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Jack Hylton

Jack Hylton (born John Greenhalgh Hilton;[1] 2 July 1892 – 29 January 1965) was an English pianist, composer, band leader and impresario.[2]

Jack Hylton
Hylton c. mid-to-late 1920s
Background information
Birth nameJohn Greenhalgh Hilton
Also known asJack Elton
Born(1892-07-02)2 July 1892
Great Lever, Lancashire, England
Died29 January 1965(1965-01-29) (aged 72)
Marylebone, London, England
GenresJazz
Occupation(s)
Instrument(s)Piano
Years active1917–1965
LabelsHMV

Hylton rose to prominence during the British dance band era, being referred as the "British King of Jazz" and "The Ambassador of British Dance Music" by the musical press, not only because of his popularity which extended throughout the world, but also for his use of unusually large ensembles for the time and his polished arrangements. He mostly retired from the music industry after 1940, becoming a successful theatrical businessman until his death.

Early life and career edit

He was born John Greenhalgh Hilton in Great Lever near Bolton, Lancashire,[3] the son of George Hilton, a cotton yarn twister. His father was an amateur singer at the local Labour Club and Hylton learned piano to accompany him on the stage. Hylton later sang to the customers when his father bought a pub (The Round Croft) in nearby Little Lever, becoming known as the "Singing Mill-Boy".[3] He also performed as a relief pianist for various bands. In 1905 he joined a pierrot troupe in Rhyl and he went on to conduct the orchestra of a touring pantomime.[3]

In 1913 he moved to London where he initially worked as an organist at a cinema in Stoke Newington.[3] A year later he was working as a pianist in the 400 Club and playing with the Stroud Haxton Band. During the First World War he moved to be a musical director of the band of the 20th Hussars, and later in the Army Entertainment Division (N.A.C.B.).[3]

After the First World War, Hylton formed a double act with Tommy Handley to little success, also collaborating in a number of short-lived stage shows. In 1919 he moved to Blackpool, where he composed and sold songs to tourists.[3] He returned to London, playing with the "Queens" Dance Orchestra, wrote arrangements of popular songs and recorded them for His Master's Voice and Zonophone under the label "Directed by Jack Hylton" (being credited in lieu of a pay rise), his records carrying the new style of jazz-derived American dance music.[3]

1920s and 1930s edit

After being dismissed by his own bandmates from the Queen's Hall in 1922, Hylton not only set up his own band, but also set up a number of other orchestras under the Jack Hylton Organisation. Even though he was not professionally trained for business, he brought his band to success even at a time when the Great Depression hit hard during the 1930s. His good reputation allowed him to make contacts with famous jazz artists of the time, and he was credited for bringing Duke Ellington, Louis Armstrong and others to Britain and Europe in the 1930s.[4]

An ensemble consisting at times of more than 20 musicians, the Hylton orchestra quickly stood out from the rest. Unlike many other bandleaders who took up residences at nightclubs and ballrooms, Hylton often embarked on lengthy tours of England, which ultimately moulded the concept most Britons had of jazz.[2]

By the mid-1920s, he was usually referred as the "British King of Jazz", a notion Hylton initially dismissed. As late as 1926, he thought of jazz as "a bunch of noises" popular at the end of the First World War, "when everything was topsy-turvy". Hylton first appeared on radio through station 2LO in 1924, and on 24 June 1925, he cut HMV's first electric record, "Feelin' Kind O' Blue", at Hayes in Middlesex.[5]

The second half of the 1920s marked Hylton's highest point of prominence. After recovering from a near-fatal car accident – which took place on 20 January 1927, on the way to the HMV studios at Hayes, Middlesex[6] – he made the first in a string of "continental tours" that lasted until 1930. The orchestra's line-up also included some of the most skilled musicians of the time. "Regular" players included saxophonists Billy Ternent (who was also the band's main arranger and co-leader), Edward Owen (E.O.) "Poggy" Pogson and Noel "Chappie" d'Amato, trumpeter/cornetist Jack Jackson, trombonist Lew Davis, violinists Hugo Rignold and Harry Berly, pianist/arranger Peter Yorke, and (from 1928) singer Sam Browne. The orchestra was often augmented with members of other Hylton-controlled bands, especially for 12-inch "concert arrangements". According to the Daily Herald of 7 June 1930,[7] between four and five million records sold in 1929 (out of 50 million sold overall) were made by Hylton, although three million has been suggested as likely a more accurate figure.[2]

