MATT NATHANSON: "Boston Accent"

Published Aug 9, 2022, 7:00 AM

Singer/Songwriter, Matt Nathanson, is my guest on this episode of LOVE SOMEONE! His blend of folk and rock & roll, with meaningful, relatable lyrics, appeals to a wide wide audience.

He's newest LP, "Boston Accent" was recently released and we'll be dishing on it, as well as an upcoming tour, the lessons learned during the pandemic, and how things you used to run from in your youth, you find yourself running toward once older. (While lamenting the parenting of sassy (but lovable!) pre-teens.)  It's a fantastic conversation that's only missing one thing, YOU! Come on in!  ~ Delilah

Can you believe it's already August? My friend? How in the world did that happen? Are we just lamenting that winter wouldn't end? And here we find ourselves in deep summer, thinking about snow banks and ice storms and remembering they weren't really that bad. How is your summer going? Are you soaking up the sun or you sitting in front of the A C unit? Wherever you find yourself, I hope there has been some creativity, some productivity, some contemplation, a whole lot of relaxation, and at least one or two good books on your summer schedule. And music, music, music, definitely music. What kind of music do you turn to when the days are long the sun is high? Feel good tunes are high on my list, as are all those nostalgic songs that take me back to my high school days. And I gotta admit a little hard rock makes a long car trip a whole lot more fun. Today's guest on love Someone is doing his part to add to our catalog of musical options. He is a prolific singer songwriter who just released his twelve studio album. You'll probably know him from his breakthrough, multi platinum hit Come On Get Higher from the album Some Mad Hope. If you're a sugar Land fan, maybe you heard him perform Run with Them from his critically acclaimed album Modern Love, which also included another huge hit, Faster Sings. His sad Heart spawned the hit single used to Be, which was also a chart climber. Quite possibly you've heard his music watching your favorite TV shows. He's been featured on in c I s On, Private Practice, Women's Murder, Uh, Scrubs, Men and Trees, One Tree Hill, and so many more shows and movies. He's performed on The Howard Stern Show. He's performed on Ellen, Jimmy Kimmel, Alive, Dancing with the Stars, Rachel Ray, and the CMA Awards, to name a few. Matt Nathanson's blend of folk and rock and roll appeals to a wide wide audience. I love his lyrics. His lyrics get me in the heart every time he is a lyricist. They're meaningful, some might say magical, relatable, and so very very real. Matt's as authentic as it gets. He's also adorable. He is a delight to watch perform, which he does often solo, strumming an acoustical guitar in his signature style. More often he's accompanied by longtime collaborator and music director Aaron tapp Air and his on guitar and backup vocals, And sometimes you'll see him with a few bandmates who had percussion and bass to the lineup. What you will always see is Matt Nathanson smiling a genuine smile. He has a compelling desire to connect with others. I am so happy to welcome Matt aboard today to talk about his latest album. It's called Boston Accent. Didn't know he was born on the East Coast. A few of the singles have caught my attention, and his upcoming tour is going to be a whole lot of fun. But first, I'm going to take a little minute to talk about one of my sensational podcast sponsors. Did you know that right after water, tea is the most popular beverage. As a long time tea drinker, that doesn't surprise me. I start every day with a cup of tea and always have a mug with me in the recording studio. One of my favorites is Bigelow's constant comment it even ums in decaffeinated in the heat of the summer. Nothing beats a tall glass of Bigelows perfectly mint over ice. It's so refreshing after a morning out in the garden. To stay hydrated, the Bigelow Botanicals cold water infusions are incredible, lightly infused water with nothing artificial, caffeine free and zero calories. Try their blueberry citrus basil, the BlackBerry raspberry hibiscus, or any of their numerous flavors. You'll find Bigelow t s in the t I'll at your local grocery, at Amazon dot com or at bigelow t dot com. Cups up my friends with me on Love Someone today is uh such a cute e pie. I can't flirt with you though, um number one because this is like a professional show. And number two, you're married with a baby today. Our guest is the amazing the soundtrack for our life, Mr Matt Nathanson. I'm psyched to be here with you. Ps you can still flirt. Okay, what I'm saying, we got it and that's it's what makes the world spin good. But yeah, so I've got my baby all of a sudden is like eleven. So she's like a powerhouse. You know what I mean like she went from being hold her in my arm. I've seen pictures of you with baby in arms. Now she's a big It's crazy. I think she has an apartment that she rented during the pandemic. I think that, like the pandemic has affected all of us in certain ways, but my literally my, when she was in fifth grade when it started, or fourth grade when it started, I think about mid fifth grade, she secretly got an apartment that she rents to get away from us. Yeah. Yeah, I have a thirteen year old who's um a little bit sassy. It's built into their genetic I don't understand I would have