You Can't Be 20: Old-Person Songs by Young People

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Lee Hazlewood wrote "My Autumn's Done Come" when he was 37.

henry s, Monday, 27 September 2021 15:22 (two years ago) link

Janis Ian's "At Seventeen" may not necessarily be an old person's song but given its wistful quality one would think the singer is older than 24

Josefa, Monday, 27 September 2021 15:24 (two years ago) link

Alice Cooper was a very old 18.

Precious, Grace, Hill & Beard LTD. (C. Grisso/McCain), Monday, 27 September 2021 15:25 (two years ago) link

I know The Corporation wrote it but "I Want You Back" comes to mind given that MJ was only 11 when he was delivering those lines

Indexed, Monday, 27 September 2021 15:25 (two years ago) link

...or MJ doing "Who's Loving You" on the flip!

Precious, Grace, Hill & Beard LTD. (C. Grisso/McCain), Monday, 27 September 2021 15:27 (two years ago) link

xp I do not recall lines forming on my face and hands at 18. That was more of a 26 kind of thing.

henry s, Monday, 27 September 2021 15:27 (two years ago) link

Diana Ross singing "Reflections" at 23.

Precious, Grace, Hill & Beard LTD. (C. Grisso/McCain), Monday, 27 September 2021 15:29 (two years ago) link

Paul Anka wrote the lyrics to "My Way" at age 27. If you say, well, he wrote it for Sinatra - Sinatra was only 53.

Josefa, Monday, 27 September 2021 15:39 (two years ago) link

Van Morrison at 22-23 writing Astral Weeks, Slim Slow Slider, and Madame George

that's not my post, Monday, 27 September 2021 15:49 (two years ago) link

Bob Mould - Compositions for the Young and Old (mid-late 20s), These Important Years, Hardly Getting Over It (mid 20s). Probably a bunch more, he was always kind of an old fart.

a down-on-his-luck gastromancer enters (Matt #2), Monday, 27 September 2021 15:55 (two years ago) link

I'm wondering if this tendency (among boomers) was a sort of second-guessing of "never trust anyone over 30," or an attempt to forestall the criticism? I'm thinking that a later '80s/new wave sensibility can only regard aging with horror (several Cure songs do this, though "In Between Days" is the only example that comes to mind).

eatandoph (Neue Jesse Schule), Monday, 27 September 2021 16:09 (two years ago) link

The Church's "Almost With You", penned by a 27 year-old:

See the dust that fills your sleep
Does it always feel this chill, near the end?

Vast Halo, Monday, 27 September 2021 16:26 (two years ago) link

'But I remember, when we were young..." - 21-year-old Ian Curtis

Zelda Zonk, Monday, 27 September 2021 16:32 (two years ago) link

I'm wondering if this tendency (among boomers) was a sort of second-guessing of "never trust anyone over 30," or an attempt to forestall the criticism?

Could be. Most all of the songs I named date to the mid-late '60s; I'm guessing there was just so much happening so fast, a lot of these people felt prematurely old.

Dylan, as always, goes his own way: "I was so much older then..."

clemenza, Monday, 27 September 2021 16:34 (two years ago) link

suspect the source of this tendency in the 60s was more to do with the singer/songwriters imitating 20s/30s/40s blues musicians, who also wrote old-person songs when in their twenties.

edited to reflect developments which occurred (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Monday, 27 September 2021 16:41 (two years ago) link

"Both Sides Now" reads to me as an older person's song, but it was released when Joni Mitchell was 25.

mike t-diva, Monday, 27 September 2021 17:09 (two years ago) link

"Lather" by Jefferson Airplane, "Where Did My Spring Go?" by the Kinks, "Pushing Thirty" by Peter Hammill, "Remember a Day" (and maybe "See Saw") by Pink Floyd, all by writers in their 20s; but the Hammill song at least is not nostalgic but defiant about aging, so maybe not thematically in the same area?

