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Andrew Trendell
· posted in 🕺 Music RSS Feeds
Death Cab For Cutie, 2026. Credit: Shervin Lainez


Death Cab For Cutie’s Ben Gibbard has spoken to NME about how divorce and making peace with his past shaped new album ‘I Built You A Tower’, as well as his thoughts on major label life and the doom that younger generations are facing.

Released last week (Friday June 5), ‘I Built You A Tower’ is the indie veterans’ first release on the legendary Anti- Records, after over 20 years signed to major label Atlantic. Their new home rekindled a dormant approach to their music and seemed to sit perfectly alongside Gibbard’s desire to make sense of his past, as the frontman explained.

“I started to ruminate on this idea that one’s memory and their past is like this cityscape,” he told NME about the concept behind ‘I Built You A Tower’. “We have compartmentalised memories. I was envisioning this horizon of buildings of various shapes and sizes that all held moments and times in your life – like if you see an aerial shot of Manhattan. When we move through different periods in life, we create a new edifice to hold that memory.”

The impetus to do so came from the pain of Gibbard’s marriage coming to an end, all at a time when he had to dig deep into his past each and every night for a gruelling tour celebrating 20 years of both Death Cab’s ‘Transatlanticism’ and ‘Give Up’ by his cult side project The Postal Service.



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“I’d argue that most divorces are painful,” he continued. “I don’t hear a lot about ‘awesome’ divorces. I suppose there are some. A 10 year period of my life came to a close and I found myself in a position where I had more professional pressure on my life then I’d ever had with this Death Cab and Postal Service tour. It all depended on me. It’s weird to say it out loud, but it is a statement of fact. It’s a co-headline where if the singer of one band doesn’t show up, there’s no show.

“At the same time, I’m spending half of my time preparing for this tour and the other half talking to lawyers or therapists. I found on the tour that I was dealing with some very difficult things related to my divorce that were not for public consumption. I was having to manage this part of it while an hour later going out at Madison Square Garden.”

He added: “Being on that tour and doing those shows was a welcome distraction, but there was still an element of context-switching. It was very eerie to go from, ‘It’s 2023 and I’m trying to put the pieces of my life back together from the life I thought I was going to have until I passed away’ while I was time-travelling back to 2003 and living in my 25-year-old self for the whole set.”


From there, Gibbard leaned into the metaphor of giving all his feelings and memories a place or ‘tower’ – a tip he recommends just so we can “get through our days”.

Check out the rest of our interview with Gibbard below, where he tells us about the beauty of an indie label, going back to analogue, and how he’s really doing now.

NME: Hello Ben Gibbard. You’ve described this time as “a new chapter”. Do you mark a new era for each album or does that come simply from being back on Anti- Records?

Ben Gibbard:
“I think it’s mostly [because of the] label. We’re in the midst of a new chapter after being on Warner for the last 20 years. It’s a real change of scenery. As I’ve been talking about this record and talking about the catalogue as a whole, I feel like we are in the midst of a new chapter that started with the last record [‘Asphalt Meadows’]. ‘Codes & Keys’ through to ‘Thank You For Today’ are of a particular chapter, but I really feel that starting with ‘Asphalt Meadows’ is when Dave [Depper, guitars] and Zac [Rae, keys]’s integration into the band really started to bear fruit. We started to really learn how to be a five-piece. With this record, everyone just feels really confident with their role in the band. It just feels as if we’re really firing on all cylinders in a way that is reminiscent of other high watermarks in the band’s career to this point.

“That can sound a little self-serving as we’re here to promote a new album and I don’t want to be sitting here trying to blow smoke, but it does feel as if we’re hitting this stride where things are both effortless and feeling really inspired.”

How does having a label like Anti- as a home alter your approach to making and releasing music?

“First and foremost when we met with Anti-, we went to their offices in Los Angeles and in the small talk we were just talking about music in this way that I don’t remember talking about at Atlantic. Immediately being in the room with Anti- and talking about things that we like and aren’t market-driven, we just immediately felt, ‘This is fucking great’. It was awesome to be in a room and not have somebody ask you if you want to hear the new Kid Rock single. That happened at some point early on at Atlantic.

“Don’t get it twisted: we had the antithesis of most people’s major label experience. We were able to make the records how we wanted to make them, there wasn’t someone coming in and saying, ‘I don’t hear a single’. Our successes were our successes and our failures were our failures, at least from a critical perspective. Atlantic did a wonderful job, certainly in the States.

“I can try and sell this narrative of a return back to our indie roots or something, and that’s technically true, but overall we all just feel a lightness. If we wanted to make a record that was more in the vein of ‘Laughing Stock’ [Talk Talk’s 1991 classic] than ‘Plans’, no one would bat an eyelid.”

Death Cab For Cutie, 2026. Credit: Shervin Lainez

Death Cab For Cutie, 2026. Credit: Shervin Lainez

Would it be too tidy a narrative to say that the Death Cab and Postal Service anniversary tours brought about any kind of sense of closure of a chapter?

“Those chapters are never closed because we’re playing those songs so often live. We’ll be playing songs I wrote when I was 20, and I’m like, ‘Oh that’s a cringe-y lyric, what the fuck?’ – then alongside songs we wrote last year. It’s never closing a chapter, but spending that much time with my 25-year-old self was illuminating. There are these moments where I’d be playing a song from ‘These Are The Facts And We’re Voting Yes’, ‘Something About Planes’ or ‘Photo Album’ and it’s like, ‘I really like the interplay of these elements’. I find myself asking the question: ‘Why don’t I do this anymore?’ or ‘When and why did I stop doing this?’

