2025 In Review (Also Cool's Top Albums)

 

Listen along with the official Sounds Cool 2025 playlist!

Available on YouTube and Spotify below.

1tbsp - Hotel Living (sumoclic)

Australian producer and DJ 1tbsp has taken over just about every DJ’s USB this year. With easy bangers like “Rush (Missing Out On Me)” featuring cherry chola and Purient, or freaky genre-blurring tracks like “Isso” featuring MC Pânico, the EP firmly takes its place at the function. 

— Malaika Astorga 


Bassvictim - Forever (VOTB)

​A euphoric crystallisation of friendship, Bassvictim’s Forever expands the duo’s sonic world in tandem with this year’s breakout success. “27a Pitfield” takes you by the hand, running through a field of someone else’s memories, leading you into a stubborn reflection on friendship and time passing with “Grow Up!!!”. If the 2010s flavour of electroclash is truly back, “Final Song” encapsulates it, with an anthemic feeling that can only be compared to rubbing a sugar cube on your tongue. 

— Malaika Astorga


BENEE - Ur an Angel I’m Just Particles (Republic Records)

BENEE’s long-anticipated Ur an Angel I’m Just Particles feels like a collection of thoughts, drifting in with a bouncy, alt-pop sparkle before settling into moments of deeper introspection. True to the nature of a sophomore album, however, the core of BENEE’s identity is unmistakably present. There is a cinematic quality to the record, the kind that feels like a coming-of-age soundtrack, with “Doomsday” filling the slot for the scene when the main character is forced to confront themselves. “Cinnamon” and “Sad Boii” have that classic pop lightness BENEE does best. Even while the album as a whole resists a perfectly linear flow, BENEE’s voice remains a steady through-line. Her vocals make the songs less fragmented and more like emotional snapshots, written across the three-year period it took to create and release Ur an Angel I’m Just Particles. The result is an album that mirrors looking at your own memories, perhaps something you want to keep coming back to with a soft sense of fondness.

— Minou de Lang


cootie catcher - Shy at first (Cooked Raw) 

“Proficient in the realm of smart pop akin to The Moldy Peaches and (Sandy) Alex G, Toronto’s cootie catcher [shares] Shy at First, a melange of earnest deadpan vocals, college rock instrumentation, crochet tutorial samples and field recordings finessed with a melancholic indietronica flare.” 

— Zoë Argiropulos-Hunter, Playlist Refresh, March 21st, 2025 


Das Beat - Frau Fatal (Arbutus Records)

Our favourite Berlin duo released their first full-length album Frau Fatal this year. Veering from dance bangers to emotional ballads, the album keeps us dancing from start to finish. Theatrical, steeped in mystery and mischief, the album merges contemporary pop with nods to new wave, EBM, indie rock, and Italo disco. Burning and brazenly dramatic, it dances on the edge of the timeline, laying its emotions bare as it explores themes of romance, depression, casual dating, and fast-paced city life. 

— Malaika Astorga


Deftones - private music (Reprise Records)

Ten albums deep, Deftones delivered yet another masterpiece in 2025. Sometimes when bands blow up on TikTok years after their initial burst of fame, it’s hard to know how they’ll ride the wave. Despite the obnoxious “Deftones used to be for dudes who love shoegaze, not alt teenage girls on TikTok,” rhetoric, it’s undeniable that the band has been launched into what might be the height of their popularity – 25 years after the release of their best-selling album. Deeply emotional, droning and concise, private music plugs us all back into their gorgeous abyss of sound.

— Malaika Astorga


Florence Adooni - A.O.E.I.U. (Philophon)

On her debut album A.O.E.I.U., Florence Adooni moves graciously through Ghanaian highlife, jazz, funk, and spiritual expression, grounding it all in the energy of live performance. Rather than pushing across a message, Adooni invites you in. This feeling is captured perfectly with the line “just listen up and close your eyes,” which feels less like instruction, and more like a natural instinct. The music arrives with warmth, and a general sense of open-hearted joy. “Otoma da naba,” meaning “The creator has done well,” sits at the center of the record, combining a powerful, immense groove with subtly futuristic touches, carried forward by a funky bassline. It’s here that the spirit of the album comes together in its full celebratory nature. For anyone drawn to spiritual music, or Ghanaian highlife specifically, A.O.E.I.U. offers an inviting and accessible entry point.