gotten it. Would I would be you would have gotten down. Oh I would have been. It would have been finished. And my kids says things that i've First of all, they're incredibly smart, they're incredibly sassy and uh and yet there's no way I would have survived growing up with that mouth. No, no, mine doesn't do the mouth. She does the eyes. I said, do not talk back to me like that. She says, I didn't say a word. Is that I saw you? Oh it's the eyes, the eye roll, and the glare she does, the stare off into space. When I'm giving her direction with her mouth half open, like, uh, I just can't hear a word you're saying, mom. And then when I get angry, like she will push my buttons until I get angry, and then it's the eye roll, like, oh, I am dealing with a psychopath. Totally. I've never felt more out of control in my life than I do when I'm getting mad. I'm like, So I went to pick my daughter up. She went to theater camp. That was one of her camps this summer. And so she went to one of the and she found her people right like these kids that she you know, singing rent and you know, singing, uh Hamilton and Hamilton's Hamilton's amazing. Oh, it was super amazing. So I went to go pick her up at this friend's house and the mom answered the door and I said, Hi, nice to meet you. I'm coming to pick up my daughter, you know, and uh, all of a sudden, down the stairs like really fast, and then out the door. My kid just bolts for the car, and I go, Bubba, can you say like thank you? And she goes thank you and then goes to the car and I walk over and I go, what happened. Was it not a good hank? No, it was amazing. And I said, why did you run out of the house. She goes, I didn't want to stay too long because I was afraid we're gonna say something stupid. And I was like, dude, I'm functioning. I'm functioning almost fifty year old person. She's like, you have no filter. She's like, and I don't know what you're gonna say. And I was like, well, my job is to interact with human beings like I can do this, you know, And she was not having any not having any part. This is all paid back for me because when I was growing up, my mom would wear curlers all day long and then take him out. Right before dad came home. She would she did that, you know, like the poster you see or the ads you see from the sixties. The she had the housecoat, dressed thing and curlers in her hair all day and then right before dad came home, she'd take the curlers out, comb her hair and make it look so pretty. But she would think it was appropriate to go out in public so long as she had red lipstick on, she was okay, even though there were curlers in her hair, and I would be like, Mom, could you just like drop me off here? No, she said, school is up there. I know, but high need X. I feel like I need to walk a little bit. Says it's raining. Uh oh, look there's billy. I'm gonna run in over there in time. Damn. And now it's payback was in. We're not embarrassing. Oh, I'm so embarrassing to my kids. Look what we do. Like, yeah, but they don't know what we do. They don't know that. Your daughter does not know you're Matt Nathanson, heart throb of the nation, that you are the singer songwriter of every soundtrack of every TV show or movie I happen to bump into. Yeah, she definitely has zero cares about that. And I'll be like, she'll she'll do something and I'll say, well, Bubba, let me help you. I know how to do that. And she's like, you don't know how to do that, like in singing or something. And I'll be like, no, but I can. You know that it's my job kind of to do this, to do this. I know a little bit about this. She's like, no, you don't know. That's the other thing. Does does you have a son or a dog. Have seven sons and eight daughters, but I have five that are home. So the thirteen year old and the six year old are the ones that are now doing the I roll. Yeah. Yeah, they know more than we do as well. And the scary thing is they really do. They really do know a lot more than me. I blame the Internet. It is the Internet. It is totally the Internet. And there circle of friends. Yeah, yeah, they talk about headier stuff than we did. Yeah, much. That's the other thing. Like, I walked in on my seventeen year old the other day. She was having a sleepover because she was going back to the state that we adopted her out of to visit family and her godparents, and so she's like, can I have somebody spend the night. I'm like, sure, honey, who do you want to have? And then she listed off sixteen people and I like, that's that's not somebody, that is somebody's that's an army battalion. Yeah, that our houses and that pig. She's look, that's okay, we'll crowd in my room. Maybe we'll sleep out on the trampoline. So she ended up having three girls spend the night, and I walked into their conversation and they're using the word intentional. Oh yeah, yeah, it's Mike. At five. My kid was using words that were like way advanced. And she still she'll process. She's a very quick processor, so she's able to sort of sum up what's going on and come up with kind of a night. And I've been teen. All I wanted to know was what David Cassidy still marry me even though I was a foot taller than him. Totally. I was lip sinking to Deaf Leopard at her age, like in my mom's room, pretending I was Joe Elliott the singer and deaf Leppard, like, and my mom had these leather pants and I was like, Joe Elliot wears leather pants. So