“The conclusion I came to was that once I started recording on a computer, the songwriting process changed pretty dramatically. I started to diverge away from the process of how I wrote songs for the first three or four records. It kind of started with ‘Asphalt Meadows’, but certainly with this record, I decided that instead of fucking around with a drum machine for a couple of hours or pulling drum loops from a folder, I would just record a bunch of drums myself in the spirit of how I would used to write a part that you could sing like a guitar part.

“I recorded myself doing all this drumming and then would start a lot of the songwriting process from there. They’re not electronic elements, it’s a human playing. I felt like my hands found places on the guitar that felt both new and familiar. I would put a bass part on it that felt new and familiar. I found myself with these demos that didn’t sound like the music we were making in the early ‘00s, but just the process of making music that way without all these found sounds and samples started to feel more organic and more like a band.”

Jenny Lewis and Ben Gibbard of The Postal Service perform

Ben Gibbard and Jenny Lewis perform withThe Postal Service. Credit: Xavi Torrent/Redferns

It’s said that the best music comes from imperfection, but music technology strives for perfection and the magic is lost…

“I completely agree. I’m working on this theory that there’s such a lack of great rock records over the last 20 years, when rock ‘n’ roll has fallen so far out of fashion, because the methodology with which people were making those recordings stripped a lot of what made guitar music great out of it. With Pro-Tools, going beat detective on the drums, putting five guitars on with a computer, auto-tuning the backing vocals… once you have the option to fix everything, you lose something. As our producer John Congleton repeatedly said, ‘Dude, in six months you’re not gonna hear any of this stuff’.”

“Aside from the fact that the songs are amazing and that Cameron Winter is such an amazing singer, one of the many reasons that this Geese record [‘Getting Killed’] has hit so hard for people is that it’s just really fucking loose. This sounds like an album that came out before 25 years ago and it has life in it, there’s oxygen in it, it feels like human beings making music. I can’t imagine that record having the impact that it’s had if it was cleaned up. In my own personal listening, I’ve just been having this strange epiphany. These are the things that Jack White has been saying for years, but things sounding a little off and not perfect is what makes rock music really work. It is the fundamental element in guitar-based music.”


What do you think about all the online psyop debate around Geese?

“This is Geese’s fourth record. That discourse around them being a psyop or an industry plant is fucking ridiculous. The only valid point I saw was that we are given the impression in a streaming economy and a social media world that we all have access to the same levers to promote ourselves. The reality is that it’s not true. Amplification of posts, the new payola, etc, but those guys are amazing and they deserve everything that’s coming their way. As a fan, I’m just really excited to see what they do next.

“I also hope that they as human beings have the fortitude to weather the weight of expectations.”

Back to your album. What can you tell us about how you used the music to make sense of the fallout from your divorce?

“As I always do for every record, I’m writing a lot and we had about 90 songs. I started writing around 2023 and the last songs were written around the middle of last year. I started to realise that if this record was going to be about divorce and be – to oversimplify it – a ‘breakup record’, then it’s going to be the result and I want that exploration to be internal. I didn’t want any of the bitterness of, ‘You did this’, ‘fuck you’, ‘I’m so glad I’m not with you any more’. I kind of already wrote that record, it’s called ‘Kintsugi’ [after split from Zooey Deschanel].”

That was over a decade ago, too…

“I’m almost 50-years-old. Outside of just not wanting to repeat myself, I also feel like being older and actually being in constant therapy, I’ve hopefully developed an emotional maturity that maybe I didn’t have before.”

Death Cab for Cutie

Death Cab for Cutie – CREDIT: Shervin Lainez

Most break-up records try to say, ‘I’m strong, I’ve got this’, but you repeatedly sing, ‘I can’t hold it together’ throughout…

“It’s just being honest. I feel that the records that people connect to the most are the ones that are the most transparent. There is a tipping point with that, where you tip into self-loathing and whining. I’m sure there are moments I probably tipped off the edge of that. At the end of the day, one of the most powerful things to say to people is, ‘You’re not alone’.

“At this period in human history, not just the political climate that we’re living in, it’s incredibly important that we all look at each other and say, ‘This is OK, I don’t feel OK right now’. Not so much because I want you to look at me and I want attention, but because I know that you’re not OK either’.”

Radiohead’s Ed O’Brien recently said the same to us – that it’s no surprise how much young people are struggling…

“Well no, and I’m a Gen-Xer so my internal programming and default has always been, ‘What the fuck? Fucking get over it! Come on!’ That’s the ‘90s of us. At the same time, I find the conversations around what’s wrong with Gen-Z and Gen Alpha to be rather ridiculous and insulting. What young people are walking into as adults today is unlikely anything we have ever seen; certainly any post-war generation. They are starting so far behind where their parents and their grandparents started in regards to how they’re able to make a life for themselves.”

And they’ll still be called ‘entitled’…

“The idea of owning a house is out. The idea of having a career? Good luck, AI is coming along. Can you blame kids for trying to be influencers? Can you blame them for getting into crypto? Can you really look down upon someone who’s just trying to find a way to keep their head above water? It’s incredibly insulting and stinks of this attitude of ‘I went through the trenches, why can’t you?’ Now a trench is not a home, it’s renting for the rest of your life. Young people are very easy to pick on and they always have been.”

