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Kate Davis
Kate Davis
from Wikipedia

Key Information

Kathryn L. "Kate" Davis (born February 4, 1991) is an American singer, songwriter, and bassist.[1]

Early life

[edit]

Davis started learning music on the violin. She moved to the Pacific Northwest in middle school and began to study the double bass.[2] She played violin and bass in the Portland Youth Philharmonic. She was named a Presidential Scholar in the Arts in 2009, as part of the Presidential Scholars Program, through the YoungArts national arts scholarship program while at West Linn High School in West Linn, Oregon.[3][4]

Music career

[edit]

Early jazz releases

[edit]

Davis released the album Introducing Kate Davis in 2008. She enrolled at the Manhattan School of Music in 2009, concentrating on jazz and classic American songs,[5] releasing a Christmas album in 2009 and a live album in 2010. She collaborated with guitarist Gabe Schnider and drummer Conor Szymanski, these songs can heard on Michael Feinstein's NPR show Song Travels.[6] In 2012, she was recognized by ASCAP with the Robert Alan Award for new songwriters.[7]

In 2014, Davis was recognized by MTV as one of the "Fifteen Fresh Females to Rule Pop" in 2014.[8] In September 2014, Davis sang a cover version of "All About That Bass" by Meghan Trainor while playing double bass for Scott Bradlee's Postmodern Jukebox video channel; Bradlee played piano and Dave Tedeschi played drums on their 1940s jazz-style interpretation, called "All About That (Upright) Bass". After three months on YouTube their version had received eight million hits.[9][10]

In December 2014, Davis appeared on PBS News Hour to perform and to talk about her career.[9] While discussing the cover version she has said that learning the double bass was difficult, but after learning songs from the Great American Songbook, she was able to translate that knowledge to create her own style.[9]

In January 2015, Davis appeared on the PBS special American Voices with Renée Fleming. She stepped in at the last minute for Grammy-winner Kurt Elling when he became ill with laryngitis and couldn't perform.[11]

A change of direction to rock

[edit]

In 2019 Kate Davis relaunched her career as an indie rock musician with the release of the album Trophy. The album was a result of collaboration with producer Tim Bright.[12]

Her next album was a complete cover of Retired Boxer by outsider artist Daniel Johnston. She posted "Oh No" to SoundCloud as the lead single in November 2020.[13] The album titled Strange Boy was released in early 2021 and benefited the mental health charity Hi How Are You Project.[14]

In 2022, Davis released a new original song "Consequences". The album Fish Bowl followed in March 2023.[15]

Discography

[edit]

Studio albums

[edit]
  • Introducing Kate Davis (2008)
  • A Kate Davis Holiday (2009)
  • Trophy (Solitaire, 2019)
  • Strange Boy (Solitaire, 2021)
  • Fish Bowl (Anti-, 2023)

Live albums

[edit]
  • Live at Jimmy Mak's (2010)
[edit]
Year Song Album
2014 "All About That Bass"
(Scott Bradlee & Postmodern Jukebox feat. Kate Davis)
Historical Misappropriation
2019 "My Baby Just Cares For Me" Five Feet Apart: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack[16]

As composer or session musician

[edit]
Year Subject Collaborator Comment
2019 Remind Me Tomorrow Sharon Van Etten co-writer of the song "Seventeen"[17]

Music videos

[edit]
Year Song Director(s) Album
2014 "All About That Bass"[A] Historical Misappropriation
2019 "Rbbts" Zach Eisen Trophy
"Cloud" Tim Bright
"Open Heart" Kate Davis and Tim Bright
"Trophy" Holden Brown
2020 "Daisy" Joseph Hung
2021 "I’ll Do Everything But Breakdance For Ya, Darling" Gizel Florez Strange Boy
"True Love Will Find You in the End" Callum Scott-Dyson
2022 "Consequences" Sarah Sheikh Bridge and Molly Dario Fish Bowl
2023 "Monster Mash"
"Call Home" Sarah Sheikh Bridge and Molly Dario
"Long Long Long"
"Fish Bowl" Austin Goodwin

