, incredible music
played perfectly by all concerned.
For me, and this is Sir Elton John, for me, it's the mana from heaven.
Listening to the unexpected twists and turns, a brave album and one that is a complete triumph.
When you hear those words from Elton John, how does that make you feel?
You don't want me crying on your podcast, Mike.
You don't want, you know, you don't want that.
No.
I'll turn into a blubbering baby when elton's first record came out and i don't even you know
how did you know about those things in those days i mean i was a kid man i was just a kid so how do
you know about it i don't even know how i knew about it but that first album changed my whole
thing because the way he played and the quality of the recordings and the players.
And then the next record, Tumbleweed.
Because here we, in America, it was not, there was another album before the one with your song on it that came out.
But the first one I heard was your song. And then Tumbleweed.
And then I saw him play over and over again.
And then all those years later, to find myself making a record with him and from scratch and to see his methods you want to
talk about a genius you know forget it i mean the stories are like nothing else he is an absolute
one-off in every sense of the word so i know when elton says that about the record that i know what
he did he put it on and he cranked it up so loud that it would kill any normal human in the room
because he listens at deafening levels. He really does.
And this record is kind of like, that's what it's, that's what it is.
It's a, you know, when you actually get there,
it's much more seventies rock than it is eighties anything.
And if you're eighties in it, it's just the writing feels familiar.
Probably.
Yeah, that's me. You're right. Because I definitely heard, like I said,
I heard some funk. I heard some really tight structure beat. And for those that don't understand music, like before sunup while I was making the record,
oftentimes three, four in the morning, because that's when I got a lyric idea and being here
till six at night and not five days a week, take weekends off every day. And, you know,
you think, well, don't you get tired? It's like, no, this is the mother's milk because when you
start to get the building blocks and you start to get the pieces, everything disappears and you're just going to get there.
It's funny, I was I was writing a little thing for a magazine the other day, just looking at themes.
And I talked about the word genius. And in my little thing that I started to write, which I didn't use this part of it.
But something that occurred to me is I said, in your mind, think of people that you think are geniuses that are alive right now.
And if you can think of more than three, you don't know what a genius is. And the things I've said over, you know,
decades is I say, when Beethoven was alive, everyone else was trying just as hard as he was,
but you can't think of anybody else, you know, and it's that sort of thing. And so what I've
said for a long time is I said, a hundred years from now, it's going to be Stevie Wonder and
everybody else. That's really how I feel about it. long time is I said, 100 years from now, it's going to be Stevie Wonder and everybody else.
That's really how I feel about it.
You know, I don't disagree.
Stevie defined it all to me and will always be that guy who's like, that's it.
And that's a genius.
And I got to work with him and spend some time with him at his house.
And that was wow.
From Elton through Elton again, you know, because he played harmonica and clavinet on dark diamond on songs from the West coast record. And what a moment, what an evening. And to me,
that's a genius. And if that's how I measure genius,
and I'm just killed with a bunch of skills and a creative mind, you know,
smoked a lot of weed in the seventies. You know what I mean?
Like I know what it's supposed to feel like.
Cause I saw a lot of concerts, very stoned.
And I'm just trying to create that a genius, you know old stoner maybe no i'm giving you with some skills no no very very few
geniuses and legends but patrick you're one of them i promise you you're very generous thank you
i promise so what are your thoughts on music today what are your thoughts on music today?
What are your thoughts on the current state of the music industry?
And do you see it evolving in the coming years?
I have a tremendous cop out for you.
I have no idea what's going on because I never listen and I never will listen.
I just don't.
I can't afford it. Even in the 80s, when I was making the records I was making, I wouldn't listen to the radio.
I didn't.
I can't. And I've never been able to, except when I was a kid records I was making, I wouldn't listen to the radio. I didn't. I can't.
And I've never been able to, except when I was a kid.
But even then, it wasn't the radio.
It was consuming albums of bands that I idolized.
And that list has not changed or grown since then.
I think after Joni Mitchell made Mingus, that's probably about the cutoff for me,
for things that I go, this is part of my musical life.
And Peter Gabriel's So was a tremendous record, but it's not in the same category.
And the stuff that I consumed until I had to stop consuming it, which is kind of strange, but it was Keith Jarrett, because that's a genius.
