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Vincent d'Indy

Paul Marie Théodore Vincent d'Indy (French: [vɛ̃sɑ̃ dɛ̃di]; 27 March 1851 – 2 December 1931) was a French composer and teacher. His influence as a teacher, in particular, was considerable. He was a co-founder of the Schola Cantorum de Paris and also taught at the Paris Conservatoire. His students included Albéric Magnard, Albert Roussel, Arthur Honegger, Darius Milhaud, and Erik Satie, as well as Cole Porter.

d'Indy, c. 1895

D'Indy studied under composer César Franck, and was strongly influenced by Franck's admiration for German music. At a time when nationalist feelings were high in both countries (circa the Franco-Prussian War of 1871), this brought Franck into conflict with other musicians who wished to separate French music from German influence.

Life Edit

Paul Marie Théodore Vincent d'Indy was born in Paris into an aristocratic family of royalist and Catholic persuasion. He had piano lessons from an early age from his paternal grandmother, who passed him on to Antoine François Marmontel and Louis Diémer.[1]

From the age of 14 d'Indy studied harmony with Albert Lavignac. When he was 16 an uncle introduced him to Berlioz's treatise on orchestration, which inspired him to become a composer.[2] He wrote a piano quartet which he sent to César Franck, who was the teacher of a friend. Franck recognised his talent and recommended that d'Indy pursue a career as a composer.[2]

At the age of 19, during the Franco-Prussian War, d'Indy enlisted in the National Guard, but returned to musical life as soon as the hostilities were over. He entered Franck's organ class at the Conservatoire de Paris in 1871 remaining there until 1875, when he joined the percussion section of the orchestra at the Châtelet Theatre to gain practical experience. He also served as chorus-master to the Concerts Colonne.[2]

 
Bust of d'Indy by Antoine Bourdelle

The first of his works he heard performed was a Symphonie italienne, at an orchestral rehearsal under Jules Pasdeloup; the work was admired by Georges Bizet and Jules Massenet, with whom he had already become acquainted.[1]

During the summer of 1873 he visited Germany, where he met Franz Liszt and Johannes Brahms. On 25 January 1874, his overture Les Piccolomini was performed at a Pasdeloup concert, sandwiched between works by Bach and Beethoven.[1] Around this time he married Isabelle de Pampelonne, one of his cousins. In 1875 his symphony dedicated to János Hunyadi was performed. That same year he played a minor role – the prompter – at the premiere of Bizet's opera Carmen.[1] In 1876 he was present at the first production of Richard Wagner's Ring cycle at Bayreuth. This made a great impression on him and he became a fervent Wagnerian.[3]

In 1878 d'Indy's symphonic ballad La Forêt enchantée was performed.[4] In 1882 he heard Wagner's Parsifal. In 1883 his choral work Le Chant de la cloche appeared. In 1884 his symphonic poem Saugefleurie was premiered. His piano suite ("symphonic poem for piano") called Poème des montagnes came from around this time. In 1887 appeared his Suite in D for trumpet, 2 flutes and string quartet. That same year he was involved in Lamoureux's production of Wagner's Lohengrin as choirmaster. His music drama Fervaal occupied him between 1889 and 1895.[3]

 
Illustration by Carlos Schwabe for Fervaal

Inspired by his studies with Franck and yet dissatisfied with the standard of teaching at the Conservatoire, d'Indy, together with Charles Bordes and Alexandre Guilmant, founded the Schola Cantorum de Paris in 1894.[3] D'Indy taught there until his death, becoming principal in 1904.[3] Of the teaching at the Schola Cantorum, The Oxford Companion to Music says, "A solid grounding in technique was encouraged, rather than originality", and comments that few graduates could stand comparison with the best Conservatoire students.[5] D'Indy later taught at the Conservatoire and privately, while retaining his post at the Schola Cantorum.[3]

Among d'Indy's renowned pupils were Albéric Magnard, Albert Roussel, Joseph Canteloube (who later wrote d'Indy's biography), Celia Torra,[6] Arthur Honegger and Darius Milhaud.[n 1] Two atypical students were Cole Porter, who signed up for a two-year course at the Schola, but left after a few months,[7] and Erik Satie, who studied there for three years and later wrote, "Why on earth had I gone to d'Indy? The things I had written before were so full of charm. And now? What nonsense! What dullness!"[8] Nonetheless, according to Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians, d'Indy's influence as a teacher was "enormous and wide-ranging, with benefits for French music far outweighing the charges of dogmatism and political intolerance".[3]