I'm like on the floor of her bedroom trying to put on women's leather pants to lip sync to Deaf Leppard and she's talking about like the state of the Union. Yeah, it's like, what is happening? I was drinking sprite and like, far did you know? Like, and she doesn't. She's just I'm doing stupid, I think, and she's just like advanced. Yeah, kids today they blown me away. So what was the best thing that came out of COVID for you. So I think it's still emerging, but I think, um so everybody that I know, and I'm sure this is for you as well. Everybody started to um COVID ended, and then everybody has started to get Everyone saw their mortality, and everybody saw that they don't actually control much of anything in the world, and everybody started to get really kind of conservative in the true sense of the word, right, Everybody started conserving there, like, so we're living in a time where people's bandwidth is sort of taxed, and then everybody's feeling their limitations as humans, whether they know it or not. And for me, what's really happened is I've been able to figure out what's important to me more so than I ever have in my life, and I've started to kind of ratchet down on There's only a few things on my plate, and I'm only going to keep a few things on my plate, and that within that I can sort of find all the satisfaction and all the all the fulfillment that I need. So it's like my family making music and playing music and that's pretty much it, and my friends and and it was like before it's funny, before the pandemic, I used to do all these things and expand all this energy and all these directions, and I couldn't believe. I said to my wife this morning. I said, like, I can't believe I had time to do any of those things. Like life is short and precious and like we have to do the things we love. And I've just been focusing on that so hard, and it's continuing every day that I get further outside of it. I still feel this commitment to simplicity in a way that I think I knew in theory before, but I didn't know now. And I have this idea that people fetishize the idea of like moving to the woods and like simplifying and like just like bringing their own water. And you know this idea, Like on Instagram and on TikTok, you see people like living in cabins, like off the grid and they're like, this is the way to live. And I feel like people do that, like and I know, no shade on people that do that, but we were fetishizing that as a thing because we're not drawing boundaries in our own life. That's kind of an extreme way to draw a boundary. Yeah, it's to have boundaries drawn for you essentially right like, but sometimes sometimes that were I mean that worked for me during during the pandemic. I decided, I am not going to be stuck here, shut off from the world, with five kids who are going crazy. I'm not going to do it. So I did just what you're talking about. I went to our ranch, which it does have running water and it does have electricity, but not much else. But then you came back. So and this is my point is that I think as humans, it's our job to deal in human collision and deal with each other, and that we and the idea of moving somewhere and sort of like piecing out is wonderful, and I back it, except that it's like we're not using our machines in the right way. It's like, in order for society to continue and to evolve and to move in a direction of like community and togetherness, we have to be involved. And so this is the part that I think is really important. It's like you have to show up. And part of showing up is like not only for your family, which is one aspect of showing up, but as a community and as a group. And and I'm the first person. I'm probably the worst team player you've ever seen. But like I have to tell you that I think that the only way that the world is going to move out of where we are is we have to show up for human beings and we have to show kindness and we have to be in the mix. At least that's how I feel. And so as much as I love the idea, love the idea, we have some land and we're build a house, you know, this kind of thing, and I really put it into like fast forward, like let's do this, so let's move to New Hampshire, like let's go because that's where I grew up. I was like, oh my god, it's awesome. Our kid will be psyched, it'll be the best. And then and my wife was the one that was like, no, no, no, we're here, like this is what we do, like it's our job to sort of show up. And I was like, oh my god, yeah yeah this is She's You're right. So but I back. I back a good vacation. But your music, your music is definitely touching, Matt and inspiring. And like I said, I don't have TV in my house, but I do have guilty pleasures and so after my show is over at night, I you know, I'll watch something on you know, one of the one of the streaming services. Yeah, and every time I turn it on, there you are. Oh it's fun. I love soundtracking, the the soundtrack of our life. Yeah. Yeah, that's the other thing. Covid. I got a studio down the street from my house in San Francisco. I can walk to it. It's got a live room and it's got my room, and then I share it with another kid who's got a live room on the other side. And I've just made a lot of music, more music than I've ever made before. You used to have to fly somewhere to co write, and now zoom has made it so I can co I co wrote all through the pandemic. I started