There’s a real fiery post-punk energy to the album, especially across the likes of ‘How Heavenly A State’, ‘Envy The Birds’ and ‘Punching The Flowers’. What sounds were you reaching for to translate how you were feeling?

“When we were starting the Death Cab and Postal Service tour, we had this filmmaker named Lance Bangs out with this. He was filming a bunch of stuff for us and we’ve known him for a long time. He brought Ian MacKaye [Minor Threat, Fugazi] to the show and we got to go to the Dischord House afterwards. That was just an unbelievable experience. I said to our bass player Nick [Harmer], ‘I’m really glad that 47-year-old me got to do that and not 27-year-old me’. As a massive Minor Threat and Fugazi fan, 27-year-old me would have been freaking out. I wouldn’t have been able to handle it.

“Ian was just a lovely guy and from that point on I found myself just listening to an egregious amount of Fugazi. In no world am I saying that I was trying to make us sound like Fugazi, because no one can make us sound like Fugazi, but what I took from those records was that they’re relatively simply arranged: it’s drums, bass and two guitars. There are not a lot of overdubs or adornments and they’re some of the most heavy and powerful records in my collection. I had this renaissance with Fugazi and found myself recognising how the way that we’ve made records for the last 20 years as a culture has just failed us in terms of presenting the power of what a band can be.”




Did you feel young again?

“I just don’t want to make old people music! I feel like we’re all just raging against the dying of the light here. We cannot control getting older, but we can control getting old. We can control not getting comfortable, keeping the tempos up, the level of distortion. We can make music that feels like an extension of the things that are and were the most important to us, without trying to have the equivalent of a musical dye-job in our hair.”

Given everything you went through that inspired this record, how are you now?

“I’m much better! There’s been the actual therapy, and then writing my way through this has always been incredibly illuminating for me. This period of my life is about three years in my rear view. We move on the best we can. The older I get, the more I realise that one of the biggest lies in songwriting is the ‘I’m over you’ song. That, ‘I don’t need you any more’ song. Those are the things we tell ourselves to move forward.

“We move forward in life, but you bring a piece of it with you. You can either choose to look at that period as a waste of your time or want those 10 years back, but I refuse to think of it like that. I think, ‘I was with this person for 10 years, we had eight good ones and two kinda bad ones, but I wouldn’t change any of them’. That person will always be with me somewhere in my heart as is everybody who has been in my life.

“The short answer is: ‘I’m doing great’.”


‘I Built You A Tower’ by Death Cab For Cutie is out now. A full UK and European tour kicks off in September. Visit here for tickets and more information.

The post Death Cab For Cutie on divorce, holding it together, and ‘I Built You A Tower’: “One of the most powerful things to say to people is, ‘You’re not alone’” appeared first on NME.

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S
· posted in 🎹 Pop Music
like, like every other track is trying to sound like it’s from the 80s or 90s and half the time im like… were you even alive then?? it’s weird when the production is so polished it feels fake-retro. but then again i lowkey love some of those synthwave-y tracks so im part of the problem. whats worse is when theyre clearly pandering but idk man i think im just salty bc some of these artists are younger than the trends theyre copying. still, if it slaps it slaps. whats a song that actually does the throwback thing well without feeling forced?
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BrooklynVegan Staff
· posted in 🕺 Music RSS Feeds
Pittsburgh metalcore band 156/Silence release their sixth album and first for Pure Noise, From a Distance, in September, and they’ve announced a fall tour supporting it. Shows begin on September 9 in Worcester, MA and wrap up on October 3 in their home town, and they’ll be joined by Aviana, Heavensgate and Fromjoy. They also have festival dates at Inkcarceration and Louder Than Life, a few August shows with Coldstate, and shows with Chiodos, sace6 and Calva Louise throughout the summer. See all dates below.

156/Silence’s headlining tour includes an NYC show at The Meadows on September 10. Tickets to all dates go on sale Friday, June 12 at 10 AM local time.