That's a Stevie Wonder genius right there.
And all you have to do is have gone to Carnegie Hall and sat there and watched him improvise for two and a half
hours and you go okay
you know really
you know that's like out of an airplane
with no chute and figuring out some way to get
to the ground you know and so
I don't know what's going on
in pop culture but I do know
just in my own humble opinion
that the technology
and the social media has
done a lot to connect people and a lot to bring people to commonplace, which I think
has some redeeming value and has some beauty in it.
But I never saw music as an even playing field.
That's what I see, even just peripherally.
And I can't listen to it.
The second I do do I got to back
off it because and I'm not saying there aren't brilliant people there's always brilliant people
and I'm sure there are some with shocking inventiveness and everything else I just
the medium having become so technology dependent it's just a complete turnoff to me and you know
I'm sorry I'm 68 years old like I'm not to dance to the songs, even if I could, which I can't.
I spent a lot of time sitting at the pianos.
These legs are just good with a sustain pedal.
So I don't mean to cop out of the answer, but honestly, I don't listen.
And my feeling about where things are at is I think there's a lot of people making music,
and there's probably some really brilliant ones, and I hope it lifts people up up but I don't know because I can't listen because it affects this no you didn't
cop out you gave me the answer right like you you totally gave me the answer and one of the things
that I respect about you and your genius is kind of what you were saying and alluding to and I hear
comedians say this a lot too I like I don't listen to other comedians because I never
want to be influenced by a joke or a story. And I think for you as a writer and as an artist,
it's almost the same thing. You don't want to be influenced by something and you always keep
the main thing, the main thing. And I think that should be relatable to people in your everyday
lives too. It's not that it's a bad
thing to listen to others and heed advice from others. I'm definitely not saying that, but I'm
also saying just sometimes you need to be careful and you got to focus on the things that you do and
do well and just keep perfecting those things and not be influenced by. And if it's your core and
it's what you do every day and you want it to be yours and anecdotally and this is not a point
of pride this is a really strange thing i don't know anybody's songs i never learned anybody's
songs the tours that i were on i had tape across the top of the keyboards because i didn't remember
the songs because i didn't want to remember the songs i can't play my own songs i can't play
freaking happy birthday mike I never learned songs.
So when I was a kid and taking piano lessons, which started when I was four, I'd fake it.
And I could say my sister was a classical pianist.
My dad was a jazz saxophone player. And I could play gigs with my dad with a fake book.
And I could play in rock bands because I was young enough to know the rock songs and actually learn them and remember them.
But I don't know them now.
You know, I don't know anything.
I can't play my own songs for you.
I don't.
I can't.
And sometimes I think it's super intentional,
but it's not that intentional.
It's if I'm going to sit down, I'm going to write and try to create,
whether I'm improvising or trying to write something.
And if I'm going to study, I get out the same books I got when I was 10 years old.
And I do the finger exercises
and the scales and the arpeggios. And if I'm going to learn harmony, I go to revel and I listen until
there's something I don't understand what the notes are. And then I stand it up on its end and
look at it as a harmony and go, okay, that's a really interesting harmonic relationship. Because
a lot of what was happening back then is the relationships took place over three or four octaves. You know what I mean by that? But instead of a chord being here, a chord is,
you know, it's from there to here. But you've got to have the harmony in it because
that doesn't sound good, but that does. So you need to know this stuff. And that's theory. That's not someone else's music.
That's theory. So you're going to go hunting. You bring what you need to get the critter you
want to get. It makes sense. Going with someone else's idea, you're going to get eaten by a bear,
man. You know what I mean? That's genius life advice right there.
We could just end the podcast on that. That was genius life advice.
Thanks, man. Take the tools that you need on that. That was genius life advice. Thanks, man.
Take the tools that you need to capture what you're trying to capture or else be willing to
be hunted by someone else. That's life.
And you know what too, in that, if you're doing this, it's your life duty. It's your life
adventure. You're going to go until you can't do it anymore, period. And you're going to do it
unrelentingly with one goal in mind, be better,
be better than I was this morning. What else am I doing if I'm repeating? So finding ways to
challenge or looking at things that are very difficult to do. Like there's things on my record
that I wrote and then realized they were really difficult to play because I'm putting a song down.
