Rod StewartRoderick David "Rod" Stewart, CBE Order of the British Empire (born 10 January 1945) is a British singer-songwriter born and raised in London, England and currently residing in Epping. He is of Scottish Scottish people and English English people lineage. With his distinctive raspy singing voice, Stewart came to prominence in the late 1960s and early '70s with The Jeff Beck Group and then Faces Faces (band) . He launched his solo career in 1969 with his debut album An Old Raincoat Won't Ever Let You Down (US: The Rod Stewart Album). His work with The Jeff Beck Group and Faces proved to be influential on the formation of the heavy metal Heavy metal music and punk rock genres, respectively. Both bands were also pioneers of blues-rock. With his career in its fifth decade, Stewart has achieved numerous solo hit singles worldwide, most notably in the UK, where he has garnered six consecutive number one albums and his tally of 62 hit singles include 31 that reached the top 10, six of which gained the number one position. He has had 16 top ten singles in the USA, with four of these reaching number one.he has sold over 130 million records worldwide,and is one of the best selling British singers of all time. He was voted at #33 in Q Magazine Q (magazine) The Stewart family was mostly focused on football Association football ; Combining natural athleticism with near-reckless aggression, he became captain of the school football team and played for Middle*** Schoolboys as centre-half. His introduction to rock and roll was hearing Little Richard's 1956 hit "The Girl Can't Help It The Girl Can't Help It (song) " and seeing Bill Haley & His Comets in concert. His father bought him a guitar in January 1959; the first song he learned was the folk tune "It Takes a Worried Man to Sing a Worried Song" and the first record he bought was Eddie Cochran's "C'mon Everybody".Stewart left school at age 15 and worked briefly as a silk screen printer screen printing . Spurred on by his father, his ambition was to become a professional footballer association football . a Third Division Football League Third Division club at the time. However, he disliked the early morning travel to West London London#West London and the daily assignment to clean the first team's boots Football boot . Stewart left the team, to the great disappointment of his father. then as a grave digger at Highgate Cemetery, partly to face a childhood fear of death. Stewart began listening to British and American topical folk artists such as Ewan McColl, Alex Campbell Alex Campbell (singer) , Woody Guthrie, Ramblin' Jack Elliot, and especially Derroll Adams and the debut album Bob Dylan (album) of Bob Dylan. He became attracted to beatnik attitudes and left-wing politics, living for a while in a beatnik houseboat at Shoreham-by-Sea. In 1962 he had his first serious relationship, with London art student Suzannah Boffey (and a friend of future model and actress Chrissie Shrimpton); he moved to a bed-sit in Muswell Hill to be near her. She became pregnant, but neither Rod nor his family wanted him to enter marriage; the baby girl was given for adoption and Rod and Suzannah's relationship ended. Stewart took up playing the then-fashionable harmonica. In the spring of 1962, Stewart joined The Ray Davies Quartet, later known as the successful British band The Kinks, as their lead singer. He had known three of their members at William Grimshaw School He performed with the group on at least one occasion, but was soon dropped due to complaints about his voice from then-drummer John Start's mother as well as musical and personality differences with the rest of the band.) Disillusioned by rock and roll, he saw Otis Redding perform in concert and began listening to Sam Cooke records; he became fascinated by rhythm and blues and soul music. After returning to London, Stewart joined a Birmingham-based rhythm and blues group, the Dimensions, in October 1963 as a harmonica player and part-time vocalist. A somewhat more established singer from Birmingham, Jimmy Powell, then hired the group a few weeks later, and it became known as Jimmy Powell & the Five Dimensions, with Stewart being relegated to harmonica player. The group performed weekly at the famed Studio 51 club on Great Newport Street in London, where The Rolling Stones often headlined; Relations soon broke down between Powell and Stewart over roles within the group On or around 5 January 1964, Stewart was drunk and waiting on the Twickenham railway station platform, playing "Smokestack Lightnin'" on his harmonica after having seen a Cyril Davies All Stars rhythm and blues show at Eel Pie Island Eel Pie Island Hotel . All Stars singer