like a side band with a couple of writers. I put out a YouTube covers record of my favorite record on the thirtieth anniversary. I feel like technology has made it so that we can do these kind of you can you can do your show from a barn. It's like it's kind of a magical time. I can do my show from and you where. How awesome is that? But so yeah, so I'll play you some songs. Maybe, uh, I have a song called the new record. I've got a song called Pictures, my favorite yeah, about the beauty of and I think you asked about what the pandemic has taught me. It's like that there's beauty. I'm always in pursuit of some sort of something and that that is going to somehow be the answer. And what I realized is that the answer is here right now in every minute that I'm in when I'm in the shower, if I can just focus on my feet, on the on the ground and the water on my neck, it's like that that's a beautiful miracle of a moment. And so Pictures is a song about you know, people paint pictures of places like this, People dream dreams of the life that we live. That idea that people don't realize that you're living in this moment. You know. Again, we sort of fetishize the other as this, oh my god, well what they have is great. But I got to walk down to my studio today and then I opened the door, and I have a place where I can make music. You know, I get to be with my wife and wake up in the morning with my wife. It's like everything we do I get to drink tea. I have tea in this mug that I love, and it's like I got to put and it's like everything is kind of a wonder And I don't mean to be so hippie to be about it, but it's a it is true. We're in these meat suits, like on a rock, like hurling through space and we get to do this magical stuff. It's pretty incredible. I love that song. I love Pictures. I love the whole album, but that was by far my favorite. Because I'm a lyricist, I listen for words. Yeah, I love the stories. I love the stories when they're woven together, especially the way you do it so cleverly, like thanks. You could be a country artist. You twist a word you play Like when I listen to your music, Matt, I hear you playing with words. That's super rad. I I and the country thing is incredibly thank you. I take a lot of time and I invest a lot of energy into lyrics because, like you, they're super important to me as a listener. They're the thing that I mean. I love a good journey guitar solo, or I love a good you know sing along. Course, don't get me wrong. But but when the lyrics move in a way that you can follow and invest in, I think that's really important in pictures. There's a song on this record called German Cars. I made this record growing up in Boston and then moving to California. I've always tried very hard to not be from Boston. I tried very hard to like distance myself from my family. Oh it's the ps it is the best. But when you grow up there, you want to get I wanted to get as far away as I could, and I was never My family was always a little bit um. Now. I was in as a young kid. I was put into school at age nine, and so I was I was never really around my family. And then summers I would spend two months. Awhere did you go to school? You were in boarding school? Yeah, from the time I was fifth grade on. Yeah, And I went and I wasn't rich, but I went to school with very rich people. So I went to school with like Kennedy's and Kawasaki's and and I like to say it was like most of these kids were the jewelry that their parents brought out during like holidays, right like they would put them in the you know, put them away and then they bring them out. You've lived some very opposite not just opposite ends of the country, but opposite lifestyles totally. And so I wrote this record as it's called Boston Accent, and it's kind of it's kind of a celebration of my roots because I find I have a song on the record called Boston Accent, and it was I wrote it based on every time I hear someone who even has a twinge of a New England accent, I get like, I feel like I can trust them. I feel like I'm home. I feel like I've got these like dare my people. They could be serial killers and as long as they're like if they got a Boston accent and they're like dude, how you doing? My god? You know what, I hug them. But you know, Dedam is like, that's what's all about. So you know what I disc when I lived there is it was hard to get to know people. I will talk to Advince Post and it was hard to get to know people because they're like, Wow, there's that crazy woman outside talking to the raccoons again. Um. But once they let you in for it's like it's a prison. You know, you are there forever. It's like if I say I'm not going to be there for thingsgiving or whatever, They're like, what do you mean, what are you talking about. That's how my relatives, all of my relatives that it's that's the way it is. They're super They want to know exactly what's in Boston. Everybody's in everybody's business, everybody. Once you're in, once you're in, if you're not in, forget about it. You could be you know, they could be stealing your cattle. That the converter and broad Daylight. Nobody would even tell you. They wouldn't. They'd be like, dude, use the other saw. That's not gonna cut it. That's totally how it would work. We've always hated that guy. Just cut it out. But once you're in, Yeah, it's crazy. It is the fiercest love I've ever felt. I agree, and and it's