D'Indy played an important part in the history of the Société nationale de musique, of which his teacher, Franck, had been a founding member in 1871.[9] Like Franck, d'Indy revered German music, and he resented the society's exclusion of non-French music and composers.[9] He became the society's joint secretary in 1885,[3] and succeeded in overturning its French-only rule the following year. The founders of the society, Romain Bussine and Camille Saint-Saëns resigned in protest.[9] Franck refused the formal title of president of the society, but when he died in 1890, d'Indy took the post. His regime, however, alienated a younger generation of French composers, who, led by Maurice Ravel, founded the breakaway Société musicale indépendante in 1910, which attracted leading young composers from France and other countries.[10] In an attempt to further a proposed merger of the two organisations during the First World War d'Indy stepped down as president of the Société nationale to make way for the more "progressive" Gabriel Fauré, but the plan came to nothing.[10]

According to the biographer Robert Orledge, the death of d'Indy's first wife in 1905 removed the stabilising influence in the composer's life, and he became "increasingly vulnerable to politically motivated attacks on the Schola Cantorum and apprehensive of dangerously decadent trends in contemporary music in both France and Germany". His aesthetic ideas, Orledge argues, became "increasingly reactionary and dogmatic" and his political views right-wing and anti-Semitic. He joined the Ligue de la patrie française (League of the French Fatherland) during the Dreyfus affair.[3]

 
d'Indy's grave in Cimetière Montparnasse (Paris).

During the First World War d'Indy served on cultural missions to allied countries, and completed his third music drama, La Légende de Saint-Christophe, in Orledge's view "a celebration of traditional Catholic regionalism as opposed to modern liberal democracy and capitalist values".[3] After the war he increased his activities as a conductor, giving concert tours throughout Europe and the US. 1920 he married the much younger Caroline Janson; Orledge writes that this "brought a true creative rebirth, witnessed in the serene Mediterranean-inspired compositions of his final decade".[3]

D'Indy died on 2 December 1931 in his native Paris, aged 80, and was buried in the Montparnasse Cemetery.[11]

Works Edit

Few of d'Indy's works are performed regularly in concert halls today. Grove comments that his famed veneration for Beethoven and Franck "has unfortunately obscured the individual character of his own compositions, particularly his fine orchestral pieces descriptive of southern France".[3] Among his best known pieces are the Symphony on a French Mountain Air for piano and orchestra (1886), and Istar (1896), a symphonic poem in the form of a set of variations in which the theme appears only at the end.[1]

 
d'Indy and a harmonium (11 February 1913)

Among d'Indy's other works are more orchestral pieces, including a Symphony in B, a vast symphonic poem, Jour d'été à la montagne, and another, Souvenirs, written on the death of his first wife. The Times said of his music that the influence of Berlioz, Franck, and Wagner is strong in almost all his work, "that of Franck showing itself chiefly in the shapes of his tunes, that of Wagner in their development, and that of Berlioz in their orchestration".[2]

Grove says of his chamber works: "D'Indy's somewhat academic corpus of chamber music (including three completed string quartets) is generally less interesting than his orchestral works". He also wrote piano music (including a Sonata in E minor), songs and a number of operas, including Fervaal (1897) and L'Étranger (1902). His music drama Le Légende de Saint Christophe, based on themes from Gregorian chant, was premiered at the Paris Opéra on 6 June 1920.[2][3]

D'Indy helped revive a number of then largely forgotten Baroque works, for example making his own edition of Monteverdi's opera L'incoronazione di Poppea.[3] D'Indy also contributed to the incipient revival of the works of Antonio Vivaldi, whose sonatas for cello and basso continuo (op. 14) were edited by d'Indy as cello concerti and published by Maurice Senart in 1922.[12] His musical writings include the three-volume Cours de composition musicale as well as studies of Franck and Beethoven.[3] The Times commented that his study of the former was "one of the most vivid and individual of modern French biographies", and the latter, published in 1912, showed "the closeness of the lifelong study which he devoted to that master".[2]