Halfway there but for you, Monday, 27 September 2021 17:21 (two years ago) link

Katie Melua's "The Closest Thing to Crazy" used to make me roll my eyes a lot:

"This is the closest thing to crazy
I have ever been
Feeling twenty-two, acting seventeen"

but today I learned it's actually a Mike Batt song lol ffs

look on my guacs, ye mighty, and dis pear (Noodle Vague), Monday, 27 September 2021 17:32 (two years ago) link

kanye: "we wasn't supposed to make it past 25, joke's on you we're still alive"

grove street (party) direction (voodoo chili), Monday, 27 September 2021 17:44 (two years ago) link

Jacques Brel wrote “Le Moribond” (source of “Seasons in the Sun”) when he was 31 or 32.

Josefa, Monday, 27 September 2021 17:48 (two years ago) link

I think he wrote quite a few old geezer songs but they're character songs so I'm not sure they count?

Are You Still in Love With Me, Klas-Göran? (Tom D.), Monday, 27 September 2021 17:54 (two years ago) link

Mostly character songs tbf.

Are You Still in Love With Me, Klas-Göran? (Tom D.), Monday, 27 September 2021 17:56 (two years ago) link

Fair. Hard to draw that line sometimes though.

Josefa, Monday, 27 September 2021 17:57 (two years ago) link

I mean you’re probably right that Jacques Brel didn’t believe he was dying

Josefa, Monday, 27 September 2021 17:58 (two years ago) link

this whole thing kinda reminds me of those Twitter threads of people in the 50's and 60's who looked like old men in their early thirties, people just seemed to age faster back then

frogbs, Monday, 27 September 2021 18:30 (two years ago) link

They did, they were mostly dead before they were 70.

Are You Still in Love With Me, Klas-Göran? (Tom D.), Monday, 27 September 2021 18:32 (two years ago) link

Yeah, I'd count a song where someone's in character as something separate. On a similar note, "Reflections" as a song certainly fits, but having been written by someone other than the singer, that, in my mind, is separate too.

I mentioned "Both Sides Now" too as a possibility: not specifically about feeling old, but it has an old-person's elegiac voice.

clemenza, Monday, 27 September 2021 19:45 (two years ago) link

All songs are written in character to some degree but that's a whole other discussion

Josefa, Monday, 27 September 2021 20:02 (two years ago) link

"Memories of a Rock n' Rolla" by Traffic and "Old Wild Men" by 10cc, both from the point of view of aging musicians.

Halfway there but for you, Monday, 27 September 2021 20:26 (two years ago) link

"What's Up" by 4 Non Blondes

25 years and my life is still
Tryin' to get up that great big hill of hope
For a destination

"Hold On" by Alabama Shakes

Bless my heart
Bless my soul
Didn't think I'd make it to 22 years old

Simon & Garfunkel "Old Friends."

Can you imagine us
Years from today
Sharing a park bench quietly?
How terribly strange
To be seventy

And of course "When I'm Sixty-Four"

Extinct Namibian shrub genus: Var. (Ye Mad Puffin), Monday, 27 September 2021 20:48 (two years ago) link

John Prine "Hello in There" and "Angel from Montgomery" both from the perspective of explicitly elderly folk.

They're both great songs, but I always found parts of the former a little awkwardly presumptuous in their pity

"Old people just grow lonesome, waiting for someone to say, 'hello in there'"

"So if you're walking down the street sometime
And spot some hollow ancient eyes
Please don't just pass 'em by and stare
As if you didn't care, say, 'Hello in there, hello'"

Lavator Shemmelpennick, Monday, 27 September 2021 20:55 (two years ago) link

(he was 25 when the album came out)

Lavator Shemmelpennick, Monday, 27 September 2021 20:55 (two years ago) link

Kind of interesting that R.E.M. covered "Hello in There," and also wrote "Try Not to Breathe" (a "character song" from the perspective of an elderly person).

juristic person (morrisp), Monday, 27 September 2021 20:57 (two years ago) link

michael stipe definitely an old soul

Lavator Shemmelpennick, Monday, 27 September 2021 20:58 (two years ago) link

Also some overlap there w/scene-mates 10,000 Maniacs – Natalie Merchant was obv very interested in older people, personal histories from the early 20th Century, etc. The "Trouble Me" video even features her helping out an elderly lady, IIRC

juristic person (morrisp), Monday, 27 September 2021 21:01 (two years ago) link

This one's not about the lyrics, but about the way it's sung: the guy who sings "The Letter" sounds about 30 years older than the guy who sings "September Gurls"

Lee626, Monday, 27 September 2021 21:14 (two years ago) link

Not that hearing aids are necessarily an olds thing, but Morrissey was sporting one from the early Smiths days, for many reasons I am sure but none to do with actual hearing loss.

henry s, Monday, 27 September 2021 21:15 (two years ago) link

The reason was Johnny Ray.