156/Silence 2026 tour


156/SILENCE: 2026 TOUR DATES
Sat, Jul 18 — Mansfield, OH — Ohio State Reformatory
Thu, Jul 30 – Denver, CO @ Fillmore Auditorium ^
Sat, Aug 1 – Salt Lake City, UT @ Rockwell @ The Complex ^
Mon, Aug 3 – Boise, ID @ Knitting Factory ^
Wed, Aug 5 – Bend, OR @ Midtown Ballroom ^
Thu, Aug 6 – Spokane, WA @ Knitting Factory ^
Fri, Aug 7 – Vancouver, BC @ The Commodore ^
Sun, Aug 9 – Calgary, AB @ The Palace Theatre ^
Mon, Aug 10 – Edmonton, AB @ Union Hall ^
Tue, Aug 11 – Saskatoon, SK @ Louis ^
Wed, Aug 12 – Winnipeg, MB @ Burton Cummings Theatre ^
Fri, Aug 14 – St. Paul, MN @ Myth Live ^
Sat, Aug 15 – Green Bay, WI @ Epic Event Center ^
Sun, Aug 16 – Chicago, IL @ House of Blues ^
Mon, Aug 17 – Chicago, IL @ House of Blues ^
Wed, Aug 19 – Toronto, ON @ The Concert Hall ^
Sun, Aug 23 – Portland, ME @ State Theater ^
Tue, Aug 25 – Providence, RI @ Fete Ballroom ^
Wed, Aug 26 – Huntington, NY @ The Paramount ^
Fri, Aug 28 – Asheville, NC @ The Orange Peel ^
Sat, Aug 29 – Nashville, TN @ Brooklyn Bowl ^
Thu, Aug 20 – Barrie, ON @ The Queens Night Club *
Fri, Aug 21 – Syracuse, NY @ Song & Dance *
Sat, Aug 22 – Albany, NY @ Empire Underground *
Wed, Sep 9 – Worcester, MA @ Palladium Upstairs #
Thu, Sep 10 – Brooklyn, NY @ The Meadows #
Fri, Sep 11 – Philadelphia, PA @ The Foundry @ The Fillmore #
Sat, Sep 12 – Baltimore, MD @ Soundstage #
Sun, Sep 13 – Richmond, VA @ Canal Club #
Tue Sep 15 – Durham, NC @ Motorco Music Hall #
Wed, Sep 16 – Atlanta, GA @ Terminal West #
Thu, Sep 17 – Winter Park, FL @ The Conduit #
Fri, Sep 18 – Jacksonville, FL @ Albatross #
Sat, Sep 19 – Greenville, SC @ Radio Room #
Sun, Sep 20 — Louisville, KY — Kentucky Expo Center
Tue, Sep 22 – Dallas, TX @ Puzzles Deep Ellum #
Wed, Sep 23 – San Antonio, TX @ The Rock Box #
Fri, Sep 25 – Mesa, AZ @ Rosetta Room #
Sat, Sep 26 – Anaheim, CA @ Parish @ HOB #
Sun, Sep 27 – Sacramento, CA @ Goldfield Trading Post #
Wed, Sep 30 – Kansas City, MO @ RecordBar #
Fri, Oct 02 – Detroit, MI @ TSDMAAC (Sanctuary) #
Sat, Oct 03 – Pittsburgh, PA @ Preserving #

* with Coldstate
# with Aviana, Heavensgate & Fromjoy
^ with Chiodos, sace6 & Calva Louise

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Bill Pearis
· posted in 🕺 Music RSS Feeds
Bonobo (Simon Green) has announced a new album, Distance and Static, which will be out September 11 via Ninja Tune. It features quite a few collaborators: Arooj Aftab, Nilüfer Yanya, Nicole Miglis, Joy Crookes, Aanya Martin, and Ichiko Aoba. “I want to reinforce this idea that you can be more than one thing,” says Green of the album.

The first single from the album is “Me and You” which Green calls a “kitchen table banger” and has been playing at DJ sets for a while. Watch the video below.

Bonobo will also be bringing his new full band live show to North America this fall, including an NYC show at Brooklyn Paramount on December 5, which is the last stop on the tour. Tickets for all shows go on sale Friday, June 12 at 10 AM local time and all dates are listed below.


bonobo - distance in static


‘Distance In Static’
1. Dawn
2. Cycles
3. Fire on the Water (feat. Arooj Aftab)
4. Drift
5. Talk to Me (feat. Nicole Miglis)
6. Uncasually
7. Always on Your Side (feat. Joy Crookes)
8. Youth’s Fountain (feat. Nilüfer Yanya)
9. Shokoufeh
10. Can’t You See (feat. Aanya Martin)
11. ID700
12. Me and You
13. Equinoctial (feat. Ichiko Aoba)
14. Mercury (feat. Ichiko Aoba

bonobo tour


Bonobo DJ / Live 2026
Summer DJ Tour
Fri 17 Apr – Day Zero Festival – Bali – ID [DJ SET]
Sat 18 Apr – Café Del Mar – Phuket – TH [DJ SET]
Sat 02 May – Bubbling Boiling – Tianjin – CN [DJ SET]
Mon 04 May – VAS Ear – Shanghai – CN [DJ SET]
Sun 24 May – YARD Festival – Setúbal – PT [DJ SET]
Tue 04 Aug – Pikes Presents @ 528 – Ibiza – ES [DJ SET]
Sat 08 Aug – Marenostrum Fuengirola – Málaga – ES [DJ SET]

Bonobo – North America Live Tour
Thu 05 Nov – Emo’s – Austin, TX – US
Fri 06 Nov – White Oak Music Hall – Houston, TX – US
Sat 07 Nov – The Echo Lounge & Music Hall – Dallas, TX – US
Mon 09 Nov – The Van Buren – Phoenix, AZ – US
Wed 11 Nov – The Wiltern – Los Angeles, CA – US
Thu 12 Nov – The Wiltern – Los Angeles, CA, US
Sat 14 Nov – Fox Theater – Oakland, CA – US
Sun 15 Nov – Roseland Theater – Portland, OR – US
Mon 16 Nov – PNE Forum – Vancouver, BC – CA
Tue 17 Nov – Showbox SoDo – Seattle, WA – US
Thu 19 Nov – Mission Ballroom – Denver, CO – US
Fri 20 Nov – Belly Up Aspen – Aspen, CO – US
Tue 24 Nov – First Avenue – Minneapolis, MN – US
Wed 25 Nov – Radius – Chicago, IL – US
Thu 26 Nov – HISTORY – Toronto, ON – CA
Fri 27 Nov – MTELUS – Montreal, QC, CA
Sat 28 Nov – Citizens House of Blues – Boston, MA – US
Mon 30 Nov – Higher Ground Ballroom – South Burlington, VT – US
Thu 03 Dec – The Fillmore Silver Spring – Silver Spring, MD – US
Fri 04 Dec – Union Transfer – Philadelphia, PA – US
Sat 05 Dec – Brooklyn Paramount – Brooklyn, NY – US

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Amanda Hatfield
· posted in 🕺 Music RSS Feeds
Darkwave duo Boy Harsher have announced a fall tour that they’re calling “The Heartbreak Tour.” It runs through September into November, and Choir Boy, Evanora Unlimited, True Blue, and Kassie Krut each open shows, varying by date. See all dates below.