Commemorations Edit

The private music college École de musique Vincent-d'Indy in Montreal, Canada, is named after the composer,[13] as is the asteroid 11530 d'Indy, discovered in 1992.[14]

Notes, references and sources Edit

Notes Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d e "Indy, Vincent d'",Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians, 5th edition, 1954, volume V, Eric Blom ed.
  2. ^ a b c d e f "M. Vincent d'Indy", The Times, 4 December 1931, p. 16
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Orledge, Robert, and Andrew Thomson. "Indy, (Paul Marie Théodore) Vincent d'", Grove Music Online, Oxford University Press, 2001 (subscription required)
  4. ^ "Courrier des théâtres", Le Figaro, 22 March 1878, p. 3
  5. ^ "Schola Cantorum", The Oxford Companion to Music, edited by Alison Latham, Oxford University Press, 2011.
  6. ^ Cohen, Aaron I. (1987). International encyclopedia of women composers (Second edition, revised and enlarged ed.). New York. ISBN 0-9617485-2-4. OCLC 16714846.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  7. ^ McBrien, p 94; and Citron, p. 56
  8. ^ Templier, p. 32
  9. ^ a b c Cochard, Alain. "150ème anniversaire de la naissance de la Société nationale de musique", Concertclassic.com. Retrieved 13 May 2021
  10. ^ a b Duchesneau, Michel. "Maurice Ravel et la Société Musicale Indépendante: 'Projet Mirifique de Concerts Scandaleux'", Revue de Musicologie, vol. 80, no. 2, 1994, pp. 251–281 (subscription required); and "La musique française pendant la Guerre 1914–1918: Autour de la tentative de fusion de la Société Nationale de Musique et de la Société Musicale Indépendante", Revue de Musicologie, 1996, T. 82, No. 1, p. 148 (subscription required)
  11. ^ "Les obsèques de Vincent d'Indy", Comoedia, 5 December 1931, p. 2
  12. ^ Sonates en concert: Sonate 5, Paris: Senart, 1922, OCLC 1114800864, retrieved 18 July 2022
  13. ^ "Historique", École de musique Vincent-d'Indy, 2021. Retrieved 15 May 2021
  14. ^ "(11530) d'Indy", International Astronomical Union Minor Planet Center. Retrieved 15 May 2021

Sources Edit

  • Blom, Eric (1954). Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians (fifth ed.). New York: St Martin's Press. OCLC 1192249.
  • Citron, Stephen (1993). Noël and Cole: The Sophisticates. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-508385-9.
  • McBrien, William (1998). Cole Porter. New York: Knopf. OCLC 1148597196.
  • Templier, Pierre-Daniel (1969). Erik Satie. Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press. OCLC 1034659768.

Further reading Edit

  • Norman Demuth, Vincent d'Indy: Champion of Classicism (London, 1951)
  • Steven Huebner, Vincent d'Indy and Moral Order' and 'Fervaal': French Opera at the Fin de Siècle (Oxford, 1999), pp. 301–08 and 317–50
  • Vincent d'Indy (Marie d'Indy, ed.), Vincent d'Indy: Ma Vie. Journal de jeunesse. Correspondance familiale et intime, 1851–1931 (Paris, 2001). ISBN 2-84049-240-7
  • James Ross, 'D'Indy's "Fervaal": Reconstructing French Identity at the Fin-de-Siècle', Music and Letters 84/2 (May 2003), pp. 209–40
  • Manuela Schwartz (ed.), Vincent d'Indy et son temps (Sprimont, 2006). ISBN 2-87009-888-X
  • Andrew Thomson, Vincent d'Indy and his World (Oxford, 1996)
  • Robert Trumble, Vincent d'Indy: His Greatness and Integrity (Melbourne, 1994)
  • Huebner, Steven (2006). French Opera at the Fin de Siècle: Vincent d'Indy. Oxford Univ. Press, US. pp. 301–350. ISBN 978-0-19-518954-4.

