Paul Butterfield

Paul Butterfield

Butterfield performing at
Woodstock Reunion 1979
Background information
Birth name Paul Vaughn Butterfield[1]
Born (1942-12-17)December 17, 1942[1]
Chicago, Illinois[1]
Died May 4, 1987(1987-05-04) (aged 44)[2]
North Hollywood, California[2]
Genres Blues rock, Chicago blues, blue-eyed soul
Occupation(s) Musician
Instruments Harmonica, vocals, guitar, keyboards, flute
Years active 1963–1987
Labels Elektra, Bearsville
Associated acts The Paul Butterfield Blues Band, Paul Butterfield's Better Days
Notable instruments
Hohner Marine Band harmonica

Paul Vaughn Butterfield (December 17, 1942 – May 4, 1987) was an American blues harmonica player and singer. After early training as a classical flutist, he developed an interest in blues harmonica. He explored the blues scene in his native Chicago, where he met Muddy Waters and other blues greats, who provided encouragement and opportunities for him to join in jam sessions. He soon began performing with fellow blues enthusiasts Nick Gravenites and Elvin Bishop.

In 1963, he formed the Paul Butterfield Blues Band, which recorded several successful albums and were popular on the late-1960s concert and festival circuit, with performances at the Fillmore West, in San Francisco; the Fillmore East, in New York City; the Monterey Pop Festival; and Woodstock. The band was known for combining electric Chicago blues with a rock urgency and for their pioneering jazz fusion performances and recordings. After the breakup of the group in 1971, Butterfield continued to tour and record with the band Paul Butterfield's Better Days, with his mentor Muddy Waters, and with members of the roots-rock group the Band. While still recording and performing, Butterfield died in 1987 at age 44 of a heroin overdose.

Music critics have acknowledged his development of an original approach that places him among the best-known blues harp players. In 2006, he was inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame. The Paul Butterfield Blues Band was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2015. Both panels noted his harmonica skills and his contributions to bringing blues music to a younger and broader audience.

Career

Butterfield was born in Chicago and raised in the city's Hyde Park neighborhood. The son of a lawyer and a painter, he attended the University of Chicago Laboratory Schools, a private school associated with the University of Chicago. Exposed to music at an early age, he studied classical flute with Walfrid Kujala, of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.[3] Butterfield was also athletic and was offered a track scholarship to Brown University.[3] However, a knee injury and a growing interest in blues music sent him in a different direction. He developed a love for blues harmonica and a friendship with guitarist and singer-songwriter Nick Gravenites, who shared an interest in authentic blues music.[4] By the late 1950s, they were visiting blues clubs in Chicago, where they met musicians such as Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf, Little Walter, and Otis Rush, who encouraged them and occasionally let them sit in on jam sessions. The pair were soon performing as Nick and Paul in college-area coffee houses.[5]

In the early 1960s, Butterfield attended the University of Chicago, where he met aspiring blues guitarist Elvin Bishop.[6][7] Both began devoting more time to music than studies and soon became full-time musicians.[5] Eventually, Butterfield, who sang and played harmonica, and Bishop, accompanying him on guitar, were offered a regular gig at Big John's, a folk club in the Old Town district on Chicago's North Side.[8] With this booking, they persuaded bassist Jerome Arnold and drummer Sam Lay (both from Howlin' Wolf's touring band) to form a group with them in 1963. Their engagement at the club was highly successful and brought the group to the attention of record producer Paul A. Rothchild.[9]

Butterfield Blues Band with Bloomfield

During their engagement at Big John's, Butterfield met and occasionally sat in with guitarist Mike Bloomfield, who was also playing at the club.[6] By chance, producer Rothchild witnessed one of their performances and was impressed by the chemistry between the two. He persuaded Butterfield to bring Bloomfield into the band, and they were signed to Elektra Records.[9] Their first attempt to record an album, in December 1964, did not meet Rothchild's expectations, although an early version of "Born in Chicago", written by Gravenites, was included on the 1965 Elektra sampler Folksong '65 and created interest in the band (additional early recordings were released on the Elektra compilation What's Shakin' in 1966 and The Original Lost Elektra Sessions in 1995). In order to better capture their sound, Rothchild convinced Elektra president Jac Holzman to record a live album.[10] In the spring of 1965, the Butterfield Blues Band was recorded at the Cafe Au Go Go in New York City. These recordings also failed to satisfy Rothchild, but the group's appearances at the club brought them to the attention of the East Coast music community.[6] Rothchild persuaded Holzman to agree to a third attempt at recording an album.[lower-alpha 1]