The tour begins at Hudson, NY’s Basilica Hudson on September 25 with Choir Boy and Evanora Unlimited, and wraps up at NYC’s Knockdown Center on November 5 with True Blue and Kassie Krut. Tickets to all dates go on sale Friday, June 12 at 10 AM local.

Boy Harsher’s last album was their 2022 soundtrack to their horror film The Runner and a press release says more from them is “coming very soon.” Stay tuned.

Boy Harsher 2026 tour


BOY HARSHER: 2026 TOUR DATES
9/25 – Hudson, NY @ Basilica
9/27 – Boston, MA @ Royale
9/29 – Montreal, QC @ M Telus
9/30 – Toronto, ON @ Danforth Music Hall
10/01 – Detroit, MI @ Majestic
10/02 – Chicago, IL @ Metro
10/04 – Minneapolis, MN @ Varsity Theater
10/06 – Denver, CO @ Summit
10/09 – Portland, OR @ Revolution Hall
10/11 – Seattle, WA @ The Showbox
10/13 – Vancouver, BC @ The Pearl
10/15 – Oakland, CA @ Fox Theater
10/16 – Los Angeles, CA @ Hollywood Palladium
10/17 – Del Mar, CA @ The Sound
10/20 – Las Vegas, NV @ House of Blues
10/21 – Phoenix, AZ @ Van Buren
10/24 – Fort Worth, TX @ Sick New World*
10/26 – New Orleans, LA @ Republic
10/27 – Atlanta, GA @ Variety Playhouse
10/28 – Asheville, NC @ The Orange Peel
10/30 – Washington, DC @ The Howard Theatre
10/31 – Philadelphia, PA @ Making Time
11/05 – New York, NY @ Knockdown Center

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BrooklynVegan Staff
· posted in 🕺 Music RSS Feeds
After Saturday at Governors Ball was cut short due to severe weather and multiple artists had their sets cut, Sunday also had a weather-related delay, although thankfully a brief one. Sets were temporarily paused around 1:45pm because of lightning in the area, but they were able to resume not long after, and the rest of the day happened as scheduled, and with the addition of Blood Orange, after he was cut from Saturday. A$AP Rocky made the most of the big stage with his headlining set with a troop of dancers, a bullhorn, a helicopter and American flags, telling the crowd, “I came to get disrespectful” (Rihanna was also seen watching). He took the stage late and got cut off early, but before that he delivered a career-spanning set that included lots of songs from his January album Don’t Be Dumb. Sunday at Governors Ball also included sets from Geese, Japanese Breakfast (who revealed that she’s pregnant), Slayyyter, Clipse, Fcukers, Hemlocke Springs, Hot Mulligan, Jennie, Freddie Gibbs, Rachel Chinouriri, Hannah Jadagu, Holly Humberstone, and more. See pictures from the whole day (most are by Ellen Qberplaya, Freddie Gibbs photo by Rich Fury) below.
Hemlocke Springs at Governors Ball 2026

Hemlocke Springs (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Hemlocke Springs at Governors Ball 2026

Hemlocke Springs (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Hemlocke Springs at Governors Ball 2026

Hemlocke Springs (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Hemlocke Springs at Governors Ball 2026

Hemlocke Springs (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Hemlocke Springs at Governors Ball 2026

Hemlocke Springs (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Hannah Jadagu at Governors Ball 2026

Hannah Jadagu (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Hannah Jadagu at Governors Ball 2026

Hannah Jadagu (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
govball2026-sun-008

Hannah Jadagu at Governors Ball 2026

Hannah Jadagu (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Hannah Jadagu at Governors Ball 2026

Hannah Jadagu (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Hannah Jadagu at Governors Ball 2026

Hannah Jadagu (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Hannah Jadagu at Governors Ball 2026

Hannah Jadagu (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Hannah Jadagu at Governors Ball 2026

Hannah Jadagu (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Rachel Chinouriri at Governors Ball 2026

Rachel Chinouriri (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Rachel Chinouriri at Governors Ball 2026

Rachel Chinouriri (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Rachel Chinouriri at Governors Ball 2026

Rachel Chinouriri (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Rachel Chinouriri at Governors Ball 2026

Rachel Chinouriri (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Rachel Chinouriri at Governors Ball 2026

Rachel Chinouriri (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Rachel Chinouriri at Governors Ball 2026

Rachel Chinouriri (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Slayyyter at Governors Ball 2026

Slayyyter (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Slayyyter at Governors Ball 2026

Slayyyter (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Slayyyter at Governors Ball 2026

Slayyyter (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Slayyyter at Governors Ball 2026

Slayyyter (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Slayyyter at Governors Ball 2026

Slayyyter (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Slayyyter at Governors Ball 2026