funny. So my best friend is still my friend from when I was five. My guitar player in my band I've known for thirty years. He worked with me and we grew up in the same town. My wife and I have been together for thirty one years. It's like I definitely adopted that that part of who I am is there. I'm surrounded by people who have known all my life, Like that's just really how I do it. And I realized how much of what Boston is is inside of me, do you know what I mean? And so this record, yeah, and so this record is like a celebration of that. There's a song called German Cars that's about going to school with rich kids, and the chorus says and finding sort of someone you can like, summer love in Boston to me is like the ultimate, Like I was in love with this girl and we used to swim in Walden Pond like because we you know, Lexington is so close to Waldon Pond. So growing up in Lexington where the Revolution happened, I would walk by every day of my life houses that were from seventeen seventy you know what you name it, and it was all lost on me. And then going to school with these kids that were like not being the they're the the lyric in the song that I wanted to that I think you'd appreciate. We hated the way everybody talked about their father's money and their summer jobs, princes and princesses trying to get lost in German cars that their parents bought. Right. That was like this idea of growing up with rich kids who were sort of like wayward and sort of broken and disassociate disconnected from their community, finding their own communities, and then myself finding my own community outside of them because I didn't feel like I related to what they were doing, and it's like it's just all about The pandemic really got me thinking about who I am and where I'm from on a literal level and on like a metaphorical heady level. So it did the same thing to me so much that I went back to my hometown and bought the radio station. Yeah, that's what I'm talking about about, the first station I was ever on that. Yeah, it was. It was, And it has been an amazing year reconnecting with teachers that I had, and like you, the people that surround me have been around me my whole life. That's our power center. It is because those are the people that that can see through the bs, that can see through everything and call you out on stuff and say no, you need to you know, you need to do this. You need to or you need to not do this, or why are you putting all your energy into that thing when that's that's not even something you love. Well. Trust the trust element is the important part, right, and that's the other thing. Just salute back to the pandemic idea. It's like, if you can trust the humans that you've got, that's a small circle of people, like very small, it's a handful, And so you want to really double down on loving those people, you know what I mean, as much as you can and spend. And since energy is finite, you don't want to push that energy out to people that may or may not be able to even understand what you're saying, right, like interpret everything you do wrong. The people that are in your inner circle are forgiving, and they understand the language you have created together, and you have your own language. Yeah, when you say love to them, they know what love means. That when you say friendship to them, they know you know everybody else it's like up for grabs. Yeah, you are a very very fortunate man, and so are you. I am. I am. I tell people all the time, I am the most fortunate woman I've ever met. Yeah, I want Matt to tell you all about his upcoming tour right after I tell you about another fantastic podcast sponsor. This podcast is sponsored by a company solving a family problem. They've got the greatest name, Forever forever dot com. I love my family, and I love all my family memories, especially on the photos and all the videos of my children and my grandchildren. But I have the same problem as many people. My photos my videos are everywhere. Some are in old boxes and old photo albums, others are on social media sites and cloud storage accounts, and thousands are on my phone. But with all these memories spread about everywhere, they're really nowhere. They're difficult to share, and they are all in danger of being lost, and many are being data mined by advertisers. But recently I discovered a solution to my photo mess. Forever is the name of a company that's been helping families save, organize, and share their memories for a decade, and I've opened my own account at Forever dot com. My Forever account is my permanent digital home, which I'm now using to safely, save, organize, and share thousands of family photos and videos. Forever is safe, no data mining, no advertising, and you can design and print beautiful holiday cards, books, and gifts. Start today by opening a free intro account at Forever dot com. It's easy, but if you need help, call one eight eight eight Forever or choose a Forever ambassador near you. Memories help families stay connected Forever. Get started at Forever dot com and use promo code Love for percent off. So your schedule your tour so it's great. The tour was rescheduled four times because of COVID. We kept kind of moving it. And the record release Boston Accent, this album was finished in so all this stuff has been you know, long time coming, perculating, marinating. It's like, you know, something that just