In these recording sessions, Rothchild had assumed the role of group manager and used his folk contacts to secure the band more and more engagements outside of Chicago.[12] At the last minute, the band was booked to perform at the Newport Folk Festival in July 1965.[6] They were scheduled as the opening act the first night when the gates opened and again the next afternoon in an urban blues workshop at the festival.[12] Despite limited exposure on the first night and a dismissive introduction the following day by the folklorist and blues researcher Alan Lomax,[13][lower-alpha 2] the band was able to attract an unusually large audience for a workshop performance. Maria Muldaur, with her husband, Geoff, who later toured and recorded with Butterfield, recalled the group's performance as stunning – it was the first time that many of the mostly folk-music fans had heard a high-powered electric blues combo.[12] Among those who took notice was festival regular Bob Dylan, who invited the band to back him for his first live electric performance. With little rehearsal, Dylan performed a short, four-song set the next day with Bloomfield, Arnold, and Lay (along with Al Kooper and Barry Goldberg).[13][14] The performance was not well received by some and generated a controversy,[3] but it was a watershed event and brought the band to the attention of a much larger audience.[12]

The band added keyboardist Mark Naftalin, and its debut album, The Paul Butterfield Blues Band, was finally successfully recorded in mid-1965 and released later that year. The opening song, a newer recording of the previously released "Born in Chicago", is an upbeat blues rocker and set the tone for the album, which included a mix of blues standards, such as "Shake Your Moneymaker", "Blues with a Feeling", and "Look Over Yonders Wall", and compositions by the band. The album, described as a "hard-driving blues album that, in a word, rocked",[8] reached number 123 in the Billboard 200 album chart in 1966,[15] but its influence was felt beyond its sales figures.[9]

Jazz drummer Billy Davenport was invited to replace Lay, who was ailing.[9] In July 1966, the sextet recorded their second album, East-West, which was released a month later. The album consists of more varied material, with the band's interpretations of blues (Robert Johnson's "Walkin' Blues"), rock (Michael Nesmith's "Mary, Mary"), R&B (Allen Toussaint's "Get Out of My Life, Woman"), and jazz selections (Nat Adderley's "Work Song"). East-West reached number 65 in the album chart.[15]

The thirteen-minute instrumental track "East-West" incorporates Indian raga influences and some of the earliest jazz-fusion and blues rock excursions, with extended solos by Butterfield and guitarists Mike Bloomfield and Elvin Bishop.[7] It has been described as "the first of its kind and ... the root from which the acid rock tradition emerged".[16] Live versions of the song sometimes lasted nearly an hour, and performances at the San Francisco Fillmore Auditorium "were a huge influence on the city's jam bands".[17] Bishop recalled, "Quicksilver, Big Brother, and the Dead – those guys were just chopping chords. They had been folk musicians and weren't particularly proficient playing electric guitar – [Bloomfield] could play all these scales and arpeggios and fast time-signatures ... He just destroyed them."[17] Several live versions of "East-West" from this period were later released on East-West Live in 1996.

In England in November 1966, Butterfield recorded several songs with John Mayall & the Bluesbreakers, who had recently finished the album A Hard Road.[18] Butterfield and Mayall contributed vocals, and Butterfield's Chicago-style blues harp was featured. Four songs were released in the UK on a 45-rpm EP, John Mayall's Bluesbreakers with Paul Butterfield, in January 1967.[lower-alpha 3]