— Minou de Lang 


Geese - Getting Killed (Partisan Records) 

Everyone is talking about this record. Your favourite college radio DJ, your best friend… Admittedly, a guy has probably talked at you about it on a first date… The point is, we have all been united by the ubiquity that is 2025’s most compelling “rock” record, Getting Killed by Brooklyn’s Geese. Though at its worst being described as Gen-Z Phish, and at its best comparing frontman Cameron Winter to Bob Dylan, what remains clear is that the reverence for the jam band has made an unexpected comeback in the year 2025, with a totally disarming, fascinating sound. Our heartstrings have been mangled by a lyricist younger than our younger brothers. The future is bright. 

— Zoë Argiropulos-Hunter


Ivri - The Theory of You (ivsounds)

Clocking in at just under thirty minutes, this album slips in quietly and unfolds like a night spent inside someone else’s dream, disappearing just as fast. The songs move quickly from start to finish, creating a flip-book effect that feels fleeting in the moment, but strangely permanent once it's over. The recording feels deeply personal, almost private, close and unguarded. Ivri has a rare ability to build soft, magical worlds out of intimate ideas and transport us into a dream space that feels both fragile and unforgettable. By the time it ends, it’s already gone, but the feeling lingers and settles somewhere familiar.

— Minou de Lang


Jane Remover - Revengeseekerz (deadAir Records)

Revengeseekerz digs its hands into a world of chopped up digital noise, pulling out an earnest embodiment of growing up online and deep nostalgia as a defence against the world. The album feels like a corecore edit of samples and chronically online music knowledge, with Jane Remover kicking and screaming their way into the music scene. Despite the chaos, there are moments of vulnerability, with themes of personal expansion and a desire to be loved scattered throughout the tracks.

— Malaika Astorga


Maria Somerville - Luster (4AD)

“Its lyrical imagery is viscous, and at times nebulous—harkening back to natural wonders at every scale—but Somerville cleverly adapts these narratives. “This world will break your heart / I know not to know now,” she sagely opines on the hushed “Corrib” (named for County Galway’s freshwater lake). Somerville sinks into “Violet” with another limber tableau: ‘Hearts and mind, the sea of change / Veils of vision, offshore birds.’ Though thematically anchored to the musician’s surroundings, the album breathes musings fit for any terrain.”

— Rebecca Judd, Maria Somerville Conjures Echoes to Shore with "Luster,” May 1st, 2025


Oklou - choke enough (True Panther Sounds)

While early reviews of choke enough have alluded to monotony, French art-pop artist Oklou’s restraint reads instead as elegance – an intentional chapter sealed within its own breath. choke enough marks a sterling debut from a storied talent, a narrative that sands itself down until spectre remains. The musing of “blade bird” arrests listeners as they peer through a fogged peephole at love being given space to expand on its own terms. And though “viscus (feat. FKA twigs)” waited to emerge until the deluxe version, its quiet destruction delivers a kind of symmetry – pittering synths like darting eyes recount anxiety rendered corporeal, as two voices breathe into each other before twigs takes the floor. In lineage with artists like Caroline Polachek, Oklou offers hermetic poetry – water that rests at the edge of the glass, its fractal grace suggesting marked evolution.

— Rebecca Judd


Pearly Drops - The Voices Are Coming Back (Music Website)

“Across the album’s eleven tracks, Pearly Drops build an impressionistic pop realm steeped in their delicate yet slightly macabre tradition. Tervonen’s marbled cooing swells and tenses, ruminating with an air that is equal parts anguished and curious. The songs move with the steady pulse of alternative rock, lit from within by an almost-sacred electronic glow. Described by the band as a piece of ‘autofiction,’ The Voices Are Coming Back braids idealism with the mundane, folding the Hollywood dream into something more psychological – the narrative becomes less about a destination than an emotional mirage, its story shaped by a tormented exchange of fantasy and fear.”