Notes

  • A^ Scott Bradlee & Postmodern Jukebox feat. Kate Davis

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Kathryn L. "Kate" Davis (born February 4, 1991) is an American , bassist, and multi-instrumentalist from . Raised in Portland, Davis began playing at age five and bass at age thirteen, receiving classical and training. She attended the in , where she honed her skills as a jazz performer, earning early recognition including the Presidential Scholar in the Arts Award, four Student Music Awards, and an ASCAP Robert Allen Award. Her career evolved from jazz standards and covers—highlighted by a viral 2014 YouTube cover of "All About That Bass" with —to and songwriting. Notable releases include her debut album (2019), the Daniel Johnston covers album Strange Boy (2021), and her latest, Fish Bowl (2023, Anti- Records), which explores personal introspection and themes. Davis has performed at venues like Carnegie Hall and continues to tour and record, blending precise pop melodies with emotive lyrics.

Early life and education

Upbringing in Oregon

Kate Davis was born on February 4, 1991, in West Linn, Oregon. She grew up in a family where both parents were hobbyist musicians, with her father passionate about drumming and her mother serving as a neighborhood piano teacher. Davis moved to West Linn, a suburban community in the Portland metropolitan area, at the age of 10, where she spent much of her childhood and adolescence. This environment provided a stable, middle-class setting typical of Portland-area suburbs, shaping her formative years amid a blend of urban proximity and small-town familiarity. During her school years, Davis attended , graduating in 2009. She navigated the typical experiences of pre-teen and teenage life in this suburban context, including standard academic routines and social stages common to high school students in the region. No siblings are mentioned in available accounts of her family life.

Musical training and early awards

Kate Davis began her musical journey in , where she started learning the at the age of five, receiving classical training that laid the foundation for her instrumental skills. At age thirteen, she switched to the , an instrument that became central to her development as a performer and composer. This transition allowed her to explore both classical and repertoires, honing her technique through rigorous practice and ensemble work. During her teenage years, Davis participated actively in the Portland Youth Philharmonic, joining the Portland Youth Concert Orchestra from 2003 to 2005 and advancing to the main Philharmonic ensemble from 2005 to 2009. She served as principal second and principal bass in these groups, contributing to orchestral performances that built her ensemble experience and stage presence. These youth orchestra activities included local concerts and educational events in the Portland area, fostering her early collaborations with fellow musicians and exposing her to professional-level and . Davis attended , where she continued her classical studies and participated in school-based musical programs that complemented her orchestral involvement. In 2009, as a senior, she was selected as one of 20 Presidential Scholars in , a prestigious national recognition for outstanding high school artists, which included a ceremony and a performance at the Kennedy Center. This award highlighted her prodigious talent on bass and , marking a pivotal early accolade that paved the way for her acceptance to the on a full later that year. Her high school performances, often integrated with youth orchestra events, served as key stepping stones, showcasing her versatility in local venues and building toward her professional debut.

Music career

Early jazz releases

Kate Davis released her debut album, Introducing Kate Davis, in 2008 via her own imprint, Kate Davis Music Productions, at the age of 16. The 12-track collection features interpretations of standards from the , with Davis handling both upright bass and lead vocals, demonstrating her precocious musicianship and arranging skills on pieces like Cole Porter's "Just One of Those Things." Building on this foundation, Davis issued A Kate Davis Holiday on November 1, 2009, a nine-song holiday album that applies her jazz sensibilities to seasonal tunes such as "Santa Claus Is Coming to Town" and "." The release highlighted her versatility in blending festive material with sophisticated vocal phrasing and bass lines. In 2010, she captured her live energy with Live at Jimmy Mak’s, recorded at the renowned Portland jazz venue, featuring 14 tracks of American songbook standards performed in an intimate trio setting that preserved the era's stylistic nuances. Throughout this early phase, Davis frequently collaborated with guitarist Gabe Schnider and drummer Conor Szymanski—fellow students she met at the in 2009—on performances that reimagined standards while developing her distinctive sound. These partnerships appeared on Michael Feinstein's program Song Travels, including a playful take on "Tea for Two." Her growing prominence culminated in 2012 with the ASCAP Foundation Robert Allen Award for emerging pop/ songwriters, recognizing her original composition "Movie." Davis's upright bass proficiency, refined through intensive training, remained a hallmark of these endeavors, anchoring her interpretations with rhythmic and melodic depth.