Are You Still in Love With Me, Klas-Göran? (Tom D.), Monday, 27 September 2021 21:17 (two years ago) link

xp I see what you mean about those those John Prine lines, but I'm ok with them because they're written from the pov of a specific person who's lonely in old age.

I think Springsteen's Thunder Road also belongs here, for "you're scared and you're thinking that maybe we ain't that young anymore" and also "I know it's late, we can make it if we run."

Lily Dale, Monday, 27 September 2021 21:19 (two years ago) link

Springsteen feels a little different to me because so many of the songs have the message/tone that even if you are 18, 20, 25 or whatever, your best days and youthful optimism are already behind you for circumstantial reasons related to your environment, class, means, etc. But Lily Dale you are more of a Springsteen scholar than I!

Lavator Shemmelpennick, Monday, 27 September 2021 21:25 (two years ago) link

I think Springsteen is really good at time-stamping and age-stamping all his songs; you can often tell exactly what age everyone is. But I think Thunder Road captures that feeling of having turned 25 or 26 and suddenly realizing that your youth has an expiration date and starting to feel older than you are.

Lily Dale, Monday, 27 September 2021 21:28 (two years ago) link

but yeah I agree that Springsteen often has this feeling of "I shouldn't feel this old at this age" which is a little different

Lily Dale, Monday, 27 September 2021 21:30 (two years ago) link

Feel like John Fogerty must have written one of these.

Are You Still in Love With Me, Klas-Göran? (Tom D.), Monday, 27 September 2021 21:32 (two years ago) link

xp agree with those thoughts Lily Dale. Another way to put the distinction is that Springsteen is actually convincing about it where some of the examples upthread end up sounding naïve and ironically childish. Like with the Neil Young examples, it's kind of an endearing quirk of Neil's that he always feels like his best days are behind him. Whereas Bruce sells it that for these song characters, their best days actually are behind them

Lavator Shemmelpennick, Monday, 27 September 2021 21:35 (two years ago) link

or yeah that it's a deeper more existential feeling anyway

Lavator Shemmelpennick, Monday, 27 September 2021 21:36 (two years ago) link

Not sure if the Incredible String Band's "Way Back in the 1960s" qualifies. Robin Williamson was 23 when he wrote it but it's set in the future - in fact he says he's 91 in it, which places it around 2034!

Are You Still in Love With Me, Klas-Göran? (Tom D.), Monday, 27 September 2021 21:39 (two years ago) link

shook ones

Vapor waif (uptown churl), Monday, 27 September 2021 21:45 (two years ago) link

Bob Dylan is an interesting one; he's sort of ageless when he's in his twenties, but then when he hits his mid-fifties, with Time Out of Mind, he seems to fast-forward to old age and stay there.

Lily Dale, Monday, 27 September 2021 21:51 (two years ago) link

Different thing, but I've always loved that Bob Seger released an album called Back in '72 in January 1973.

... (Eazy), Monday, 27 September 2021 22:23 (two years ago) link

Feel like John Fogerty must have written one of these.

I feel like “Lodi” fits, even though there’s no mention of age or aging.

Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Monday, 27 September 2021 22:54 (two years ago) link

"The Class of '57" by the Statler Bros. (Released in 1972)

Tommy's selling used cars
Nancy's fixing hair
Harvey runs a grocery store
And Margaret doesn't care

Jerry drives a truck for Sears
And Charlotte's on the make
And Paul sells life insurance
And part-time real estate

Helen is a hostess
Frank works at the mill
Jenett teaches grade school
And probably always will

Bob works for the city
And Jack's in lab research
And Peggy plays organ at the Presbyterian Church

And the class of '57 had its dreams
We all thought we'd change the world with our great works and deeds
Or maybe we just thought the world would change to fit our needs
The class of '57 had its dreams

Betty runs a trailer park
Jan sells Tupperware
Randy's on an insane war
And Mary's on welfare

Charlie took a job with Ford
And Joe took Freddie's wife
Charlotte took a millionaire
And Freddie took his life

John is big in cattle
Ray is deep in debt
Where Mavis finally wound up is anybody's bet

Linda married Sonny
Brenda married me
And the class of all of us is just part of history

And the class of '57 had its dreams
But living life, day and day, is never like it seems
Things get complicated when you get past eighteen
But the class of '57 had its dreams

Oh, the class of '57 had its dreams

I'd say the Carpenters one is the American Graffiti-type situation in which in 1973 America, ten years ago seemed liked ages ago.