— Rebecca Judd, interview: Pearly Drops Trace the Glitches of Perfection on "The Voices Are Coming Back,” December 6th, 2025


PinkPantheress - Fancy That (Warner Records)

Unapologetically lusty, Fancy That sees PinkPantheress’ trademark concision induce the most pleasant kind of whiplash. The UKG-forward mixtape drags the Y2K microtrend by its extension-clad wig and somehow keeps things feeling fresh, stitching Panic! At The Disco, Basement Jaxx and assorted pop ephemera together with youthful curiosity. “Tonight” is the tape’s flashpoint – synthetic, bold, and giggly, with Pink throttling toward desire like she’s two steps ahead. Although the companion release Fancy Some More? landed with a bit less clarity, Zara Larsson’s “Stateside” remix worked like a midnight sun, keeping Fancy That on everyone’s lips into Q4.

— Rebecca Judd


Ribbon Skirt - Bite Down (Mint Records) 

2025 is the year of Ribbon Skirt: two albums, one Polaris Prize short-list nomination, an extensive North American tour and a KEXP special. Reemerging under a new name—signalling a shift in approach, sound and spirit—the Montreal band released their debut long-player Bite Down and follow-up EP PENSACOLA this year on Vancouver label Mint Records. The former, produced by Scott “Monty” Monroe (Preoccupations) and Marlaena Moore, is a striking collection of urgent, raw and poetic reflections on identity, grief, tokenism and survival from lead singer, guitarist and songwriter Tashiina Buswa’s Anishinaabe perspective. Co-written with Buswa’s long-time creative partner Billy Riley, Bite Down resonates for its sonic and lyrical agility, cascading between engrossing noise and prickly stillness. 

— Zoë Argiropulos-Hunter


Sam Gellaitry - ANYWHERE HERE IS PERFECT (Major Recordings/Warner Records)

Colourful and euphoric, ANYWHERE HERE IS PERFECT finds Sam Gellaitry pushing his synesthesia-fuelled electronics to fully funkified heights. Opener “LIGHTNING” lands with orchestral urgency, snapping the listener into shape before the record melts into futuristic disco grooves. “CURIOUS,” the coy, eyelash-batting duet with Toro y Moi, sees the pair spin their softer touches into something weightless – letting ease become the flex. Gellaitry’s layered vocals carry a buttery R&B swagger, especially on slow burns like “RESTORE MY FAITH,” where sultriness gives way to something more reflective. With one foot in bass-heavy ’70s slickness and the other in gleaming digital futurism, Gellaitry turns Uber lingo into something surprisingly loaded with feeling.

— Rebecca Judd


Scarlet Rae - No Heavy Goodbyes (Bayonet Records)

An EP born out of grief, an exploration of life after death – No Heavy Goodbyes is NYC-based artist Scarlet Rae’s ode to her late sister Lucy, offering a contemplation on how to keep moving ahead through a fog of spiritual confusion. This collection is highly recommended for fans of Elliot Smith, My Bloody Valentine, and anyone dealing with loss. 

— Malaika Astorga 


Smerz - Big city life (Escho) 

Norwegian duo Catharina Stoltenberg and Henriette Motzfeldt, AKA Smerz, are at the forefront of cool girl Scandi avant-pop. The pair’s sophomore album Big city life is a post-modern hopscotch game of downtempo annotations on the Zillenial lifestyle. With its diary entry cadence, Stoltenberg and Motzfeldt share stoic, yet sincere, tales of post-20s malaise, lacklustre encounters, bitter fizzlings out and the dizziness of a crush becoming more. While the album conceptually draws from the hum of the concrete jungle, Big city life doesn’t get bogged down by the platitudes of the city grind. Rather, Stoltenberg and Motzfeldt’s chunky, saturated synths and slinky, effortless electro frill make for an innovative and contemporary portrait of a girl in the city

— Zoë Argiropulos-Hunter


Tony Price - Street Theatre (Maximum Exposure Inc.) 

“Alongside an ensemble of various equipment, from synthesizers and mixers to a trusty Ableton Push, Price takes cues from the monolithic influences of midwestern house and Motor City techno to interlace metallic beatwork and shadowy rhythms with the whispers and sweet nothings from his Street Theatre cast of acapella vocal samples.” 