By the time the Depression started biting in 1930, Hylton downsized his band and began performing in Europe less frequently; that same year, however, Maurice Chevalier recorded with Hylton, who also made the first recording of "Body and Soul", and Pat O'Malley replaced Browne as vocalist. In 1930, they recorded "Amy, Wonderful Amy", a song about Amy Johnson.[8] Hylton also became a director and major shareholder of the new Decca record label, switching from HMV in late 1931. The following year, he was decorated by the French government, recorded with Paul Robeson, and made the first transatlantic entertainment broadcast with Paul Whiteman and his orchestra.[2]

In late 1933, Hylton left Decca after refusing to take a pay cut, not making records until 1935 when he rejoined HMV. He spent 1934 touring Europe again, and adopted "The Soldiers in the Park" (more commonly known as "Oh Listen to the Band") as his signature tune.[9] In 1935, he appeared in his first feature film, the musical comedy She Shall Have Music, which starred June Clyde and Claude Dampier.[2]

That same year, Hylton finally was able to perform in the United States;[10] he had repeatedly attempted this for almost a decade, but had been opposed by the musicians' unions (a 1929 tour was cancelled at the last minute). Standard Oil signed Hylton for a radio show on CBS, not only paying him and his star players, but also paying all expenses for those band members unable to play in the US. Whilst in Chicago, Hylton made a number of records with his radio band for Victor. Union pressure led him to return to the UK in 1936, although Pat O'Malley and Alec Templeton stayed in America, making a name for themselves.

Upon returning to Britain, he was criticised for adopting the then-popular swing rhythm, so he kept playing in his well-established style, including a series of new "concert recordings". After a new tour of Europe in 1937, which included a performance at the Scala in Nazi Germany,[3] Hylton began appearing on radio more frequently, starring in Radio Luxembourg's Rinso Radio Revue until 1939, when he appeared in the BBC's Band Waggon, as well as its 1940 film adaptation.[2] Hylton and his band also made a number of appearances on BBC television in the 1930s, on one of which Ernie Wise made his television debut.

1940s and 1950s edit

The Jack Hylton orchestra disbanded in 1940 as many of its members were called up for service,[2] although Jack continued to conduct orchestras for radio in the years to come, leading the Glenn Miller Orchestra when it visited England in 1943. During the war, he took the London Philharmonic Orchestra around Britain, giving promenade concerts. This helped to keep the orchestra going when its normal programme had ceased and it was on the edge of bankruptcy.[11]

At this point in his career he became an impresario, discovering new stars and managing radio, film and theatre productions, from ballets to circuses. His productions dominated the London theatres with such productions as The Merry Widow, Kiss Me, Kate, and Kismet.[2]

In 1950 he reunited with a number of his former employees, many of whom had become successful in their own right, for that year's Royal Command Performance, billed as "The Band that Jack Built".[3] Despite their success, Hylton resisted calls for his return to band-leading. There were rumours in 1954 that he would stand for Parliament from Bolton, where he was a prominent member of the local Labour Party branch.

In November 1955, he was contracted as Advisor of Light Entertainment to Associated-Rediffusion (A-R), winner of the London weekday franchise in the recently established ITV network. He founded Jack Hylton Television Productions, Ltd. in that same month to produce a range of light entertainment programming exclusively for A-R. In spite of their popularity, however, the company's productions were of low quality, with performers even apologising in front of millions of viewers at times. This in turn helped establish ITV's reputation for coarseness, a stigma it would only shake off by the 1970s. Hylton refused to renew his ITV contract in 1959; the last shows made by the company were broadcast in 1960.

1960s edit

In his final years Hylton was still producing stage shows, as well as taking a leading role in organising various Royal Command Performances, until his final stage production, Camelot, in 1965.[2]

In 1965 a televised tribute to Hylton, The Stars Shine for Jack, was held in London on Sunday 30 May at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane with many artists including Arthur Askey, the Crazy Gang, Marlene Dietrich, Dickie Henderson and Shirley Bassey.