Slayyyter (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Slayyyter at Governors Ball 2026

Slayyyter (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Slayyyter at Governors Ball 2026

Slayyyter (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Slayyyter at Governors Ball 2026

Slayyyter (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Japanese Breakfast at Governors Ball 2026

Japanese Breakfast (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Japanese Breakfast at Governors Ball 2026

Japanese Breakfast (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Japanese Breakfast at Governors Ball 2026

Japanese Breakfast (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Japanese Breakfast at Governors Ball 2026

Japanese Breakfast (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Japanese Breakfast at Governors Ball 2026

Japanese Breakfast (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Japanese Breakfast at Governors Ball 2026

Japanese Breakfast (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Japanese Breakfast at Governors Ball 2026

Japanese Breakfast (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Japanese Breakfast at Governors Ball 2026

Japanese Breakfast (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Japanese Breakfast at Governors Ball 2026

Japanese Breakfast (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Japanese Breakfast at Governors Ball 2026

Japanese Breakfast (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Japanese Breakfast at Governors Ball 2026

Japanese Breakfast (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Japanese Breakfast at Governors Ball 2026

Japanese Breakfast (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Japanese Breakfast at Governors Ball 2026

Japanese Breakfast (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Holly Humberstone at Governors Ball 2026

Holly Humberstone (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Holly Humberstone at Governors Ball 2026

Holly Humberstone (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Holly Humberstone at Governors Ball 2026

Holly Humberstone (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Holly Humberstone at Governors Ball 2026

Holly Humberstone (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Holly Humberstone at Governors Ball 2026

Holly Humberstone (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Holly Humberstone at Governors Ball 2026

Holly Humberstone (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Fcukers at Governors Ball 2026

Fcukers (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Fcukers at Governors Ball 2026

Fcukers (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Fcukers at Governors Ball 2026

Fcukers (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Fcukers at Governors Ball 2026

Fcukers (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Fcukers at Governors Ball 2026

Fcukers (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Fcukers at Governors Ball 2026

Fcukers (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Fcukers at Governors Ball 2026

Fcukers (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Fcukers at Governors Ball 2026

Fcukers (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Fcukers at Governors Ball 2026

Fcukers (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Blood Orange at Governors Ball 2026

Blood Orange (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Blood Orange at Governors Ball 2026

Blood Orange (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Blood Orange at Governors Ball 2026

Blood Orange (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Blood Orange at Governors Ball 2026

Blood Orange (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Blood Orange at Governors Ball 2026

Blood Orange (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Blood Orange at Governors Ball 2026

Blood Orange (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Blood Orange at Governors Ball 2026

Blood Orange (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Blood Orange at Governors Ball 2026

Blood Orange (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Blood Orange at Governors Ball 2026

Blood Orange (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Blood Orange at Governors Ball 2026

Blood Orange (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Blood Orange at Governors Ball 2026

Blood Orange (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
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Geese (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Geese at Governors Ball 2026

Geese (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Geese at Governors Ball 2026

Geese (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Geese at Governors Ball 2026

Geese (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Geese at Governors Ball 2026

Geese (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Geese at Governors Ball 2026

Geese (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Geese at Governors Ball 2026

Geese (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Geese at Governors Ball 2026

Geese (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Geese at Governors Ball 2026

Geese (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Geese at Governors Ball 2026

Geese (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Geese at Governors Ball 2026

Geese (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Geese at Governors Ball 2026

Geese (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Geese at Governors Ball 2026

Geese (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Geese at Governors Ball 2026

Geese (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Geese at Governors Ball 2026

Geese (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Geese at Governors Ball 2026

Geese (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Geese at Governors Ball 2026

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Clipse (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
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Clipse (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Clipse at Governors Ball 2026

Clipse (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Clipse at Governors Ball 2026

Clipse (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Clipse at Governors Ball 2026

Clipse (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Clipse at Governors Ball 2026

Clipse (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Clipse at Governors Ball 2026

Clipse (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Clipse at Governors Ball 2026

Clipse (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Clipse at Governors Ball 2026

Clipse (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
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Clipse (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Clipse at Governors Ball 2026

Clipse (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
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Clipse (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Clipse at Governors Ball 2026

Clipse (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Clipse at Governors Ball 2026

Clipse (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Clipse at Governors Ball 2026

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Hot Mulligan at Governors Ball 2026

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Hot Mulligan at Governors Ball 2026

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Hot Mulligan at Governors Ball 2026

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Governors Ball 2026

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Governors Ball 2026

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Jennie at Governors Ball 2026

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Jennie at Governors Ball 2026

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Jennie at Governors Ball 2026

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Jennie at Governors Ball 2026

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Jennie at Governors Ball 2026

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Jennie at Governors Ball 2026

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Jennie at Governors Ball 2026

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Jennie at Governors Ball 2026

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A$AP Rocky at Governors Ball 2026

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A$AP Rocky at Governors Ball 2026

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A$AP Rocky at Governors Ball 2026

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A$AP Rocky at Governors Ball 2026

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A$AP Rocky at Governors Ball 2026

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A$AP Rocky at Governors Ball 2026

A$AP Rocky (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
A$AP Rocky at Governors Ball 2026

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A$AP Rocky at Governors Ball 2026

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A$AP Rocky at Governors Ball 2026

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A$AP Rocky at Governors Ball 2026

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A$AP Rocky at Governors Ball 2026

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A$AP Rocky at Governors Ball 2026

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A$AP Rocky at Governors Ball 2026

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A$AP Rocky at Governors Ball 2026

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A$AP Rocky at Governors Ball 2026

A$AP Rocky (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
A$AP Rocky at Governors Ball 2026

A$AP Rocky (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
A$AP Rocky at Governors Ball 2026

A$AP Rocky (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
A$AP Rocky at Governors Ball 2026

A$AP Rocky (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
See pictures from Saturday at Governors Ball here and Friday here.