— Zoë Argiropulos-Hunter, Meet Tony Price: Nighttime Connoisseur, Greektown Businessman and Media Archivist, May 22nd, 2025


Turnstile - NEVER ENOUGH (Roadrunner Records)

Sometimes, the right hardcore bands get the budget they deserve. This album, both visually and sonically, redefines what a rollout for a hardcore indie band should be. NEVER ENOUGH is accompanied by an hour-long movie, showcasing each of the album’s songs in gorgeous cinematic detail. We’re carried from Holy Mountain-inspired dream sequences of hardcore shows, to the streets of Baltimore, by anthems of self-determination:“There is no authority but yourself.”

Malaika Astorga


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2023 in Review (Also Cool's Top Albums)

 

2023 in Review - Also Cool’s Top Albums

Listen along with the official Sounds Cool 2023 playlist!

100 gecs - 10,000 gecs

100 gecs - 10,000 gecs (Dog Show, Atlantic Records)

Can an album be both cohesive and chaotic? 100 gecs defend their reign as hyperpop harbingers, bringing feral music into the mainstream. Starting off strong with a THX sample, “Dumbest Girl Alive” screams into the void with relatable–yet questionable–choices, like texting people back that you should probably leave on read. 

The throughline is glitchy, punky, technicoloured rage, sometimes with an in-your-face attitude, and sometimes more laissez-faire. “757” is a barrage of party-anthem lyrics, while “The Most Wanted Person in the United States” gives more of a “I guess I’m a serial killer or something” attitude.

Overall great listen if you’re okay with being overstimulated. Read our review of their show with Machine Girl here.


Alice Longyu Gao - Let’s Hope Heteros Fail, Learn, and Retire

Alice Longyu Gao - Let’s Hope Heteros Fail, Learn, and Retire

Unphased, unapologetic and unfiltered, Alice Longyu Gao’s breakthrough album Let’s Hope Heteros Fail, Learn, and Retire opens with one of the greatest lyrics of all time, “Imagine a world with no heteros.” Hot off the heels of her first world tour, the NYC-based wildcard and self-proclaimed CEO of ALG enterprises is delightfully impossible to keep up with on Let’s Hope. A bombastic concoction of hyperpop (understatement), industrial metal, EDM and flirtations with pop punk and sometimes dinner theatre-esque polka, Longyu Gao’s Let’s Hope makes one thing clear: gender is just as real as genre (it’s not).


Blonde Redhead - Sit Down for Dinner

Blonde Redhead - Sit Down for Dinner (Section1) 

NYC avant-rock trio Blonde Redhead gifted listeners Sit Down for Dinner this past September after a five-year marinade. Beguiling yet humble, tormented yet sexy, Sit Down for Dinner marks the band’s first release in nearly a decade, and perhaps their most genuine musings to-date. This balancing act is translated elegantly in the band’s live rendition of Sit Down for Dinner, with an evident chemistry that can be best described as the kind of mind-reading that comes from powerful creative kinship. 


Club Casualties - Bridge Under Water 

Club Casualties - Bridge Under Water 

This was easily one of our most listened-to albums of the year. Club Casualties is the joint project of LUCY (Cooper B. Handy) and Nick Atkinson, with Bridge Underwater being their second full-length album. The project provides a more dance-centric take on the duo's independent musical identities, while still highlighting their vocal-focused approach. The album also includes collaborative tracks with God's Wisdom, Mal Devisa, Sen Morimoto, and thoughtfully-layered vocals from both Nick and Cooper. 

Bridge Under Water feels like biking home after a summer evening that may or may not have impacted the direction your life is taking. The album is best listened to start-through-finish via Apple headphones.


Debby Friday - GOOD LUCK

Debby Friday - GOOD LUCK (Sub Pop) 

Not to brag, but we’ll note here that we have it on the record that Debby Friday’s GOOD LUCK was ranked one of our most-anticipated albums of 2023 before its release and Polaris Prize win: 

“On ‘So Hard To Tell’, Friday subdues her metallic, industrial-punk foundations to unveil raw, reflective and luminous R&B by allowing her unmodified singing voice to surface. [...] Upon first listen, the dynamism of ‘So Hard To Tell’ made Friday’s GOOD LUCK one of our most-anticipated albums of the year (yes, already!).”