Long John Baldry discovered him and invited him to sit in with the group (which passed into his hands and was renamed the Hoochie Coochie Men when Davies died of leukemia on 7 January); when Baldry discovered Stewart was a singer as well, he offered him a job for £35 a week, after securing the approval of Stewart's mother. the nickname coming from his dandyish style of grooming and dress. While still with Baldry, Stewart embarked on a simultaneous solo career. He made some demo recordings, was scouted by Decca Records at the Marquee Club and signed to a solo contract in August 1964. He appeared on several regional television shows around the country and recorded his first single in September 1964. The resulting single, "Good Morning Little Schoolgirl", was recorded released in October 1964; despite Stewart performing it on the popular television show Ready Steady Go!, it failed to enter the charts. Also in October, Stewart left the Hoochie Coochie Men after having a row with Baldry.Stewart played some dates on his own in late 1964 and early 1965, sometimes backed by the Southhampton R & B outfit The Soul Agents. The Hoochie Coochie Men broke up, Baldry and Stewart patched up their differences (and indeed became lifelong friends)), and legendary impresario Giorgio Gomelsky put together Steampacket, which featured Baldry, Stewart, Brian Auger, Julie Driscoll, Micky Waller, Vic Briggs, and Rick Brown Rick Brown (English musician) ; their first appearance was in support of The Rolling Stones in July 1965. The group was conceived as a white soul revue, analogous to The Ike & Tina Turner Revue, with multiple vocalists and styles ranging from jazz to R & B to blues. Steampacket toured with the Stones and The Walker Brothers that summer, ending in the London Palladium; Stewart, who had been included in the group upon Baldry's insistence, ended up with most of the male vocal parts. although Gomelsky did record one of their Marquee Club rehearsals. Stewart's "Rod the Mod" image gained wider visibility in November 1965, when he was the subject of a 30-minute Rediffusion, London Associated-Rediffusion television documentary titled "An Easter with Rod" that portrayed the Mod scene. His parallel solo career attempts continued on EMI's Columbia label Columbia Graphophone Company with the November 1965 release of "The Day Will Come", a more heavily arranged pop attempt, and the April 1966 release of his take on Sam Cooke's "Shake Shake (Sam Cooke song) ", with the Brian Auger Trinity. Stewart had spent the better part of two years listening mostly to Cooke; he later said, "I didn't sound like anybody at all ... but I knew I sounded a bit like Sam Cooke, so I listened to Sam Cooke." and in February 1967, Stewart joined the Jeff Beck Group as vocalist and sometime songwriter. This would become the big break of his early career. Stewart's sputtering solo career also continued, with the March 1968 release of non-hit "Little Miss Understood" on Immediate Records. The first-time-in-America Stewart suffered terrible stage fright during the opening show and hid behind the amplifier banks while singing; only a quick shot of brandy brought him out front. and New Musical Express reporting that the group was receiving standing ovations and pulling receipts equal to those of Jimi Hendrix and The Doors. Stewart also co-wrote three of the songs, (something which would continue throughout Beck's career). In July 1969, Stewart left, following his friend Wood's departure. Stewart later recalled: "It was a great band to sing with but I couldn't take all the aggravation and unfriendliness that developed.... In the two and a half years I was with Beck I never once looked him in the eye – I always looked at his shirt or something like that." During his time with the group, Stewart initially felt overmatched by Beck's presence, and his style was still developing; but later Stewart felt the two developed a strong musical, if not personal, rapport. Much of Stewart's sense of phrasing was developed during his time with the Jeff Beck Group.Mercury Records A&R man Lou Reizner had seen Stewart perform with Beck, and in October 1968 signed him to a solo contract; Meanwhile, in May 1969, guitarist and singer Steve Marriott left English band The Small Faces. The Faces toured extensively in 1972 with growing tension in the band over Stewart's solo career enjoying more success than the band's. Stewart released Never a Dull Moment Never a Dull Moment (Rod Stewart album) in the same year. Repeating the Every Picture formula for the most part, it reached number two on the US album charts and number one in the UK, and enjoyed further good notices from reviewers. "You Wear It Well" was