Personal life edit

Hylton was married twice; firstly in 1913 in St Asaph, Flintshire, Wales, to bandleader Ennis Parkes (born Florence Parkinson), whom he had met during his pierrot work.[10] They separated in 1929, but remained relatively close until Parkes's death in 1957, despite the formation of a short-lived "Mrs. Jack Hylton Band" in the mid-1930s. During the 1930s he had a long affair with model Frederika Kogler ("Fifi"), with whom he had two daughters: Jackie (b. 1932) and Georgina (b. 1938). He also had a son, Jack (b. 1947) by a later affair with Pat Taylor, a singer and actress.

He secondly married in Geneva in 1963, to Australian model and beauty queen Beverley Prowse (1932–2000).[12][13][14]

Hylton was decorated by the French government on two occasions for his contribution to the entertainment industry.[10]

Death edit

On 26 January 1965, complaining of chest and stomach pains, Hylton was admitted to the London Clinic. He died there three days later, from a heart attack, aged 72.[10] Hylton's spending habits and generosity left his estate with £242,288. Hylton said to his son during his latter years, "I won't leave you much, but we'll have a good laugh spending it while I'm here!"[15] However, this equates to £4.6m in 2018, when adjusted for inflation.[16]

He is buried in the churchyard of St Catherine at Gosfield, Essex. His wife Beverley is buried beside him.

Legacy edit

Specialist dance band radio stations, such as Radio Dismuke and Swing Street Radio, continue to play his records. Hylton also features regularly on the Manx Radio programme Sweet & Swing, presented by Howard Caine.

His 1930 recording of "Happy Days Are Here Again" was used during the closing credits of episode four of Ken Burns's documentary series "The Roosevelts".

Hylton is portrayed by Ted Robbins in the 2011 television film Eric and Ernie.

References edit

  1. ^ He legally changed his name to Jack Hylton by deed poll on 10 November 1937: London Gazette. No. 34464. 17 December 1937. p. 7973. {{cite news}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Colin Larkin, ed. (1997). The Virgin Encyclopedia of Popular Music (Concise ed.). Virgin Books. p. 635. ISBN 1-85227-745-9.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i Fenton, Alasdair. Jack Hylton & His Orchestra (Sleeve notes). World Record Club. SH 127.
  4. ^ Mawer 2008, 271.
  5. ^ "Discography 1921-1927". Jack Hylton. Retrieved 17 February 2024.
  6. ^ "Biography". JackHylton.com. 2015. Retrieved 12 January 2018.
  7. ^ Deborah Mawer, "'Parisomania'? Jack Hylton and the French Connection", Journal of the Royal Musical Association, Vol. 133 No. 2 (2008): 271.
  8. ^ "AMY - Lyrics - International Lyrics Playground". Lyricsplayground.com. Retrieved 9 October 2019.
  9. ^ Ades, David; Bickerdyke, Percy; Holmes, Eric (July 1999). This England's Book of British Dance Bands. Cheltenham: This England Books. pp. 14–17. ISBN 0-906324-25-4.
  10. ^ a b c d Borden, Bill. Jack Hylton and his Orchestra (Sleeve notes). EMI. MES/7033.
  11. ^ Berta Geissmar (1944), The Baton and the Jackboot, Hamish Hamilton, pp 374–75, 377
  12. ^ "JACK HYLTON WEDS BEAUTY". The Canberra Times. 20 April 1963. p. 9. Retrieved 27 November 2015 – via National Library of Australia.
  13. ^ "JACK HYLTON'S WEDDING". The Australian Women's Weekly. 1 May 1963. p. 7. Retrieved 27 November 2015 – via National Library of Australia.
  14. ^ Beverley Hylton later married Australian newspaperman Alick Benson McKay."Newspaper executive remarries". The Canberra Times. 1 June 1973. p. 5. Retrieved 27 November 2015 – via National Library of Australia.
  15. ^ "Jack Hylton". Jackhylton.com. Retrieved 9 October 2019.
  16. ^ "Your results". Measuring Worth. Retrieved 22 April 2020.