gets better. And the more it's see it's like it's all the flavor seeps in. And also the thing, I played a show this weekend, just like a one off private show, but I remembered how important it is to be with human beings and to be like communing and being able to sing and laugh and be together. And that's the kind of thing again that we but that muscle got really weak during the pandemic because everybody got to be insular. Everyone was told to stay in, stay on your couch, don't go out. And so playing the show and being on stage with people playing music and then interacting with the humans in the crowd and and having this sort of cyclical thing. I came home the next day and I woke up and I felt whole in a way that I hadn't felt whole in a I was hesitant to even admit how important it was to me to have that connection because it's it's energy. It's energy. Yeah, we need that energy as humans. Some people need time away to fill their energy, you know, reservoirs. You and I we need to be on stage, communicating and connecting in a heart way with people to get that energy filled. I call it the human collision. And I'm an introvert extrovert, so I do need time away. But like once I'm in it, I think that humans are best when they are a team and and that's really what happens on stage is like not only am I a team member with my band, but I'm a team member with like everybody in the room, and we're and we're elevating this thing together to this place where we could never get to without each other. Yep, it's true. And I see that when whenever you're performing or I watch any of your anything, you know, I see that connection and I love it. I love it. I also love pictures like a yeah yeah. But the fact that so many people I talked to hundreds of people a week on the show. So many people are waiting for that thing to make them happy, waiting for the marriage, waiting for the right person, waiting for their kids to finish high school and get out on their own, waiting for waiting for the degree to be finished, waiting for their time in the military to be up, waiting for whatever the you know, the happiness is just or like right out of reach. I talked to a lady last night, Oh my gosh, I must have talked to her for half an hour, who had a thousand things that she thought she needed before she could be happy. What you're saying is the thing is you were talking about being fortunate. We are all incredibly fortunate to have the time that we have, and like COVID taught us, that time is finite and we don't actually control anything, and so all we get to control is how we interpret the experience we're having and then an action that we take after that. That's it. That's all we've got, and live in it living fully. Every time I hear the word metaverse, it just just like fingernails on a chalkboard. I'm like, why do you want to live in a pretend world where our world is so beautiful? It's incredible. You get to brush our teeth, like we have literally a thing that makes our teeth clean and we get to do It's like the stupidest things are these a miracles? Dogs? Yeah, oh my god, we get to we get to have dogs at our house. We get to have cats living with us that we feed and they do their thing, and it's like even and you know, it's just incredible. We are all fortunate, and it's just a matter of if we're able to see it, and especially those of us that have our hierarchy of needs met, then it's like it should be all sky from from here on out for us. Yeah, it should be. But you would be shocked and you wouldn't but to hear people call me night after night, day after day who are waiting to be happy. Be happy. Now find your joy. Now, go get Matt's new album, listen to it and really listen to the lyrics and try to live in that moment. That's going to be my advice and my Delilah dilemmas for the next month. I love it, Matt. Thank you for all your time and thank you for Salila. Thanks for having me. I so love hanging with you. Thank you for spending all this time with us. God bless you, and I can't wait to see it in concert. Awesome. I can't wait to see you. Thanks so much, Talila, it has been so great having Matt join us today. His newest album, Boston Accent, is out right now. Tickets are on sale for his upcoming tour that kicks off in St. Louis, Missouri, August one, heads east from there, winds up back on the West Coast in October, concluding on October nine in Los Angeles. If you are into the authenticity of the singer songwriter experience as much as I am, you will not want to miss the opportunity to catch up with this amazing man. You can find all things Matt Nathanson related, including tour information, at Matt Nathanson dot com m A T t in A T h A N s O N dot com. Matt's pretty prolific on social media. To find him on Facebook, on Instagram, on TikTok, doing his thing, making music, being silly, being vulnerable, and doing his best to connect with each of us, one heart at a time, while trying to help make sense of this chaotic, beautiful world. I'll keep trying to do the same, bringing inspiring guests alongside on this podcast, sharing my evenings with you on the radio, and sending a few minutes of love your way each weekday with my new daily podcast, Hate It's Delilah. While the summer is heating up, remember to stay cool, drink lots and lots of water, and take some time to slow down and love someone

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