So I'm just winging something.
And then I have to play it on the organ and the piano.
And it's like, whoa, you know, because when it comes out,
like I could easily right now improvise something that I could never play tomorrow.
If you wrote it down for me, you'd be like, whoa, this is so strange and squirrely and odd.
And that to me is kind of what it's all about.
If there isn't
something that you've never done before on mood, there's things that are in time signatures that
I defy anyone to try to count because they're changing every bar. And it's not because I wanted
it to be academic. It's because I how I wanted it to feel. And you're tapping your foot to it.
But trust me, man, it's all over the board in terms of where those downbeats are
falling. And what that does is it makes you listen. And I'm not trying to make you listen
either. I'm just pleasing myself, you know, which is, I think another component in this is
you care what others think because you want it to affect them, but you're doing it for you.
You know, the challenges I do are not for anybody else the challenges they do are for me sometimes they're a bitch man sometimes you know i love it yes and that's where i think
you were talking music and you're out here giving life lessons i think an album needs to be life
lessons by patrick leonard oh no it you know you do anything long enough you you get in all the
nooks and crannies, you know.
There's a thing behind us here. Do you know what modular synthesis is?
No.
I'll turn this around and show it to you. First, I'll show it to you, and then I'll give you a little bit of here. Can you see that?
Wow. Yes. That's my modular synth. And what it is, is it's individual modules that are from different companies, many of them.
And you put them in a rack and you screw them in and you connect them from the front.
There are no connections in the back at all.
And you make sounds and do music with them.
And when you're done, you pull the patch cords out and it's gone.
There is no memory. There is no nothing.
Everything is the first time and everything is the last time.
So it's the greatest thing for me because that's how I like to think of it.
All of it.
Like I'm doing this now and then that's it.
And then I got to do something else.
And hopefully I learn from what I did so that the next thing I do is better.
A lot of people don't like that idea that you're trying to be better, you know, but I do.
If you're not kicking your own ass a little bit, who's going to do it for you?
You know, there it is.
Especially if you're if you're a little bit the big fish in some ways, because then people don't say anything.
Yeah.
That's why I love my wife. She's not shy.
No.
Love it. Absolutely love it. Patrick, I'm going to get you out of here on this. It all comes down to mood.
What do you want people to know most about that album and this project?
What I would like from people in this record is I'd like them to listen to it. Just listen to it
and listen to it as a body of work if you can. By the nature of it being two discs, whoever buys
the vinyl, it's easy. You get 20 minutes, you turn it over, you get 20 minutes, you go have a sandwich,
you get 20. It's a little bit of the vinyl ritual. But if you're listening to it any
other way, if you can look at the way it's laid out and consume it that way, it'll mean more
because that's the intention of it. You don't want to watch a movie a scene at a time. You know,
you want to watch it as chapters a little bit. And it's not intended to be anything other than
what it is. And something that I've always noticed or noticed, started noticing's not intended to be anything other than what it is and something that i've
always noticed or noticed started noticing and found it to be really true is all of my great
favorite bands that i loved and artists that i loved in their careers no matter how long their
careers were there tends to be three albums as a group somewhere in the middle usually a little
bit towards the end sometimes towards the beginning that are it. And there's the ones that were getting them there. And they're ones that they
maybe shouldn't have made. And then there's those three. And for almost everyone, you can sort of go,
it's these three. And if you think about it, it's an interesting little thing. And when I finished
this, I was talking to somebody and they said, what do you want from this? And I said, I want
it to be the first of my three. That's what I want. That's what I'm looking for is, is I just want to keep being able to do this now. Cause I like
doing it and I like collaborating, but I'm not going to do it anymore. I'm going to force myself
to find it all, you know? So that's right. Get uncomfortable, right? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
If you're not terrified, what are you going to get out of it, you know? Right. I love it. Ladies and gentlemen, dropping June 14th is the first digital single. And then
the album, both digital and vinyl, which I'm going to have the vinyl, July 26th.
Right.
Can't wait.
Thank you, man.
Can't wait.
Been a pleasure.
Patrick, you are amazing. And to all the listeners and viewers, remember, your because
is your superpower.
Go unleash it.
Thanks for listening to Mick Unplugged.
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