External links edit

  • Jack Hylton official website
  • "Internet Archive Search: Jack Hylton – archive.org (multimedia content in the public domain)". Retrieved 29 April 2012.
  • Jack Hylton's Kit-Cat Band Red Hot Jazz Archive
  • "British Pathé Search: Jack Hylton – britishpathe.com". Retrieved 2 May 2012.
  • Lancaster University Library – Jack Hylton Archive
  • Jack Hylton biography and credits at the BFI's Screenonline
  • Jack Hylton plays "Say Yes" February 1931 on YouTube

jack, hylton, born, john, greenhalgh, hilton, july, 1892, january, 1965, english, pianist, composer, band, leader, impresario, hylton, late, 1920sbackground, informationbirth, namejohn, greenhalgh, hiltonalso, known, asjack, eltonborn, 1892, july, 1892great, l. Jack Hylton born John Greenhalgh Hilton 1 2 July 1892 29 January 1965 was an English pianist composer band leader and impresario 2 Jack HyltonHylton c mid to late 1920sBackground informationBirth nameJohn Greenhalgh HiltonAlso known asJack EltonBorn 1892 07 02 2 July 1892Great Lever Lancashire EnglandDied29 January 1965 1965 01 29 aged 72 Marylebone London EnglandGenresJazzOccupation s PianistBand leaderimpresariocomposerInstrument s PianoYears active1917 1965LabelsHMV Hylton rose to prominence during the British dance band era being referred as the British King of Jazz and The Ambassador of British Dance Music by the musical press not only because of his popularity which extended throughout the world but also for his use of unusually large ensembles for the time and his polished arrangements He mostly retired from the music industry after 1940 becoming a successful theatrical businessman until his death Contents 1 Early life and career 2 1920s and 1930s 3 1940s and 1950s 4 1960s 5 Personal life 6 Death 7 Legacy 8 References 9 External linksEarly life and career editHe was born John Greenhalgh Hilton in Great Lever near Bolton Lancashire 3 the son of George Hilton a cotton yarn twister His father was an amateur singer at the local Labour Club and Hylton learned piano to accompany him on the stage Hylton later sang to the customers when his father bought a pub The Round Croft in nearby Little Lever becoming known as the Singing Mill Boy 3 He also performed as a relief pianist for various bands In 1905 he joined a pierrot troupe in Rhyl and he went on to conduct the orchestra of a touring pantomime 3 In 1913 he moved to London where he initially worked as an organist at a cinema in Stoke Newington 3 A year later he was working as a pianist in the 400 Club and playing with the Stroud Haxton Band During the First World War he moved to be a musical director of the band of the 20th Hussars and later in the Army Entertainment Division N A C B 3 After the First World War Hylton formed a double act with Tommy Handley to little success also collaborating in a number of short lived stage shows In 1919 he moved to Blackpool where he composed and sold songs to tourists 3 He returned to London playing with the Queens Dance Orchestra wrote arrangements of popular songs and recorded them for His Master s Voice and Zonophone under the label Directed by Jack Hylton being credited in lieu of a pay rise his records carrying the new style of jazz derived American dance music 3 1920s and 1930s editAfter being dismissed by his own bandmates from the Queen s Hall in 1922 Hylton not only set up his own band but also set up a number of other orchestras under the Jack Hylton Organisation Even though he was not professionally trained for business he brought his band to success even at a time when the Great Depression hit hard during the 1930s His good reputation allowed him to make contacts with famous jazz artists of the time and he was credited for bringing Duke Ellington Louis Armstrong and others to Britain and Europe in the 1930s 4 An ensemble consisting at times of more than 20 musicians the Hylton orchestra quickly stood out from the rest Unlike many other bandleaders who took up residences at nightclubs and ballrooms Hylton often embarked on lengthy tours of England which ultimately moulded the concept most Britons had of jazz 2 By the mid 1920s he was usually referred as the British King of Jazz a notion Hylton initially dismissed As late as 1926 he thought of jazz as a bunch of noises popular at the end of the First World War when everything was topsy turvy Hylton first appeared on radio through station 2LO in 1924 and on 24 June 1925 he cut HMV s first electric record Feelin Kind O Blue at Hayes in Middlesex 5 The second half of the 1920s marked Hylton s highest point of prominence After recovering from a near fatal car accident which took place on 20 January 1927 on the way to the HMV studios at Hayes Middlesex 6 he made the