Later Butterfield Blues Band

In spite of its success, the Butterfield Blues Band soon changed its lineup. Arnold and Davenport left the band, and Bloomfield went on to form his own group, Electric Flag.[9] With Bishop and Naftalin remaining on guitar and keyboards, the band added bassist Bugsy Maugh, drummer Phillip Wilson, and saxophonists David Sanborn and Gene Dinwiddie. This lineup recorded the band's third album, The Resurrection of Pigboy Crabshaw, in 1967. The album cut back on extended instrumental jams and went in a more rhythm and blues-influenced horn-driven direction, with songs such as Charles Brown's "Driftin' Blues" (retitled "Driftin' and Driftin'"), Otis Rush's "Double Trouble", and Junior Parker's "Driving Wheel".[19] The Resurrection of Pigboy Crabshaw was Butterfield's highest-charting album, reaching number 52 on the album chart.[15] Most of this lineup performed at the seminal Monterey Pop Festival on June 17, 1967.[lower-alpha 4][20]

On its next album, In My Own Dream, released in 1968, the band continued to move away from its roots in Chicago blues towards a more soul-influenced, horn-based sound. With Butterfield singing only three songs, the album featured more band contributions[21] It reached number 79 in the Billboard album chart.[15] By the end of 1968, both Bishop and Naftalin had left the band.[9] In April 1969, Butterfield took part in a concert at Chicago's Auditorium Theater and a subsequent recording session organized by record producer Norman Dayron, featuring Muddy Waters backed by Otis Spann, Mike Bloomfield, Sam Lay, Donald "Duck" Dunn, and Buddy Miles. Such Waters warhorses as "Forty Days and Forty Nights", "I'm Ready", "Baby, Please Don't Go", and "Got My Mojo Working" were recorded and later released on the album Fathers and Sons. Waters commented, "We did a lot of the things over we did with Little Walter and Jimmy Rogers and Elgin [Evans] on drums [an early configuration of Waters's band] ... It's about as close as I've been [to that feel] since I first recorded it".[22] To one reviewer, these recordings represent Paul Butterfield's best performances.[23]

The Butterfield Blues Band was invited to perform at the Woodstock Festival on August 18, 1969. The band performed seven songs, and although its performance did not appear in the film Woodstock, one song, "Love March", was included on the album Woodstock: Music from the Original Soundtrack and More, released in 1970. In 2009, Butterfield was included in the expanded 40th Anniversary Edition Woodstock video, and an additional two songs appeared on the box set Woodstock: 40 Years On: Back to Yasgur's Farm.

The album Keep On Moving, with only Butterfield remaining from the original lineup, was released in 1969. It was produced by veteran R&B producer and songwriter Jerry Ragovoy, reportedly brought in by Elektra to turn out a "breakout commercial hit".[3] The album was not embraced by critics or long-time fans;[24] however, it reached number 102 in the Billboard album chart.[15]

A live double album by the Butterfield Blues Band, Live, was recorded March 21–22, 1970, at the The Troubadour, in West Hollywood, California. By this time, the band included a four-piece horn section in what has been described as a "big-band Chicago blues with a jazz base". Live provides perhaps the best showcase for this unique "blues-jazz-rock-R&B hybrid sound".[25] After the release of another soul-influenced album, Sometimes I Just Feel Like Smilin' in 1971, the Paul Butterfield Blues Band disbanded.[9] In 1972, a retrospective or their career, Golden Butter: The Best of the Paul Butterfield Blues Band, was released by Elektra.

Better Days and solo

After the breakup of the Butterfield Blues Band and no longer under contract with Elektra, Butterfield retreated to Woodstock, New York, where he eventually formed his next band,[12] Paul Butterfield's Better Days, with drummer Chris Parker, guitarist Amos Garrett, singer Geoff Muldaur, pianist Ronnie Barron and bassist Billy Rich. In 1972–1973, the group recorded the albums Paul Butterfield's Better Days and It All Comes Back, released by Albert Grossman's Bearsville Records. The albums reflected the influence of the participants and explored more roots- and folk-based styles.[26] Although without an easily defined commercial style, both reached the album chart.[15] The band did not last to record a third studio album, but its album Live at Winterland Ballroom, recorded in 1973, was released in 1999.[27]