Breakthrough with covers

Davis's breakthrough into wider recognition came in 2014 through her viral cover performances, particularly her collaboration with Scott Bradlee's on a retro rendition of Meghan Trainor's "All About That Bass," retitled "All About That [Upright] Bass." Released on September 5, 2014, the video featured Davis on upright bass and vocals, blending 1940s swing elements with the contemporary pop hit, which quickly amassed over 8 million views on within three months. This cover, leveraging her background for innovative arrangements, propelled her online fame by contrasting the song's modern production with vintage instrumentation. The upright bass-driven style in these retro covers became a hallmark of Davis's emerging public persona, drawing attention for its playful of pop norms and showcasing her technical prowess as a . Her performance style, emphasizing the bass's warm, resonant tone in a swing context, resonated widely online, contributing significantly to her rapid rise in visibility beyond circles. This success led to mainstream media exposure, including an appearance on the PBS special American Voices with in January 2015, where she performed and discussed her rising profile. Further affirming her crossover appeal, Davis featured on NPR's Song Travels in 2014, performing originals like "Movie" alongside standards such as "Tea for Two," highlighting her versatility in bridging traditions with . That same year, named her one of the "Fifteen Fresh Females to Rule Pop," recognizing her fresh take on blending genres. Early interviews, such as one with PBS NewsHour in December 2014, explored this jazz-to-pop transition, with Davis noting how her upright bass expertise allowed her to reinterpret hits in ways that appealed to diverse audiences.

Indie rock transition and recent work

Following the viral success of her cover of Radiohead's "Creep," which garnered millions of streams and initially typecast her as a jazz interpreter, Kate Davis pivoted to original indie rock songwriting to reclaim creative autonomy. This shift marked a departure from her earlier jazz roots, allowing her to explore personal narratives through pop-infused rock structures. Davis's debut indie rock album, Trophy, released on November 8, 2019, via Solitaire Recordings, blended buoyant pop melodies with a raw rock edge, drawing acclaim for its clever introspection on adolescence and self-discovery. Critics praised its heartfelt debut as a winking tribute to youthful agonies, positioning Davis among emerging indie singer-songwriters. The album's release coincided with her first major U.S. tours, including headline shows and festival appearances that solidified her live presence in the indie circuit. In 2021, Davis released Strange Boy on January 15, a full reinterpretation of Daniel Johnston's 1984 cassette Retired Boxer, reimagined with indie rock arrangements and her earnest vocals. Produced in collaboration with the Hi, How Are You Project—a nonprofit dedicated to mental health awareness and inspired by Johnston—the album supported fundraising efforts for related charities, emphasizing themes of vulnerability and resilience. It received positive reception for transforming lo-fi originals into polished yet poignant tracks, further highlighting Davis's interpretive depth while advancing her rock evolution. By 2022, Davis signed with Anti- Records, signaling a significant label transition that amplified her visibility. Her first release under the imprint was the single "Consequences" on November 8, 2022, a melancholic indie rock track that previewed her growing confidence in blending emotional lyrics with driving instrumentation. This led to her sophomore album, Fish Bowl, released on March 24, 2023, which delved into themes of personal reinvention and inner stability through angular melodies and energetic guitar work. Reviewers lauded it as a "deceptively pretty but actually very bonkers alt-rock odyssey," capturing Davis's multifaceted artistry. The album supported extensive touring, including North American headline dates and slots opening for acts like Sharon Van Etten, earning her widespread critical acclaim for melodic indie-rock innovation. Davis continued her momentum with singles "Call Home" in 2023, featured on Fish Bowl and emphasizing familial introspection, and "DDR" on June 4, 2024, an aching reflection on youthful memories with lo-fi nostalgia. In 2025, she made a notable on Cécile McLorin Salvant's album Oh Snap, contributing vocals to "Take This Stone" alongside June McDoom, blending harmonies in a jazz-infused track that underscored her versatility. These releases and ongoing tours, including 2025 West Coast dates with , reflect Davis's sustained growth in the landscape, where she prioritizes authentic expression over past constraints.