Josefa, Monday, 19 February 2024 17:10 (two months ago) link

"In My Life" (John Lennon, 25...not a personal favourite, but obviously it fits)

there are a lot of 80s Madness songs that have this melancholy ruminative focus on childhood memories from the perspective of early-mid 20 somethings, but possibly this is a distinct thing from the old before your time type songs, ruminating on your childhood is maybe a typical early 20 something thing to do?

Madness were only young when they started having hits, late teens to early 20s, only a few years older than the kids buying their records, and this was obviously part of their appeal, that they were peers of their young fans, but even from the start there's this sense of people looking back at the youth they've just left behind, even if only recently

Their last album before they broke up (Mad Not Mad from 1985) has lots of lyrics about ageing and weariness, I think that's to do with the band coming to an end and tiredness of being on the record/promote/tour carousel non stop for several years, which is maybe why a lot of young pop stars end up writing these kind of songs.

soref, Monday, 19 February 2024 17:23 (two months ago) link

Mood-wise, not even remotely the same thing, but Ian MacKaye was 23 when Minor Threat put out "Salad Days" (their last single, I think). In his world, 23 actually was old.

clemenza, Monday, 19 February 2024 18:05 (two months ago) link

I think people in their mid-20s are often more nostalgic for childhood/teen years than older folks

Beyond Goo and Evol (President Keyes), Monday, 19 February 2024 18:11 (two months ago) link

Miley Cyrus had a god awful single last year called Used To Be Young. She was 30 at the time on release. Absolute pensioner.

a hoy hoy, Monday, 19 February 2024 18:18 (two months ago) link

I don't know if this counts but I think Leonard Cohen wrote "Tonight Will Be Fine" (my favorite Leonard Cohen song) in about 1968. When he was maybe 32 or 34?

It begins "sometimes I find I get to thinking of the past."

fleetwood macrame (Ye Mad Puffin), Monday, 19 February 2024 18:31 (two months ago) link

in 1973 America, ten years ago seemed liked ages ago

The Beach Boys reminisced about the days of rock and roll in "Do You Remember", released in 1964!

Kim Kimberly, Monday, 19 February 2024 18:35 (two months ago) link

Ray Davies had this market cornered.

― Are You Still in Love With Me, Klas-Göran? (Tom D.), Monday, 27 September 2021 15:16 (two years ago) bookmarkflaglink

Bears repeating. Just one example, "Where Have All the Good Times Gone" was written when he was 21.

The British Boy of Film Classification (Tom D.), Monday, 19 February 2024 18:41 (two months ago) link

As the man himself said:

"We'd been rehearsing 'Where Have All the Good Times Gone' and our tour manager at the time, who was a lot older than us, said, 'That's a song a 40-year-old would write'."

The British Boy of Film Classification (Tom D.), Monday, 19 February 2024 18:42 (two months ago) link

Apparently, once a single left the charts it was impossible to find it. So when the Oldies But Goodies LPs came out in the early 1960s they were recapturing something that had been very ephemeral, if only two or three years old. Pop culture moved so fast in part because stuff disappeared from radio and theaters and shops quickly. No matter how poptimist we’d like to be I don’t think we can internalize that sentimentalism. Play it again Sam, etc.

bendy, Monday, 19 February 2024 18:47 (two months ago) link

True story: On New Year's Eve of maybe 1990 I was on the roof of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts with some friends.

Someone started singing "Still Crazy After All These Years." Most of us were twenty or so.

The oldest person among us (who may have been, yikes, and 22) said to stop it, because "all these years" should be reserved for older persons with longer shared histories.