With Rick Danko (left) on bass guitar at Woodstock Reunion 1979

Butterfield next pursued a solo career and appeared as a sideman in several different musical settings.[8] In 1975, he again joined Muddy Waters to record Waters's last album for Chess Records, The Muddy Waters Woodstock Album.[28] The album was recorded at Levon Helm's Woodstock studio with Garth Hudson and members of Waters's touring band. In 1976, Butterfield performed at the Band's final concert, "The Last Waltz", accompanying the Band on the song "Mystery Train" and backing Muddy Waters on "Mannish Boy".[29] Butterfield kept up his association with former members of the Band, touring and recording with Levon Helm and the RCO All Stars in 1977[7] and touring with Rick Danko in 1979. A 1984 live performance with Danko and Richard Manuel was recorded and released as Live at the Lonestar in 2011.[30]

As a solo act with backing musicians, Butterfield continued to tour and recorded the misguided and overproduced Put It in Your Ear in 1976 and North South in 1981, with strings, synthesizers, and pale funk arrangements.[3] In 1986, he released his final studio album, The Legendary Paul Butterfield Rides Again, which again was a poor attempt at a comeback with an updated rock sound. On April 15, 1987, he participated in the concert "B.B. King & Friends", with Eric Clapton, Etta James, Albert King, Stevie Ray Vaughan, and others.[31]

Legacy

Aside from "rank[ing] among the most influential harp players in the Blues",[32] Butterfield has also been seen as pointing blues-based music in new, innovative directions.[33] AllMusic critic Steve Huey commented,

It's impossible to overestimate the importance of the doors Butterfield opened: before he came to prominence, white American musicians treated the blues with cautious respect, afraid of coming off as inauthentic. Not only did Butterfield clear the way for white musicians to build upon blues tradition (instead of merely replicating it), but his storming sound was a major catalyst in bringing electric Chicago blues to white audiences who'd previously considered acoustic Delta blues the only really genuine article.[3]

In 2006, Butterfield was inducted into the Blues Foundation's Blues Hall of Fame, which noted that "the albums released by the Butterfield Blues Band brought Chicago Blues to a generation of Rock fans during the 1960s and paved the way for late 1960s electric groups like Cream".[32] The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inducted the Paul Butterfield Blues Band in 2015.[34] The induction biography commented that "the Butterfield Band converted the country-blues purists and turned on the Fillmore generation to the pleasures of Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf, Little Walter, Willie Dixon and Elmore James".[14]

Harmonica style

Like many Chicago blues harp players, Butterfield approached the instrument like a horn, preferring single notes to chords, and used it for soloing.[8] His style has been described as "always intense, understated, concise, and serious",[33] and he was "known for purity and intensity of his tone, his sustained breath control, and his unique ability to bend notes to his will".[35] In his choice of notes he has been compared to Big Walter Horton, but he was never seen as an imitator of any particular harp player.[6][8][lower-alpha 5] Rather, he developed "a style original and powerful enough to place him in the pantheon of true blues greats".[3]

Butterfield played Hohner harmonicas (and endorsed them). He preferred the diatonic ten-hole Marine Band model.[36] He wrote a harmonica instruction book, Paul Butterfield Teaches Blues Harmonica Master Class,[37] a few years before his death (it was not published until 1997). In it, he explains various techniques, demonstrated on an accompanying CD.[35] Butterfield played mainly in cross-harp, or second position. He occasionally used a chromatic harmonica.[8] Reportedly left-handed, he held the harmonica in a manner opposite that of a right-handed player, i.e., in his right hand, upside down (with the low notes to the right), using his left hand for muting effects.[lower-alpha 6]

Also like other electric Chicago blues harp players, Butterfield frequently used amplification to achieve his sound.[8] Producer Rothchild noted that Butterfield favored an Altec harp microphone run through an early model Fender tweed amplifier.[38] Beginning with album The Resurrection of Pigboy Crabshaw, he began using an acoustic harmonica style, following his shift to a more R&B-based approach.[6]

Personal life

By all accounts, Paul Butterfield was absorbed in his music. According to his brother Peter,

He listened to records and went places, but he also spent an awful lot of time, by himself, playing [harmonica]. He'd play outdoors. There's a place called the Point in Hyde Park [Chicago], a promontory of land that sticks out into Lake Michigan, and I can remember him out there for hours playing. He was just playing all the time ... It was a very solitary effort. It was all internal, like he had a particular sound he wanted to get and he just worked to get it.[8]