External links Edit

vincent, indy, indy, redirects, here, asteroid, named, after, composer, 11530, indy, paul, marie, théodore, french, march, 1851, december, 1931, french, composer, teacher, influence, teacher, particular, considerable, founder, schola, cantorum, paris, also, ta. d Indy redirects here For the asteroid named after the composer see 11530 d Indy Paul Marie Theodore Vincent d Indy French vɛ sɑ dɛ di 27 March 1851 2 December 1931 was a French composer and teacher His influence as a teacher in particular was considerable He was a co founder of the Schola Cantorum de Paris and also taught at the Paris Conservatoire His students included Alberic Magnard Albert Roussel Arthur Honegger Darius Milhaud and Erik Satie as well as Cole Porter d Indy c 1895D Indy studied under composer Cesar Franck and was strongly influenced by Franck s admiration for German music At a time when nationalist feelings were high in both countries circa the Franco Prussian War of 1871 this brought Franck into conflict with other musicians who wished to separate French music from German influence Contents 1 Life 2 Works 3 Commemorations 4 Notes references and sources 4 1 Notes 4 2 References 4 3 Sources 5 Further reading 6 External linksLife EditPaul Marie Theodore Vincent d Indy was born in Paris into an aristocratic family of royalist and Catholic persuasion He had piano lessons from an early age from his paternal grandmother who passed him on to Antoine Francois Marmontel and Louis Diemer 1 From the age of 14 d Indy studied harmony with Albert Lavignac When he was 16 an uncle introduced him to Berlioz s treatise on orchestration which inspired him to become a composer 2 He wrote a piano quartet which he sent to Cesar Franck who was the teacher of a friend Franck recognised his talent and recommended that d Indy pursue a career as a composer 2 At the age of 19 during the Franco Prussian War d Indy enlisted in the National Guard but returned to musical life as soon as the hostilities were over He entered Franck s organ class at the Conservatoire de Paris in 1871 remaining there until 1875 when he joined the percussion section of the orchestra at the Chatelet Theatre to gain practical experience He also served as chorus master to the Concerts Colonne 2 nbsp Bust of d Indy by Antoine BourdelleThe first of his works he heard performed was a Symphonie italienne at an orchestral rehearsal under Jules Pasdeloup the work was admired by Georges Bizet and Jules Massenet with whom he had already become acquainted 1 During the summer of 1873 he visited Germany where he met Franz Liszt and Johannes Brahms On 25 January 1874 his overture Les Piccolomini was performed at a Pasdeloup concert sandwiched between works by Bach and Beethoven 1 Around this time he married Isabelle de Pampelonne one of his cousins In 1875 his symphony dedicated to Janos Hunyadi was performed That same year he played a minor role the prompter at the premiere of Bizet s opera Carmen 1 In 1876 he was present at the first production of Richard Wagner s Ring cycle at Bayreuth This made a great impression on him and he became a fervent Wagnerian 3 In 1878 d Indy s symphonic ballad La Foret enchantee was performed 4 In 1882 he heard Wagner s Parsifal In 1883 his choral work Le Chant de la cloche appeared In 1884 his symphonic poem Saugefleurie was premiered His piano suite symphonic poem for piano called Poeme des montagnes came from around this time In 1887 appeared his Suite in D for trumpet 2 flutes and string quartet That same year he was involved in Lamoureux s production of Wagner s Lohengrin as choirmaster His music drama Fervaal occupied him between 1889 and 1895 3 nbsp Illustration by Carlos Schwabe for FervaalInspired by his studies with Franck and yet dissatisfied with the standard of teaching at the Conservatoire d Indy together with Charles Bordes and Alexandre Guilmant founded the Schola Cantorum de Paris in 1894 3 D Indy taught there until his death becoming principal in 1904 3 Of the teaching at the Schola Cantorum The Oxford Companion to Music says A solid grounding in technique was encouraged rather than originality and comments that few graduates could stand comparison with the best Conservatoire students 5 D Indy later taught at the Conservatoire and privately while retaining his post at the Schola Cantorum 3 Among d Indy s renowned pupils were Alberic Magnard Albert Roussel Joseph Canteloube who later wrote d Indy s biography Celia Torra 6 Arthur Honegger and Darius Milhaud n 1 Two atypical students were Cole Porter who signed