a hit single that reached number 13 in the US and went to number one in the UK, while "Twisting the Night Away" made explicit Stewart's debt to Sam Cooke. For the body of his early solo work Stewart earned tremendous critical praise. Rolling Stone's 1980 Illustrated History of Rock & Roll includes this in its Stewart entry: Rarely has a singer had as full and unique a talent as Rod Stewart [...] a writer who offered profound lyricism and fabulous self-deprecating humour, teller of tall tales and honest heartbreaker, he had an unmatched eye for the tiny details around which lives turn, shatter, and reform [...] and a voice to make those details indelible. [... His solo albums] were defined by two special qualities: warmth, which was redemptive, and modesty, which was liberating. If ever any rocker chose the role of everyman and lived up to it, it was Rod Stewart. The Faces released their final album Ooh La La Ooh La La (Faces album) which reached number one in the UK and number 21 in the US in 1973. The band toured Australasia, Japan, Europe and the UK in 1974 to support the album and the single "Pool Hall Richard". In late 1974 Stewart released his Smiler Smiler (album) album. In Britain, it reached number one, and the single "Farewell" number seven, but only number 13 on the Billboard Billboard (magazine) pop album charts and the single "Mine for Me" only number 91 on the Billboard pop singles charts. It was his last original album for Mercury Records. After the release of the double album compilation The Best of Rod Stewart he switched to Warner Bros. Records and remained with them throughout the vast majority of his career. In 1975 the Faces toured the US twice (with Ronnie Wood joining The Rolling Stones' US tour in between)In 1975, Rod Stewart moved to the US, applying for citizenship United States citizenship due to his love affair with Britt Ekland and a fight with the UK tax authorities Inland Revenue . He released the Atlantic Crossing album for his new record company, using producer Tom Dowd and a different sound based on the Muscle Shoals rhythm section. Atlantic Crossing marked both a return to form and a return to the Top 10 of the Billboard album charts. The first single, a cover of the Sutherland Brothers song "Sailing Sailing (Rod Stewart song) ", was a number one hit in the UK, but it only reached the Top 60 of the US charts. The single returned to the UK Top 10 a year later when used as the theme music for a BBC documentary series Sailor (TV series) about HMS Ark Royal HMS Ark Royal (R09) , and having been a hit twice over became, and remains, Stewart's biggest-selling single in the UK. His Holland-Dozier-Holland cover "This Old Heart Of Mine" was also a Top 100 hit in 1976. Additionally in 1976 Stewart covered The Beatles' song "Get Back" for the ephemeral musical documentary Documentary film All This and World War II. Later in 1976, Stewart topped the Billboard singles charts for eight weeks and the Australian singles charts with the ballad "Tonight's the Night", with an accompanying music video featuring Ekland. It came from the A Night on the Town A Night on the Town (Rod Stewart album) album, which went to number two on the Billboard album charts and was Stewart's first album to go platinum. By explicitly marking the album as having a "fast side" and a "slow side", Stewart continued the trend started by Atlantic Crossing. "The First Cut Is the Deepest", a cover of a Cat Stevens song, went Top 30 in the US in 1977 and number one in the UK. "The Killing of Georgie (Part 1 and 2)", about the murder of a*** man, was also a Top 40 hit for Stewart during 1977. Foot Loose & Fancy Free featured Rod's own band, the original Rod Stewart Group that featured Carmine Appice, Phil Chen, Jim Cregan, Billy Peek, Gary Grainger and John Jarvis, from 1977 continued Stewart's run of chart success, again reaching number two. "You're In My Heart" was the hit single, reaching number four in the US. The rocker "Hot Legs" achieved a lot of radio airplay as did the confessional "I Was Only Joking". In appearance, Stewart's look had evolved to include a glam glam rock element, including make-up and spandex clothes. Stewart scored another UK number one and US number one single with "Da Ya Think I'm ***y?" which was a crossover hit reaching number five on the Billboard black charts due to its disco sound. This was the lead single from 1978's Blondes Have More Fun...or do they? Blondes Have More Fun which went to number one on the Billboard album charts and sold 4 million albums. It was to be Stewart's last number one album for 25 years. A focal point of criticisms about this period was his biggest-selling 1978 disco hit "Da Ya