Okay, point taken, but Paul Simon was probably or 32 when he wrote that line

fleetwood macrame (Ye Mad Puffin), Monday, 19 February 2024 18:48 (two months ago) link

Yeah, but I bet those people are a lot crazier today

Beyond Goo and Evol (President Keyes), Monday, 19 February 2024 18:51 (two months ago) link

idk y'all, everyone has a past. does a 30 year old former child star get to feel old? i'd say yeah, myself.

absolute king of the young old men has to be orson welles though, right? not a song per se, but him doing "hearts of age" at 19...

i read a lot of the songs upthread about being "old" as just depression. or trauma. like, having a friend die, that'll make you feel old.

i think sometimes about dylan's "so much older than" and mitchell's "both sides now" - there aren't in fact two sides, but it's easy for me to fall into thinking that way.

this whole thing kinda reminds me of those Twitter threads of people in the 50's and 60's who looked like old men in their early thirties, people just seemed to age faster back then

― frogbs

i got a picture of me at age 22 where i look twice that age. i look like i'm about to yell at some kids to tell them to get off my lawn. then i got a picture of me actually _at_ about twice that age, and i look, god, i look at least 60 in that one.

i got no idea how old i look now. i got no idea how old i _am_ now. i mean, i can give you a number. i can give you a couple of numbers. i went to a friend's birthday party a couple months ago. she was turning five. she's looking forward to retiring - she's eligible this year.

Most all of the songs I named date to the mid-late '60s; I'm guessing there was just so much happening so fast, a lot of these people felt prematurely old.

― clemenza

that's the thing, right? it gets graded on a curve. if i hang out with people my age, they don't see me as old, but mostly i don't hang out with people my age. the people i hang out with are younger than me _and getting younger_. transfem HRT will knock ten years off your age over the course of two years or so. do things change fast around me? fuck yes, things change fast. when it comes to transition, two years is a generation. i'm more than four years in and i've started aging forward again. candy darling was 29 when she died, "bored by everything. You might say bored to death." how old does she look in that famous picture?

Kate (rushomancy), Monday, 19 February 2024 21:34 (two months ago) link

I did not know the song "Class of '57" but I am picturing Charlotte as Charlotte from Sex and the City.

Sort of reminds me of my favorite Dylan line, "some are mathematicians, some are carpenters' wives," though I think it works better as a single line than as an entire song.

Lily Dale, Monday, 19 February 2024 23:27 (two months ago) link

Probably why the Statlers haven’t won a Nobel

Beyond Goo and Evol (President Keyes), Monday, 19 February 2024 23:37 (two months ago) link

Marmalade’s “Reflections Of My Life” seems to fit, though like “Heart of Gold” and several other examples, it definitely feels like it swings between old man POV (“all my sorrows/sad tomorrows/take me back/to my old home”) and young man perspective (all the “changing” and “rearranging” the singer is doing of his life). It actually has two singers, with one sounding older than the other. Anyway, neither band member who wrote it was older than 25 at the time.

gjoon1, Monday, 19 February 2024 23:54 (two months ago) link

the class of what, '09? did the class of '09 have dreams? come to think of it '09 was my 15 year reunion.

i don't know. i don't think i can look at '94 and see a bunch of young people who had big dreams. i mean i had 'em. they were pissant dreams, though.

Kate (rushomancy), Tuesday, 20 February 2024 00:11 (two months ago) link

I wonder if any of the class of 57 had dreams of being Country Music artists, cause that seemed to work out for a few of them

Beyond Goo and Evol (President Keyes), Tuesday, 20 February 2024 00:56 (two months ago) link

Libba Cotten - "Freight Train" age 11

When I'm dead and in my grave
No more good times here I crave
Place the stones at my head and feet
And tell them all I've gone to sleep

When I die, Lord bury me deep
Down at the end of old Chestnut Street
So I can hear old Number Nine
As she comes rolling by

citation needed (Steve Shasta), Tuesday, 20 February 2024 04:19 (two months ago) link

Great revive…

I think people in their mid-20s are often more nostalgic for childhood/teen years than older folks

R.E.M.’s “Catapult” to thread

Sony's Sports Walkman Universe (morrisp), Tuesday, 20 February 2024 04:32 (two months ago) link

some are mathematicians, some are carpenters' wives

When I first heard Tangled up in Blue around age 16 it struck me as very much what it might feel like to look back at your life at 35, and by 35 I’d realized it was pretty accurate. A song about aging that is pitched very precisely! It captures a twisting path of memories where you can only see so far back and so far ahead.

bendy, Tuesday, 20 February 2024 04:42 (two months ago) link

Confession: For at least 30 years, I have harbored a secret curiosity about how many mathematicians are also carpenter's wives.