(Also Cool Playlist Refresh, January 21st, 2023) 


Jordan Gardner - Rhythm Acceleration

Jordan Gardner - Rhythm Acceleration (CRSL)

If you go out dancing in Montreal, you’ve probably seen Jordan Gardner on at least one DJ lineup – whether it be at Datcha, Système, or an underground rave. Rhythm Acceleration is his first EP, drawing on rhythmic inspiration from the UK, Detroit, Chicago, and his many years in the field (AKA in the club). The album also features Montreal party scene staple Martyn Bootyspoon, who provides fiery vocals to “Rhythm Acceleration.”

The album’s sound is across the board party-ready, but draws inspiration from the spiritual unification that occurs on the dance floor, the ubiquitous pulse of Maori Hakka, and the the legacy of the Maroons, a revolutionary group in Jamaica that rebelled against the British colonists who enslaved them. Also Cool’s standout track, “Celine Dior,” is inspired by Gardner’s love for fashion, Chicago house music, and dancehall.


La Sécurité - Stay Safe!

La Sécurité - Stay Safe! (Mothland) 

Interview with La Sécurité by Rebecca L. Judd (June 15th, 2023):

“From the arresting synths of debut track ‘Suspens’ to the domineering bass line of ‘Serpent,’ the band has set a standard of heightened sonic volatility, and the remainder of the record continues that thrill. Stay Safe! provokes the senses with its bilingual musings and jagged new-wave arrangements, traversing between subjects like flirtation and bodily autonomy with the same crafty cool. “


Lil Yachty - Let’s Start Here.

Lil Yachty - Let’s Start Here. (Motown Records, Quality Control Music)

Rap-rock has picked up in popularity lately, and is easy to get wrong. Lil Yachty, however, brings a beautiful, elevated take on the genre, enlisting the likes of Alex G, Unknown Mortal Orchestra’s Jake Portrait, and Daniel Caesar, as writers on the project. There’s no misdirected angst, but rather careful consideration of the blending of genres and evolution of his sound.

We had the opportunity to see Lil Yachty perform live with his band earlier this year. The show’s production was excellent, with his live band all equally highlighted and clearly appreciated on stage. Lil Yachty performed flawlessly, providing an interlude featuring all his top hits, and then returning to the second half of the album to close out the show. Overall the album was unexpected, and one that’s easy to return to for deeper listening, or for a casual addition to your psych-indie-rap-rock playlist. 


Nabihah Iqbal - DREAMER

Nabihah Iqbal - DREAMER (Ninja Tune) 

With her sophomore studio album DREAMER, English musician, producer, DJ, broadcaster and curator Nabihah Iqbal reimagines her approach to music to overcome creative burnout. Conceived in its earliest forms on harmonium and guitar after her studio—and DREAMER’s buddings—were burglarized, Iqbal’s anticipated return transverses spacey dream sequences with 80s synth pop sensibility. For fans of A.R. Kane and Broadcast, look no further.  


No Waves - Postcard

No Waves - Postcard (Stomp Records)

Montreal’s punk scene sweethearts No Waves shared their first EP this year after signing with Stomp Records. The album is a compilation of songs written from when they were teenagers, and thematically is as emo as you can get. Postcard covers everything from the feeling you get when life starts to change a little too quickly to hometown angst. The obvious sonic comparisons are Surf Curse, Joy Again, and FIDLAR, but the band pulls inspiration from CRABE, LUCY (Cooper B Handy), ultra-pop hits, hyperpop and the Mexican punk scene.

Listen to our podcast episode with No Waves to learn more about the band, their inspiration, and Postcard.


Sasha Cay - Spin

Sasha Cay - Spin (Lighter Than Air) 

Spin is the striking debut record of Montreal born-and-raised indie rock singer-songwriter Sasha Cay. Recorded amongst friends in her bandmate’s home studio, Spin is a stunning, silvery portrait of vulnerable vignettes shared from Cay’s heavy heart. Between twinkling tunings and Cay’s hushed vocals, the songstress’ gritty inclinations shine through in both songwriting and sentiment. 


Turnstile & BADBADNOTGOOD - New Heart Designs

Turnstile & BADBADNOTGOOD - New Heart Designs (Dine Alone Records)

Hardcore-turned-jazz is an unexpected, but deeply appreciated, fusion of genres – especially when it comes from two of Also Cool’s favourite artists, Turnstile and BADBADNOTGOOD

Turnstile have always been arguably accessible as a hardcore band, drawing inspiration from classic hardcore song structures and indie rock sounds. It was a surprise to see them transform so elegantly with the help of BADBADNOTGOOD’s jazz fusion. However, for those of us who grew up going to BADBADNOTGOOD shows, you would know that although their music is pleasantly jazzy, there is almost always a moshpit IRL.