up for a two year course at the Schola but left after a few months 7 and Erik Satie who studied there for three years and later wrote Why on earth had I gone to d Indy The things I had written before were so full of charm And now What nonsense What dullness 8 Nonetheless according to Grove s Dictionary of Music and Musicians d Indy s influence as a teacher was enormous and wide ranging with benefits for French music far outweighing the charges of dogmatism and political intolerance 3 D Indy played an important part in the history of the Societe nationale de musique of which his teacher Franck had been a founding member in 1871 9 Like Franck d Indy revered German music and he resented the society s exclusion of non French music and composers 9 He became the society s joint secretary in 1885 3 and succeeded in overturning its French only rule the following year The founders of the society Romain Bussine and Camille Saint Saens resigned in protest 9 Franck refused the formal title of president of the society but when he died in 1890 d Indy took the post His regime however alienated a younger generation of French composers who led by Maurice Ravel founded the breakaway Societe musicale independante in 1910 which attracted leading young composers from France and other countries 10 In an attempt to further a proposed merger of the two organisations during the First World War d Indy stepped down as president of the Societe nationale to make way for the more progressive Gabriel Faure but the plan came to nothing 10 According to the biographer Robert Orledge the death of d Indy s first wife in 1905 removed the stabilising influence in the composer s life and he became increasingly vulnerable to politically motivated attacks on the Schola Cantorum and apprehensive of dangerously decadent trends in contemporary music in both France and Germany His aesthetic ideas Orledge argues became increasingly reactionary and dogmatic and his political views right wing and anti Semitic He joined the Ligue de la patrie francaise League of the French Fatherland during the Dreyfus affair 3 nbsp d Indy s grave in Cimetiere Montparnasse Paris During the First World War d Indy served on cultural missions to allied countries and completed his third music drama La Legende de Saint Christophe in Orledge s view a celebration of traditional Catholic regionalism as opposed to modern liberal democracy and capitalist values 3 After the war he increased his activities as a conductor giving concert tours throughout Europe and the US 1920 he married the much younger Caroline Janson Orledge writes that this brought a true creative rebirth witnessed in the serene Mediterranean inspired compositions of his final decade 3 D Indy died on 2 December 1931 in his native Paris aged 80 and was buried in the Montparnasse Cemetery 11 Works EditMain article List of compositions by Vincent d Indy Few of d Indy s works are performed regularly in concert halls today Grove comments that his famed veneration for Beethoven and Franck has unfortunately obscured the individual character of his own compositions particularly his fine orchestral pieces descriptive of southern France 3 Among his best known pieces are the Symphony on a French Mountain Air for piano and orchestra 1886 and Istar 1896 a symphonic poem in the form of a set of variations in which the theme appears only at the end 1 nbsp d Indy and a harmonium 11 February 1913 Among d Indy s other works are more orchestral pieces including a Symphony in B a vast symphonic poem Jour d ete a la montagne and another Souvenirs written on the death of his first wife The Times said of his music that the influence of Berlioz Franck and Wagner is strong in almost all his work that of Franck showing itself chiefly in the shapes of his tunes that of Wagner in their development and that of Berlioz in their orchestration 2 Grove says of his chamber works D Indy s somewhat academic corpus of chamber music including three completed string quartets is generally less interesting than his orchestral works He also wrote piano music including a Sonata in E minor songs and a number of operas including Fervaal 1897 and L Etranger 1902 His music drama Le Legende de Saint Christophe based on themes from Gregorian chant was premiered at the Paris Opera on 6 June 1920 2 3 D Indy helped revive a number of then largely forgotten Baroque works for example making his own edition of Monteverdi s opera L incoronazione di Poppea 3 D Indy also contributed to the incipient revival of the works of Antonio Vivaldi whose