first in a string of continental tours that lasted until 1930 The orchestra s line up also included some of the most skilled musicians of the time Regular players included saxophonists Billy Ternent who was also the band s main arranger and co leader Edward Owen E O Poggy Pogson and Noel Chappie d Amato trumpeter cornetist Jack Jackson trombonist Lew Davis violinists Hugo Rignold and Harry Berly pianist arranger Peter Yorke and from 1928 singer Sam Browne The orchestra was often augmented with members of other Hylton controlled bands especially for 12 inch concert arrangements According to the Daily Herald of 7 June 1930 7 between four and five million records sold in 1929 out of 50 million sold overall were made by Hylton although three million has been suggested as likely a more accurate figure 2 By the time the Depression started biting in 1930 Hylton downsized his band and began performing in Europe less frequently that same year however Maurice Chevalier recorded with Hylton who also made the first recording of Body and Soul and Pat O Malley replaced Browne as vocalist In 1930 they recorded Amy Wonderful Amy a song about Amy Johnson 8 Hylton also became a director and major shareholder of the new Decca record label switching from HMV in late 1931 The following year he was decorated by the French government recorded with Paul Robeson and made the first transatlantic entertainment broadcast with Paul Whiteman and his orchestra 2 In late 1933 Hylton left Decca after refusing to take a pay cut not making records until 1935 when he rejoined HMV He spent 1934 touring Europe again and adopted The Soldiers in the Park more commonly known as Oh Listen to the Band as his signature tune 9 In 1935 he appeared in his first feature film the musical comedy She Shall Have Music which starred June Clyde and Claude Dampier 2 That same year Hylton finally was able to perform in the United States 10 he had repeatedly attempted this for almost a decade but had been opposed by the musicians unions a 1929 tour was cancelled at the last minute Standard Oil signed Hylton for a radio show on CBS not only paying him and his star players but also paying all expenses for those band members unable to play in the US Whilst in Chicago Hylton made a number of records with his radio band for Victor Union pressure led him to return to the UK in 1936 although Pat O Malley and Alec Templeton stayed in America making a name for themselves Upon returning to Britain he was criticised for adopting the then popular swing rhythm so he kept playing in his well established style including a series of new concert recordings After a new tour of Europe in 1937 which included a performance at the Scala in Nazi Germany 3 Hylton began appearing on radio more frequently starring in Radio Luxembourg s Rinso Radio Revue until 1939 when he appeared in the BBC s Band Waggon as well as its 1940 film adaptation 2 Hylton and his band also made a number of appearances on BBC television in the 1930s on one of which Ernie Wise made his television debut 1940s and 1950s editThe Jack Hylton orchestra disbanded in 1940 as many of its members were called up for service 2 although Jack continued to conduct orchestras for radio in the years to come leading the Glenn Miller Orchestra when it visited England in 1943 During the war he took the London Philharmonic Orchestra around Britain giving promenade concerts This helped to keep the orchestra going when its normal programme had ceased and it was on the edge of bankruptcy 11 At this point in his career he became an impresario discovering new stars and managing radio film and theatre productions from ballets to circuses His productions dominated the London theatres with such productions as The Merry Widow Kiss Me Kate and Kismet 2 In 1950 he reunited with a number of his former employees many of whom had become successful in their own right for that year s Royal Command Performance billed as The Band that Jack Built 3 Despite their success Hylton resisted calls for his return to band leading There were rumours in 1954 that he would stand for Parliament from Bolton where he was a prominent member of the local Labour Party branch In November 1955 he was contracted as Advisor of Light Entertainment to Associated Rediffusion A R winner of the London weekday franchise in the recently established ITV network He founded Jack Hylton Television Productions Ltd in that same month to produce a range of light entertainment programming exclusively for A R In spite of their popularity however the company s productions were of low quality with performers even apologising in front of millions of viewers at times This in turn helped establish ITV s reputation for coarseness a