It’s the perfect album to get to know both bands, and stretches the boundaries of what a collaboration from two artists in very different genres can sound like.


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OSHEAGA 2022 - IDLES, Pinkpantheress, TURNSTILE Wet Leg and more!

 

via Osheaga

It's that time of year again; get your best festival outfits ready; Osheaga 2022 is back with an all-star lineup for its 15th anniversary edition. We have our selection of (what we think) are the coolest shows to go to.

Whether you're into hyper pop, hardcore, or feminist post-punk, this year's lineup has diverse acts that will keep you dancing all day long. Listen along to our playlist to get a taste of what to expect!

Ceréna via Osheaga

First up, we have Canadian sweethearts Luna Li, Sophia Bel, and Ceréna. 

Luna Li is a multi-instrumentalist based in Toronto, where we've been catching her shows since early 2016. She creates a hyper-lush universe with dreamy tunes that integrate a blend of pristine pop with psychedelic indie rock. 

Sophia Bel via Osheaga

Sophia Bel is Montreal's pop punk princess, inspired by divas of the 90s emo-rock. We caught her show earlier this summer at Foufounes Électriques, which you can check out here.

Ceréna (she/they) is an experimental dance-pop artist from Toronto, Canada. Their debut album launched off the platform and community she co-founded via Club Quarantine (read our Club Q interview here). 

Wet Leg via Osheaga

Next, we have Wet Leg and PinkPantheress, who took the internet by storm via the TikTok pandemic algorithms.

Wet Leg, whose debut album we covered here, is a post-punk band from Isla of Wight. Amidst a night of hazy scenes in their hometown, Rhian Teasdale and Hester Chambers found themselves at the summit of a Ferris wheel. They decided to start a band. The band is called Wet Leg. Arming themselves with guitars, a penchant for French disco, effervescent imaginations and a shared love of The Ronettes and Jane Birkin, through to Ty Segall and Bjork, they set about making some recordings of their own.

Pinkpantheress via Osheaga

Pinkpantheress is the 20-year-old London-based artist responsible for introducing Gen-Z to classic drum and bass beats. After using TikTok as a focus group for her songs and learning how to work the algorithm, she skyrocketed to internet fame with each new release. Although she's joked about her set only being 15 minutes long due to the short nature of her songs, her set is not one to miss.

Khruangbin will also be gracing the Osheaga stage with their wonderfully sparkly tunes. If there's ever a time to pretend you're at a concert in the 60s, living your best psychedelic life, it will be during this set. Khruangbin has always been multilingual, weaving far-flung musical languages like East Asian surf-rock, Persian funk, and Jamaican dub into mellifluous harmony. 

Khruangbin via Osheaga

Wrapping up with the loudest bands of the bunch, we have IDLES and TURNSTILE.

IDLES, the Bristol-based hardcore post-punk band, will play Sunday evening, closing the festival with a bang. Our personal favourites from their discography include Joy as an Act of Resistance, the band's second deeply passionate album that asks the listener to face themselves with brutal honesty.

IDLES via Osheaga

TURNSTILE, possibly one of our favourite bands, takes on the hardcore genre with a multitude of fresh influences and, most importantly, an incredible amount of kindness.

From the moment they hit the ground a decade ago, TURNSTILE have never stopped moving forward -- and they're sure as hell not about to look back. The Baltimore band, comprised of singer Brendan Yates, guitarists Brady Ebert and Pat McCrory, bassist Franz Lyons, and drummer Daniel Fang, immediately distinguished themselves from the pack with their infectious, aggressive punk fusion; their welcoming, satisfying live shows; and most importantly, their willingness to experiment. The only constant in the TURNSTILE universe, aside from love, is progression.

TURNSTILE via Osheafa

Osheaga runs from July 29th to 31st at Parc Jean-Drapeau in Montreal.

Get your tickets here.


Malaika Astorga is the Co-Founder & Creative Director of Also Cool. She is a Mexican-Canadian visual artist, writer, and social media strategist currently based in Montreal.


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