sonatas for cello and basso continuo op 14 were edited by d Indy as cello concerti and published by Maurice Senart in 1922 12 His musical writings include the three volume Cours de composition musicale as well as studies of Franck and Beethoven 3 The Times commented that his study of the former was one of the most vivid and individual of modern French biographies and the latter published in 1912 showed the closeness of the lifelong study which he devoted to that master 2 Commemorations EditThe private music college Ecole de musique Vincent d Indy in Montreal Canada is named after the composer 13 as is the asteroid 11530 d Indy discovered in 1992 14 Notes references and sources EditNotes Edit Other students included Pierre Capdevielle Leon Destroismaisons Deodat de Severac Eugene Lapierre Leevi Madetoja Rodolphe Mathieu Helena Munktell Ahmet Adnan Saygun Anne Terrier Laffaille Emiliana de Zubeldia and Xian Xinghai References Edit a b c d e Indy Vincent d Grove s Dictionary of Music and Musicians 5th edition 1954 volume V Eric Blom ed a b c d e f M Vincent d Indy The Times 4 December 1931 p 16 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Orledge Robert and Andrew Thomson Indy Paul Marie Theodore Vincent d Grove Music Online Oxford University Press 2001 subscription required Courrier des theatres Le Figaro 22 March 1878 p 3 Schola Cantorum The Oxford Companion to Music edited by Alison Latham Oxford University Press 2011 Cohen Aaron I 1987 International encyclopedia of women composers Second edition revised and enlarged ed New York ISBN 0 9617485 2 4 OCLC 16714846 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link McBrien p 94 and Citron p 56 Templier p 32 a b c Cochard Alain 150eme anniversaire de la naissance de la Societe nationale de musique Concertclassic com Retrieved 13 May 2021 a b Duchesneau Michel Maurice Ravel et la Societe Musicale Independante Projet Mirifique de Concerts Scandaleux Revue de Musicologie vol 80 no 2 1994 pp 251 281 subscription required and La musique francaise pendant la Guerre 1914 1918 Autour de la tentative de fusion de la Societe Nationale de Musique et de la Societe Musicale Independante Revue de Musicologie 1996 T 82 No 1 p 148 subscription required Les obseques de Vincent d Indy Comoedia 5 December 1931 p 2 Sonates en concert Sonate 5 Paris Senart 1922 OCLC 1114800864 retrieved 18 July 2022 Historique Ecole de musique Vincent d Indy 2021 Retrieved 15 May 2021 11530 d Indy International Astronomical Union Minor Planet Center Retrieved 15 May 2021 Sources Edit Blom Eric 1954 Grove s Dictionary of Music and Musicians fifth ed New York St Martin s Press OCLC 1192249 Citron Stephen 1993 Noel and Cole The Sophisticates New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 508385 9 McBrien William 1998 Cole Porter New York Knopf OCLC 1148597196 Templier Pierre Daniel 1969 Erik Satie Cambridge Mass MIT Press OCLC 1034659768 Further reading EditNorman Demuth Vincent d Indy Champion of Classicism London 1951 Steven Huebner Vincent d Indy and Moral Order and Fervaal French Opera at the Fin de Siecle Oxford 1999 pp 301 08 and 317 50 Vincent d Indy Marie d Indy ed Vincent d Indy Ma Vie Journal de jeunesse Correspondance familiale et intime 1851 1931 Paris 2001 ISBN 2 84049 240 7 James Ross D Indy s Fervaal Reconstructing French Identity at the Fin de Siecle Music and Letters 84 2 May 2003 pp 209 40 Manuela Schwartz ed Vincent d Indy et son temps Sprimont 2006 ISBN 2 87009 888 X Andrew Thomson Vincent d Indy and his World Oxford 1996 Robert Trumble Vincent d Indy His Greatness and Integrity Melbourne 1994 Huebner Steven 2006 French Opera at the Fin de Siecle Vincent d Indy Oxford Univ Press US pp 301 350 ISBN 978 0 19 518954 4 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Vincent d Indy nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Vincent d Indy Works by or about Vincent d Indy at Internet Archive D Indy Trio for Clarinet Cello amp Piano Op 29 Piano Quartet Op 7 String Quartet No 1 and String Sextet Op 92 soundbites and discussion of works Free scores by Vincent d Indy at the International Music Score Library Project IMSLP Free scores by Vincent d Indy in the Choral Public Domain Library ChoralWiki Performance of Lied for cello and orchestra on YouTube by Julian Lloyd Webber and the English Chamber Orchestra conducted by Yan Pascal Tortelier Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vincent d 27Indy amp oldid 1174691344, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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