Producer Norman Dayron recalled the young Butterfield as "very quiet and defensive and hard-edged. He was this tough Irish Catholic, kind of a hard guy. He would walk around in black shirts and sunglasses, dark shades and dark jackets ... Paul was hard to be friends with."[4] Although they later became close, Michael Bloomfield commented on his first impressions of Butterfield: "He was a bad guy. He carried pistols. He was down there on the South Side, holding his own. I was scared to death of that cat".[39] Writer and AllMusic founder Michael Erlewine, who knew Butterfield early in his recording career, described him as "always intense, somewhat remote, and even, on occasion, downright unfriendly".[8] He remembered Butterfield as "not much interested in other people".[8]

By 1971, Butterfield had purchased his first house, in rural Woodstock, New York, and began enjoying family life with his second wife, Kathy, and their infant son, Lee. According to Maria Muldaur, she and her husband were frequent dinner guests, which usually involved sitting around a piano and singing songs.[12] She doubted her abilities, but "it was Butter that first encouraged me to let loose and just sing the blues [and] not to worry about singing pretty or hitting all the right notes ... He loosened all the levels of self-consciousness and doubt out of me ... And he'll forever live in my heart for that and for respecting me as a fellow musician."[12]

Death

Beginning in 1980, Paul Butterfield underwent several surgical procedures to relieve his peritonitis, a serious and painful inflammation of the intestines.[7] Although he had been opposed to hard drugs as a bandleader, he began using painkillers, including heroin, which led to an addiction. These problems and the drug-related death of his friend and one-time musical partner Mike Bloomfield weighed heavily on him.[3] On May 4, 1987 at age 44, Paul Butterfield died at his apartment in the North Hollywood district of Los Angeles. An autopsy by the county coroner concluded that he was the victim of an accidental drug overdose, with "significant levels of morphine (heroin)".[2]

By the time of his death, Paul Butterfield was out of the commercial mainstream. Although for some, he was very much the bluesman, Maria Muldaur commented "he had the whole sensibility and musicality and approach down pat ... He just went for it and took it all in, and he embodied the essence of what the blues was all about. Unfortunately, he lived that way a little too much".[12]

Discography

In 1964, Butterfield began his association with Elektra Records and eventually recorded seven albums for the label.[40] After the breakup of the Butterfield Blues Band in 1971, he recorded four albums for manager Albert Grossman's Bearsville Records – two with Paul Butterfield's Better Days and two solo.[40] His last solo album was released by Amherst Records.[40]

After his death in 1987, his former record companies released a number of live albums and compilations. Except where noted, the following albums are listed as "The Paul Butterfield Blues Band".