Like, it's perfectly plausible to be a mathematician who happens to be married to a carpenter. Even if one or the other are DIY hobbyists, as opposed to professional practitioners. I would be totally cool with an amateur mathematician married to a professional carpenter, or vice versa.

fleetwood macrame (Ye Mad Puffin), Tuesday, 20 February 2024 05:09 (two months ago) link

Many are confused about how such a life path got started.

bbq, Tuesday, 20 February 2024 09:02 (two months ago) link

they're an illusion anyway

corrs unplugged, Tuesday, 20 February 2024 09:38 (two months ago) link

"I think people in their mid-20s are often more nostalgic for childhood/teen years than older folks"

interesting topic and thread. I wonder if Simon Reynolds dealt with this phenomenon in Retromania (which I read when it came out but that was some time ago).

giraffe, Tuesday, 20 February 2024 11:57 (two months ago) link

agreed, great revive.

Tangled Up In Blue seemed vaguely Deep to me as a younger person, never one of my faves but I dug it. at 42, i find it a lovely mix of goofy Dylan shaggy-dog stuff and a near-magic encapsulation of this sense of having a personal Past. i bet it works whether you've moved around a lot, stayed in one place, become a carpenter's wife, whatever.

Still Crazy has less incident and it's not nearly the same kind of a Rorschach blot, but is so beautifully polished, especially the first verse. it gets at something.

not the one who's tryin' to dub your anime (Doctor Casino), Tuesday, 20 February 2024 12:04 (two months ago) link

Not quite the same thing, but I had always assumed Jimmy Buffett's "A Pirate Looks at Forty" was at least semi-autobiographical, but it turns out he recorded it age 27.

Josefa, Tuesday, 20 February 2024 15:24 (two months ago) link

Billy Stayhorn was 21 when he wrote Lush Life. It was a self fulfilling prophecy because he did become an alcoholic. It has the most depressing, world weary lyrics of any jazz standard i can think of and it shocked me when i learned how old he was when writing it.

bbq, Tuesday, 20 February 2024 22:01 (two months ago) link

Tangled Up In Blue seemed vaguely Deep to me as a younger person, never one of my faves but I dug it. at 42, i find it a lovely mix of goofy Dylan shaggy-dog stuff and a near-magic encapsulation of this sense of having a personal Past. i bet it works whether you've moved around a lot, stayed in one place, become a carpenter's wife, whatever.

otm

corrs unplugged, Wednesday, 21 February 2024 08:40 (two months ago) link

I love "Tangled Up in Blue," and in the regular world, Dylan being in his early 30s at the time would still count as young; in a pop music context, less so. Like another song I thought of and decided it was something different: Madonna's "This Used to Be My Playground" (she was 34).

clemenza, Wednesday, 21 February 2024 16:27 (two months ago) link

I'm going to posit that Madonna had been through a few things by the time she was 34.

Beyond Goo and Evol (President Keyes), Wednesday, 21 February 2024 16:31 (two months ago) link

She was tangled up in true blue.

clemenza, Wednesday, 21 February 2024 16:33 (two months ago) link

Lol clemenza

alpaca lips now (Ye Mad Puffin), Wednesday, 21 February 2024 16:46 (two months ago) link

I was just listening to Dion and the Belmonts singing “September Song” from 1960’s Wish Upon a Star album and thinking they sound much too young to sing those lyrics. But my benchmark of an appropriately grizzled performance is Willie Nelson’s 1978 recording and he was only 45 when that came out, which now seems a bit young for that death-haunted song.

o. nate, Wednesday, 21 February 2024 16:55 (two months ago) link

Willie Nelson is an interesting case. He was already old when most us were born, and he is apparently immortal.

When he was relatively young, and wrote "Crazy," dinosaurs still roamed the plains. It's a bit weird to see pictures of young Willie, because his brand and image have solidified so much into the one we know.

alpaca lips now (Ye Mad Puffin), Wednesday, 21 February 2024 17:05 (two months ago) link


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