Think I'm ***y?", which was atypical of his earlier output, and disparaged by critics. In interviews, Stewart, while admitting his accompanying look had become "tarty", has defended the lyrics by pointing out that the song is a third-person narrative slice-of-life portrayal, not unlike those in his earlier work, and that it is not about him. However, the song's refrain was identical to Brazilian Jorge Ben Jor's earlier "Taj Mahal" and a lawsuit ensued. Stewart donated his royalties from the song to UNICEF, and he performed it with his band at the Music for UNICEF Concert at the United Nations General Assembly in 1979. Rod moved a bit to a more New Wave New Wave music direction in 1980 by releasing the album Foolish Behaviour. The album produced one hit single "Passion"; that proved particularly popular in South Africa (reaching no. 1 on the Springbok Top 20 Charts and Radio 5 Charts in early 1981), in the same year that Stewart performed live at the then infamous Sun City Super Bowl (in the former Bophutatswana in South Africa). It also reached No. 5 on the US Billboard Charts. Later in 1981, Stewart added further elements of New Wave and synth pop to his sound for the Tonight I'm Yours album. The title song reached #20 in the U.S., while "Young Turks" reached the Top 5 with the album going platinum. In August 1981, MTV was launched in the US with several of Stewart's videos in heavy rotation. On 18 December 1981, Stewart played the Los Angeles Forum, along with Kim Carnes and Tina Turner. This show was broadcast around the world to a television audience of 35 million.Stewart's career then went into a relative slump, and his albums between Tonight I'm Yours (1981) and Out of Order Out of Order (Rod Stewart album) (1988) received harsh criticism from many critics. He only had four Top 10 singles between 1982 and 1988, "Young Turks" (#5,1982), "Some Guys Have All the Luck" (#10, 1984), "Infatuation" (#6, 1984) and "Love Touch" (#6, 1986), although "Baby Jane Baby Jane (song) " became his sixth and final UK number one in 1983. It reached #14 in the US. The corresponding Camouflage Camouflage (Rod Stewart album) album went gold in the UK, and the single "Infatuation" (which featured his old friend Jeff Beck on the guitar) received considerable play on MTV. The second single "Some Guys Have All The Luck" reached #15 in the UK and #10 in the US. A reunion with Jeff Beck produced a successful take on Curtis Mayfield's "People Get Ready People Get Ready (song) ", but an attempt to tour together fell apart after a few dates. He reached UK number two in 1986 with "Every Beat Of My Heart". In January 1985, he performed at the Rock in Rio festival in Rio de Janeiro before an estimated audience of over 100,000. His performance during a stormy night was described by Stewart himself as "winning the world soccer championship". In 1988, he returned with Out Of Order Out of Order (Rod Stewart album) , produced by Duran Duran's Andy Taylor Andy Taylor (guitarist) and by Bernard Edwards of Chic Chic (band) . "Lost in You", "Forever Young Forever Young (Rod Stewart song) ", "Crazy About Her", and "My Heart Can't Tell You No" from that album were all top 15 hits on the Billboard Hot 100 and mainstream rock charts, with the latter even reaching the Top Five. "Forever Young" was an unconscious revision of Bob Dylan's song of the same name; the artists reached an agreement about sharing royalties. The song reached #12 in the U.S. The name of the child in the video is Alex Zuckerman. In January 1989, Stewart set out on the South American leg of the Out of Order Tour playing to sell-out audiences throughout Americas. There were 80,000 people at his show at Corregidora Stadium, Querétaro, México (9 April), and 50,000 at Jalisco Stadium, Guadalajara, Jalisco (April 12). In Buenos Aires, the audience at the River Plate Stadium Estadio Monumental Antonio Vespucio Liberti , which seats 70,000+, was at over 90,000, with several thousand outside the stadium. Firehoses were sprayed on the crowd to avoid heat prostration. Stewart's version of the Tom Waits song "Downtown Train" went to number three on the US singles charts in 1990. This song was taken from a four-CD compilation set called Storyteller - The Complete Anthology: 1964–1990. The Vagabond Heart album continued his comeback with "Rhythm of My Heart" reaching the Top Five and "The Motown Song" reaching the Top 10. Also in 1990 he recorded "It Takes Two It Takes Two (song) " with Tina Turner which reached number five on the UK charts. In 1991 Stewart contributed guest lead vocals to the song "My Town" by the Canadian band Glass Tiger. In 1993, he recorded "All For Love All for Love (song) " with Sting Sting (musician) and Bryan Adams for the soundtrack to the movie The Three Musketeers The Three Musketeers (1993 film) ; the single reached number one on the US charts. Also in 1993, Stewart reunited with Ronnie Wood to record an MTV Unplugged special that included "Handbags and Gladrags", "Cut Across Shorty", and four selections from Every Picture Tells A Story. The show also featured an acoustic version of Van Morrison's "Have I Told You Lately" which topped the Billboard adult contemporary chart and went Top 10 on the Billboard Hot 100. A rendition of "Reason to Believe" also garnered considerable airplay. The resulting Unplugged...and Seated album reached number two on the Billboard 200 album charts. Stewart was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1994. On 31 December on the same year he played in front on 3.5 million people on Copacabana beach in Rio Copacabana (Rio de Janeiro) . By the early 1990s, Stewart had mostly abandoned creating his own material, saying that he was not a natural songwriter and that the tepid response to his recent efforts was not rewarding. In 1995, Stewart released A Spanner in the Works containing a single written by Tom Petty "Leave Virginia Alone" which reached the Top 10 of the adult contemporary charts. The latter half of the 1990s was not so commercially successful with the 1996 album If We Fall in Love Tonight not making much of an impression on the charts. When We Were the New Boys, his final album on the Warner Bros. label released in 1998, contained versions of songs by Britpop acts such as Oasis Oasis (band) and Primal Scream, and reached number two on the UK album charts. In 2000, Stewart decided to leave Warner Bros. and moved to Atlantic Records, another division of Warner Music Group. In 2001, he released Human Human (Rod Stewart album) , his only album for Atlantic. Human only just reached the Top 50 in 2001 with the single "I Can't Deny It" going Top 40 in the UK and Top 20 in the adult contemporary. Stewart then signed to Clive Davis' new J Records label. The Story So Far: The Very Best Of Rod Stewart The Very Best of Rod Stewart , a greatest hits album compiled from his time at Warner Bros., went to the Top 10 in the UK and reached number one in places like Belgium and France in 2001.By 2002, Stewart had sold over 100 million records during his career. On 11 June 2008, Stewart announced that the Faces are discussing a reunion for at least one or two concerts.. On 20 May 2009, Stewart performed "Maggie May" on the grand finale of American Idol season 8 Grand Finale (American Idol 8) . On 2 July 2009 Stewart performed his only UK date this year at Home Park, Plymouth. On 29 September 2009 a 4-CD, 65-track compilation entitled Rod Stewart Sessions 1971-1998 was released; it is composed of previously-unreleased tracks and outtakes from the bulk of his career. Stewart has also mentioned plans for a compilation of covers of soul classics, the possible release of another edition of the Great American Songbook album and a country covers album. On 14 November 2009, Stewart recorded a TV program in the UK for ITV which was screened on December 5, 2009. The music in the programme featured tracks from his new album and some old favourites. On 14 Jan 2010, Rhino records released Stewart's "Once in a Blue Moon" a "lost album" originally recorded in 1992, featuring ten cover songs including the Rolling Stones' "Ruby Tuesday", Dylan's "The Groom's Still Waiting at the Altar" and Stevie Nicks' "Stand Back", as well as Tom Waits' "Tom Traubert's Blues."In 1999, Stewart was diagnosed with thyroid cancer, for which he underwent surgery in July 2000. Besides being a major health scare, the resulting surgery also threatened his famous voice, and he had to re-learn how to sing. Since then he has been active in raising funds for The City of Hope Foundation charity to find cures for all forms of cancer, especially those affecting children. Stewart has remained physically active in recent years, playing in a senior soccer league in Palos Verdes, California and still kicking balls into the audience during concerts. When discussing the rock 'n' roll excesses he has been through in his career, he maintains that his love of playing football (soccer) has been his saviour. He is a well-known supporter of Celtic F.C., which he mentions in his hit "You're in My Heart", and the Scotland national team Scotland national football team . Rod is one of only two people to have a seat for life at Celtic Park, the other one being the comedian Billy Connolly. Stewart also follows Manchester United as his English side, and he explains his love affair with both Celtic and Man United in Frank Worall's book Celtic