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Bill Pearis
· posted in 🕺 Music RSS Feeds
Wishy have announced Nature’s Pill, their second album, which will be out October 2 via Winspear. The worked again with Triple Seven co-producer Ben Lumsdaine in this one.

The first single from the album is “Lovesick” which gives off strong ’80s alt-rock vibes. “There’s not much more that needs to be said about yearning in 2026, but here it is anyway,” singer-guitarist Nina Pitchkites says. “Kevin and I are stupidly romantic people who like twee pop so that combination alone was a recipe for a cheeky ‘main character’ song. We really leaned into the overzealous lyrics here because 1) we’re allowed, 2) can do whatever we want and 3) it’s fun 🙂 yay!” Watch the video below.

Wishy have also announced a fall tour which includes an NYC show at Racket on October 17. Tickets for all fall dates go on sale Friday, June 12 at 10 AM. The band are also on tour with The Beths and Beach Bunny, and all dates are listed below.


wishy - natures pill


Nature’s Pill
All The Rage
Covergirl
Sensational
Shift
You’re Not Serious
Mona Lisa
Lovesick
Freak 99
Headscratcher
Blitz
Kiss Kiss Kiss
Party World

wishy fall tour


Wishy – 2026 Tour Dates
07/25 – Cleveland, OH @ House of Blues *
07/26 – Indianapolis, IN @ Deluxe at Old National Center *
07/27 – St. Louis, MO @ Delmar Hall *
07/31 – Santa Fe, NM @ The Bridge *&
08/01 – Tucson, AZ @ Rialto Theatre *&
08/02 – Las Vegas, NV @ House of Blues *&
08/04 – San Luis Obispo, CA @ Madonna Inn *&
08/06 – San Diego, CA @ SOMA *&
08/07 – Pomona, CA @ The Fox Theater *&
08/08 – Santa Ana, CA @ Observatory *&
08/11 – San Jose, CA @ San Jose Civic *&
08/14 – Spokane, WA @ Knitting Factory *&
08/15 – Portland, OR @ Courthouse Square *&
08/16 – Seattle, WA @ Woodland Park Zoo *&
08/17 – Boise, ID @ Shrine Social Club Ballroom *
08/18 – Bozeman, MT @ The ELM *
08/20 – Omaha, NE @ Slowdown *
09/18 – Cincinnati, OH @ Fountain Square $
09/26–09/27 – Sao Paolo, Brazil @ Balaclava Festival
10/03 – Indianapolis, IN @ WISHYFEST @ Atomic Duckpin
10/09 – Columbus, OH @ Ace of Cups
10/10 – Toronto, ON @ The Garrison
10/11 – Montreal, QC @ Bar Le Ritz
10/13 – Portland, ME @ SPACE
10/14 – Boston, MA @ Brighton Music Hall
10/15 – Philadelphia, PA @ First Unitarian Church
10/17 – New York, NY @ Racket
10/18 – Washington, DC @ Atlantis
10/20 – Durham, NC @ Stanczyks
10/21 – Atlanta, GA @ The Earl
10/22 – Asheville, NC @ Revival
10/23 – Nashville, TN @ Blue Room
10/25 – Minneapolis, MN @ 7th St Entry
10/26 – Milwaukee, WI @ X-Ray Arcade
10/27 – Chicago, IL @ Lincoln Hall

* w/ Beach Bunny
*& w/ Beach Bunny and The Beths
$ w/ Ratboys

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BrooklynVegan Staff
· posted in 🕺 Music RSS Feeds
Mitski‘s essential fourth album, 2016’s fantastic Puberty 2, turns 10 this month, and she’s celebrating by giving it a new reissue. The 10th anniversary edition is out digitally now and is also coming out on limited edition “Forest Shadow” vinyl, due out on October 30 via Dead Oceans and available for pre-order in the BV shop.

The digital version includes Mitski’s covers of One Direction‘s “Fireproof” and Frank Sinatra‘s “I’m a Fool to Want You” – stream both of those below.

Mitski released the great Nothing’s About to Happen to Me in February, and while she isn’t doing a “proper tour” for it, she does have shows coming up, including the DC-area edition of All Things Go in September. See all dates below, and pick up Mitski albums on vinyl in the BV shop.


MITSKI: 2026 TOUR DATES
Jul 14, 2026 Mall of Asia Arena Manila, Philippines
Jul 16, 2026 UOB Live Bangkok, Thailand
Jul 18, 2026 Tennis Indoor Senayan Jakarta, Indonesia
Jul 20, 2026 Zepp KL Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Jul 21, 2026 The Star Theatre Singapore
Jul 26, 2026 Fuji Rock Festival Yuzawa, Japan
Jul 28, 2026 Zepp DiverCity Tokyo Tokyo, Japan
Sep 25, 2026 All Things Go Festival Columbia, MD

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Bill Pearis
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Late-’80s Austin band Nice Strong Arm mixed a few varieties of noise rock (Butthole Surfers, Swans) with a little gothy post-punk, releasing three albums for Homestead Records before calling it quits after 1990’s Stress City. The group are now back, having announced their first live shows in over 30 years.