stigma it would only shake off by the 1970s Hylton refused to renew his ITV contract in 1959 the last shows made by the company were broadcast in 1960 1960s editIn his final years Hylton was still producing stage shows as well as taking a leading role in organising various Royal Command Performances until his final stage production Camelot in 1965 2 In 1965 a televised tribute to Hylton The Stars Shine for Jack was held in London on Sunday 30 May at the Theatre Royal Drury Lane with many artists including Arthur Askey the Crazy Gang Marlene Dietrich Dickie Henderson and Shirley Bassey Personal life editHylton was married twice firstly in 1913 in St Asaph Flintshire Wales to bandleader Ennis Parkes born Florence Parkinson whom he had met during his pierrot work 10 They separated in 1929 but remained relatively close until Parkes s death in 1957 despite the formation of a short lived Mrs Jack Hylton Band in the mid 1930s During the 1930s he had a long affair with model Frederika Kogler Fifi with whom he had two daughters Jackie b 1932 and Georgina b 1938 He also had a son Jack b 1947 by a later affair with Pat Taylor a singer and actress He secondly married in Geneva in 1963 to Australian model and beauty queen Beverley Prowse 1932 2000 12 13 14 Hylton was decorated by the French government on two occasions for his contribution to the entertainment industry 10 Death editOn 26 January 1965 complaining of chest and stomach pains Hylton was admitted to the London Clinic He died there three days later from a heart attack aged 72 10 Hylton s spending habits and generosity left his estate with 242 288 Hylton said to his son during his latter years I won t leave you much but we ll have a good laugh spending it while I m here 15 However this equates to 4 6m in 2018 when adjusted for inflation 16 He is buried in the churchyard of St Catherine at Gosfield Essex His wife Beverley is buried beside him Legacy editSpecialist dance band radio stations such as Radio Dismuke and Swing Street Radio continue to play his records Hylton also features regularly on the Manx Radio programme Sweet amp Swing presented by Howard Caine His 1930 recording of Happy Days Are Here Again was used during the closing credits of episode four of Ken Burns s documentary series The Roosevelts Hylton is portrayed by Ted Robbins in the 2011 television film Eric and Ernie References edit He legally changed his name to Jack Hylton by deed poll on 10 November 1937 London Gazette No 34464 17 December 1937 p 7973 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a Missing or empty title help a b c d e f g h i Colin Larkin ed 1997 The Virgin Encyclopedia of Popular Music Concise ed Virgin Books p 635 ISBN 1 85227 745 9 a b c d e f g h i Fenton Alasdair Jack Hylton amp His Orchestra Sleeve notes World Record Club SH 127 Mawer 2008 271 Discography 1921 1927 Jack Hylton Retrieved 17 February 2024 Biography JackHylton com 2015 Retrieved 12 January 2018 Deborah Mawer Parisomania Jack Hylton and the French Connection Journal of the Royal Musical Association Vol 133 No 2 2008 271 AMY Lyrics International Lyrics Playground Lyricsplayground com Retrieved 9 October 2019 Ades David Bickerdyke Percy Holmes Eric July 1999 This England s Book of British Dance Bands Cheltenham This England Books pp 14 17 ISBN 0 906324 25 4 a b c d Borden Bill Jack Hylton and his Orchestra Sleeve notes EMI MES 7033 Berta Geissmar 1944 The Baton and the Jackboot Hamish Hamilton pp 374 75 377 JACK HYLTON WEDS BEAUTY The Canberra Times 20 April 1963 p 9 Retrieved 27 November 2015 via National Library of Australia JACK HYLTON S WEDDING The Australian Women s Weekly 1 May 1963 p 7 Retrieved 27 November 2015 via National Library of Australia Beverley Hylton later married Australian newspaperman Alick Benson McKay Newspaper executive remarries The Canberra Times 1 June 1973 p 5 Retrieved 27 November 2015 via National Library of Australia Jack Hylton Jackhylton com Retrieved 9 October 2019 Your results Measuring Worth Retrieved 22 April 2020 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jack Hylton Jack Hylton official website Internet Archive Search Jack Hylton archive org multimedia content in the public domain Retrieved 29 April 2012 Jack Hylton s Kit Cat Band Red Hot Jazz Archive British Pathe Search Jack Hylton britishpathe com Retrieved 2 May 2012 Lancaster University Library Jack Hylton Archive Jack Hylton biography and credits at the BFI s Screenonline Jack Hylton Music Downloads Jack Hylton plays Say Yes February 1931 on YouTube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jack Hylton amp oldid 1208494649, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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