United. Stewart is also a keen model railway enthusiast, having a 23 x 124-foot HO scale layout model railroad layout in his California home, called the Three Rivers City, modelled after the New York Central and the Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Railroad Railroads during the 1940s, which has now made the pages of the December 2007 issue of Model Railroader Magazine. In the article he said that he would rather be in a model railroading magazine than a music magazine, and his passion for the hobby has been blamed for contributing to the end of his second marriage. He has a layout based on Britain's East Coast Main Line at his UK home, located in Es*** on part of the Copped Hall estate. A keen car enthusiast, particularly for Ferrari, he owns one of the 400 Enzo Ferrari Enzo Ferrari (car) . In 1982, Stewart was car-jacked in Los Angeles while he was standing next to his $50,000 Porsche, which was parked on Sunset Boulevard in Hollywood Hollywood, Los Angeles, California . , which was subsequently recovered. On 11 October 2005, Stewart received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6801 Hollywood Blvd. (Star number 2093) On 18 April and 19 April 2006 Stewart was the guest artist and celebrity vocal coach on American Idol, leading the remaining seven finalists in singing entries from the Great American Songbook. Stewart is a supporter of the Conservative Party Conservative Party (UK) . Relationships Stewart is known for his liaisons with women (fathering seven children with five of them; the oldest being born in 1964 and his latest child being born in November 2005): In reference to his divorces, Rod Stewart was once quoted as saying, "Instead of getting married again, I'm going to find a woman I don't like and just give her a house.", February 2006 * Awarded CBE in 2007 New Year's Honours. * Grammy Award for Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album, 2005, Stardust ... The Great American Songbook Volume III * Diamond Award of World Music Awards show for over 100 million records sold worldwide, 2001. * Inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, 1994 * Inducted into the UK Music Hall of Fame, 2006 * "Bar none, he's the best singer I've heard in rock 'n' roll. He's also the greatest white soul soul music singer." —Elton John on Rod Stewart * "Is this a white guy? You are kidding me!!" Chuck Berry commented when asked what he thought about Stewart's cover of Sweet Little Rock & Roller in an interview by the Belgian Rock magazine Humo in 1975. * Rod Stewart played to the largest concert crowd ever, with 3.5 million fans in attendance. This was at Copacabana Beach in Rio de Janeiro for the 1994 New Year's Eve celebrations. *According to Stewart, soul legend James Brown called him music's "best white soul singer" in September 2006.During his career, Rod Stewart has been a member of a number of groups including: * Jimmy Powell and the Five Dimensions (1963) * The Hoochie Coochie Men (1964–1965) * Soul Agents (1965–1966) * Shotgun Express (1966) * The Jeff Beck Group (1966–1969) * Faces The Faces (1969–1975)Stewart's album and single sales total have been variously estimated as more than 100 million, or at 200 million, in either case earning him a place on the list of best-selling music artists. UK/US number one albums * 1971 Every Picture Tells a Story (UK / US) * 1972 Never a Dull Moment Never a Dull Moment (Rod Stewart album) (UK ) * 1973 Sing It Again Rod (UK ) * 1974 Smiler Smiler (album) (UK ) * 1975 Atlantic Crossing (UK ) * 1976 A Night on the Town A Night on the Town (Rod Stewart album) (UK ) * 1977 Foot Loose & Fancy Free (UK / US) * 1978 Blondes Have More Fun (US ) * 1979 Greatest Hits, Vol. 1 Greatest Hits, Vol. 1 (Rod Stewart) (UK ) * 2004 Stardust: the Great American Songbook 3 (US ) * 2006 Still the Same... Great Rock Classics of Our Time (US ) * 2009 Soulbook UK/US number one singles * 1971 "Maggie May" / "Reason to Believe" (UK/US) * 1972 "You Wear It Well" (UK) * 1975 "Sailing Sailing (Rod Stewart song) " (UK) * 1976 "Tonight's the Night (Gonna Be Alright)" (US) * 1977 "I Don't Want to Talk About It" / "The First Cut Is the Deepest" (UK) * 1978 "Do Ya Think I'm ***y?" (UK, US) * 1983 "Baby Jane Baby Jane (song) " (UK) * 1990 "Downtown Train" (US Adult Contemporary) * 1990 "This Old Heart of Mine" with Ronald Isley (US Adult Contemporary) * 1993 "All for Love All for Love (song) " (US) (featuring Bryan Adams and Sting Sting (musician) , first appearing on the official soundtrack from the movie "The Three Musketeers The Three Musketeers (1993 film) ") * 1993 "Have I Told You Lately" (US Adult Contemporary)
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