Following their first reunion show, in Austin of course on August 28, Nice Strong Arm will bead to the Northeast for shows in Philly, DC, Boston, Columbus, Pittsburgh, and Providence, as well as a couple NYC-area shows: Catskill, NY’s Dromfest on September 6 (with Come, Scrawl, more), and Brooklyn’s Mama Tried on September 12 with fellow Homestead Records band Phantom Tollbooth and Richard Balyut’s pre-Versus band, Flower.

All tour dates are listed, along with streams of Nice Strong Arm’s records, below.





nice strong arm tour


NICE STRONG ARM – 2026 TOUR DATES
Aug 28, 2026 – Austin, TX – 29th St Ballroom (with Knife In The Water, Ewe, Gerard Cosloy)

Sep 6, 2026 – Catskill, NY – Dromfest (with Come, Scrawl, Hypnolovewheel, Sleepyhead, more)

Sep 7, 2026 – Medford, MA – Deep Cuts

Sep 8, 2026 – Philadelphia, PA – Johnny Brenda’s (with VIA and Astral Bitch, Heavenly Bodies and Shadow Riot)

Sep 9, 2026 – Silver Spring, MD – The Quarry House (with Bed Maker)

Sep 10, 2026 – Columbus, OH – Café Bourbon St. (with Scrawl and Ron House)

Sep 11, 2026 – Pittsburgh, PA – Government Center (with Weird Paul Rock Band and Rated Eye)

Sep 12, 2026 – Brooklyn, NY – Mama Tried (with Phantom Tollbooth and Flower)

Sep 13, 2026 – Providence, RI – The Parlour (with Minibeast)

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Bill Pearis
· posted in 🕺 Music RSS Feeds
DC/NYC post-hardcore greats Shudder to Think, who returned for their first tour in over a decade and released new music last year, have announced a few live shows that are happening in September:


Tickets go on sale Friday, June 12 at 10 AM local time.

Shudder to Think’s Craig Wedren said the band’s 2025 7″ on Dischord was “the first of a trove of new songs” so maybe by the time this show happens, the band will have announced their first studio album since 1998. Stay tuned.



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Elizabeth Aubrey
· posted in 🕺 Music RSS Feeds
Ryuichi Sakamoto in 'Opus'. Credit: Press


An autobiography from the late legendary composer Ryuichi Sakamoto, titled Music Sets You Free: A Memoir, has been announced today (June 9).


The memoir from the “godfather of electronic music” will be released on September 22 via HarperVia books.

A statement from publishers HarperVia (an imprint of Harper Collins) described it as “the complete autobiography from the legendary and fearless musician, composer, and activist Ryuichi Sakamoto, in a brilliant translation from the Japanese by Sam Bett and with the full support and collaboration of Sakamoto’s estate and management team.”

You can pre-order the memoir here.



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A statement from publishing house Harper Collins added: “Music Sets You Free combines the translations of Sakamoto’s two memoirs published in Japanese – Music Makes You Free and How Many More Times Will I Watch the Full Moon Rise? It offers an intimate, contemplative account of his life, from his first encounter with a piano, to his rise as a global pop star, and his later reflections on mortality and music in the wake of multiple cancer treatments and surgeries.

“An affirming, beautifully written testament to art, life and sound, Music Sets You Free is a lasting gift from a true musical great.

Sakamoto died in 2023 at the age of 71. After making his name as a founding member of pioneering electronic band Yellow Magic Orchestra, he went on to become a revered composer for films such as The Last Emperor, Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence and The Revenant.

The NME obituary for Sakamoto said: “Over the decades, he remained fascinated with the pop song, testing the endurance of its form through different methods of musicianship – even while holding on to his earliest and dearest classical inspirations. In the wake of his departure, it’s hard to imagine that there will ever be another like Ryuichi Sakamoto.”

Ryuichi Sakamoto. Credit: Neo Sora

Ryuichi Sakamoto. Credit: Neo Sora

Meanwhile, last year, the estate of Sakamoto joined the ’No Music For Genocide’ campaign and removed his music from streaming in Israel.

The campaign was a cultural boycott initiative encouraging artists and rights-holders to pull their music from streaming platforms in Israel in response to the genocide in Gaza.

Massive Attack, Fontaines D.C., Amyl & The Sniffers, and Kneecap were among the first leading names to join the initiative and were soon joined by Paramore, Rina Sawayama, MIKE, Primal Scream, Faye Webster, Japanese Breakfast, Yaeji, King Krule, MJ Lenderman, Mannequin Pussy, Wednesday, Soccer Mommy and .

The estate of the legendary Japanese composer also joined, writing on Facebook: “To the extent possible, the Estate has removed or issued formal requests to labels to remove his music from all DSP (streaming and download) services in Israel. For much of his catalog, this has already taken effect.”

Other leading names to back ‘No Music For Genocide’ included Björk, Lorde, IDLES, MUNA, Paloma Faith, Clairo, Wolf Alice, Lucy Dacus and AURORA.

The post Ryuichi Sakamoto autobiography ‘Music Sets You Free: A Memoir’ announced appeared first on NME.

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