Studio albums

The Butterfield Blues Band

Paul Butterfield

Live albums

Butterfield compilation albums

Compilation albums and videos with various artists

As accompanist

Tribute albums

Notes

Footnotes
  1. Rothchild also recalled Holzman's approval came with the warning "Rothchild, do not fuck this up!" [11]
  2. Albert Grossman, who had agreed to take over management of the band the night before, was incensed at Lomax's perceived insults, and an argument backstage led to an altercation between the two.
  3. Presumably because of licensing restrictions, the EP was marked "For sale in the U.K. only", but it soon found its way to some specialty record retailers in the U.S. The songs were later included as bonus tracks on the 2003 expanded 2-CD reissue of A Hard Road, with most of Peter Green's recordings with Mayall.
  4. Billy Davenport played the drums, and Keith Johnson contributed trumpet in place of David Sanborn on saxophone. Former bandmate Mike Bloomfield also performed the same day at Monterey with his new group, Electric Flag.
  5. Compare Butterfield's reading of "Off the Wall" from What's Shakin' or "Everything Going to Be Alright" from Live to Little Walter's originals.
  6. Erlewine wrote that he held the harmonica in his left hand, with the low notes to the left, but this is contradicted by a photo on the front cover of Butterfield's instructional book and his filmed performance at Monterey Pop, both clearly showing him holding it in his right hand and using his left hand for muting.
  7. A review of Heart Attack states "four cuts feature Paul Butterfield on harp (believed to be his last recordings)."Frantz, Niles J. "Heart Attack – Album Review". AllMusic. Rovi Corp. Retrieved August 4, 2013.
Citations
  1. 1 2 3 "Paul Butterfield". Sweet Home Cook County. Cook County Clerk's Office. Retrieved September 15, 2013.
  2. 1 2 3 "Musician's Death Laid to Overdose". Los Angeles Times. June 13, 1987. Retrieved July 23, 2013.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Huey, Steve. "Paul Butterfield – Biography". AllMusic. Rovi Corp. Retrieved July 23, 2013.
  4. 1 2 Wolkin, Keenom (2000), p. 40.
  5. 1 2 Milward (2013), p. 66.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Field (2000), pp. 212–214.
  7. 1 2 3 4 "Paul Butterfield – Biography". Rolling Stone. Retrieved September 13, 2013.
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Erlewine (1996), p. 41.
  9. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Leggett, Steve. "The Paul Butterfield Blues Band – Biography". AllMusic. Rovi Corp. Retrieved September 14, 2013.
  10. Rothchild (1995), pp. 1–4.
  11. Rothchild 1995, p. 3.
  12. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Ellis 1997
  13. 1 2 Marcus (2006), pp. 154–155.
  14. 1 2 "The Paul Butterfield Blues Band Biography". Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Retrieved December 16, 2014.
  15. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Paul Butterfield – Awards". AllMusic. Rovi Corp. Retrieved July 23, 2013.
  16. Tamarkin, Jeff (1996). "East-West". All Music Guide to the Blues. Miller Freeman Books. p. 42. ISBN 0-87930-424-3.
  17. 1 2 Houghton (2010), p. 195.
  18. Schinder, Scott (2003). A Hard Road (expanded edition, CD booklet). John Mayall & the Bluesbreakers. Deram Records. pp. 10, 14. B0001083-02.
  19. Erlewine, Michael (1996). "The Resurrection of Pigboy Crabshaw". All Music Guide to the Blues. Miller Freeman Books. p. 42. ISBN 0-87930-424-3.
  20. Perone, James (2005). Woodstock: An Encyclopedia of the Music and Art Fair. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 3. ISBN 978-0-313-33057-5.
  21. Eder, Bruce. "In My Own Dream – Album Review". AllMusic. Rovi Corp. Retrieved September 13, 2013.
  22. Gordon (2002), p. 207.
  23. Herzhaft (1992), p. 371.
  24. Campbell, Al. "Keep on Moving – Album review". AllMusic. Rovi Corp. Retrieved July 23, 2013.
  25. Eder, Bruce. "Live – Album Review". AllMusic. Rovi Corp. Retrieved July 23, 2013.
  26. "Paul Butterfield's Better Days – Album Review". AllMusic. Rovi Corp. Retrieved September 14, 2013.
  27. "Live at Winterland Ballroom". AllMusic. Retrieved September 24, 2013.
  28. Gordon (2002), p. 247.
  29. Gordon (2002), p. 253.
  30. "Rick Danko, Richard Manuel & Paul Butterfield Live at the Lone Star 1984 – Overview". AllMusic. Rovi Corp. Retrieved September 14, 2013.
  31. "B.B. King & Friends: A Night of Blistering Blues – Overview". AllMusic. Rovi Corp. Retrieved September 14, 2013.
  32. 1 2 "Paul Butterfield". Blues Hall of Fame – 2006 Inductees. The Blues Foundation. 2006. Retrieved July 23, 2013.
  33. 1 2 Dicaire (2001), p. 59–60.
  34. "The 2015 Inductees". Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Retrieved December 16, 2014.
  35. 1 2 "Paul Butterfield Teaches Blues Harmonica Master Class". Homespun Music Instruction. Homespun Tapes. Retrieved September 15, 2013.
  36. Welding, Pete (1965). The Paul Butterfield Blues Band (Album notes). Paul Butterfield Blues Band. Elektra Records. EKL-294/EKS-7294.
  37. Butterfield, Paul (1997). Paul Butterfield Teaches Blues Harmonica Master Class. Homespun Listen and Learn Series. ISBN 978-0-7935-8130-6.
  38. Rothchild (1995), p. 3.
  39. Wolkin, Keenom (2000), p. 93.
  40. 1 2 3 "Paul Butterfield – Discography". AllMusic. Rovi Corp. Retrieved September 14, 2013.
References
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