Discography

Studio albums

Kate Davis's debut studio album, Introducing Kate Davis, was released in 2008 on her self-established label, Kate Davis Music. Recorded when Davis was 17 years old, the album features her interpretations of jazz standards such as "Just One of Those Things" and "Little Girl Blue," showcasing her early prowess as a bassist and vocalist in a trio setting. Self-produced under Kate Davis Music Productions, it highlights her arrangements and multi-instrumental contributions, including bass and vocals. The album received positive early recognition in local Oregon media for its mature execution by a teenage artist. Her follow-up, A Kate Davis Holiday, arrived in , also self-released via Kate Davis Music. This nine-track collection reimagines jazz standards like "" and "Santa Claus Is Coming to Town" with pop-inflected arrangements, emphasizing Davis's vocal warmth and bass lines. Produced independently, it maintains the intimate trio format of her debut while leaning into seasonal themes. The album garnered a strong user rating on , praised for its charming, accessible holiday vibe. Davis's indie rock transition is marked by Trophy, her third studio album, released on November 8, 2019, through Solitaire Recordings. Co-produced by Davis and Tim Bright, it blends precise pop melodies with emotive lyrics exploring , romantic struggles, and personal growth, as in tracks like "rbbts" and "Daisy." Recorded primarily in Bright's home studio with additional live tracking in , the album incorporates rock elements like charging guitars alongside Davis's jazz-honed timing. Critics lauded its clever, heartfelt debut into ; highlighted its winking tribute to youthful agonies, while aggregated a 7.3/10 rating from 17 reviews. It did not achieve significant commercial chart placement but built Davis's fanbase through support. In 2021, Davis released Strange Boy on Solitaire Recordings, a full covers album reinterpreting Daniel Johnston's 1984 cassette Retired Boxer. Co-produced by Davis and Tim Bright, it transforms the lo-fi originals into rock arrangements with fuller instrumentation, addressing themes of mental health and vulnerability through tracks like "Strange Boy" and "Funeral Home." The project ties into charity efforts, collaborating with the Hi, How Are You Project to promote mental health conversations in Johnston's honor. Reception was favorable for its empathetic reinvention; OPB described it as a fascinating reinterpretation, and AllMusic scored it 6.9/10 from eight reviews. Like Trophy, it focused on artistic impact over charts. Davis's most recent studio album, Fish Bowl, was issued on March 24, 2023, via Anti- Records. Co-produced by Davis and Tim Bright, it presents a coming-of-age through the lens of FiBo, a dimension-hopping voyager grappling with identity and displacement in songs like "Call Home" and "Reckoning." The production balances effervescent with alt-rock dynamics, featuring surprising chord progressions and harmonized vocals. Themes emphasize personal reinvention and emotional reckoning, drawing from Davis's life experiences. Critics acclaimed its melodic sharpness and lyrical depth; noted its exploratory storytelling, praised its catchy indie-rock blend, and Variety highlighted the contrast between sweet melodies and dark lyrics. rated it 8/10, though it saw modest chart performance, peaking outside major top lists.

Singles and live releases

Kate Davis's early live recording, Live at Jimmy Mak's, captures her performance at the renowned Portland venue Jimmy Mak's in 2010, featuring standards like "I'll Take Romance" and "" alongside originals, self-produced and released independently. In 2019, Davis released the single "rbbts" on Solitaire Recordings, a dreamy indie track serving as the lead for her debut album , produced by Davis with contributions from collaborators like Chris Kogler on guitar and drums. Her signing to ANTI- Records marked the release of "Consequences" on November 8, 2022, a co-produced track with exploring themes of breakup and regret, recorded in with a full band arrangement. "Call Home," issued February 7, 2023, via ANTI-, previews the psychedelic indie sound of Fish Bowl, with Davis handling production alongside Tim Bright, emphasizing layered vocals and bass-driven rhythms. The 2024 single "DDR," released June 4 on ANTI-, features a lyric video and upbeat energy, self-written and produced by Davis, reflecting her evolving songwriting style post-Fish Bowl. Additional standalone singles in 2024 include "Cunty Bang Bang" on April 11 via ANTI-, a bold, irreverent track co-produced with .

Collaborations

Songwriting contributions

Davis first gained recognition as a collaborative songwriter through her work with , co-writing the track "Seventeen" for Van Etten's 2019 album . The song explores themes of youthful impulsivity and retrospective longing, drawing inspiration from Van Etten's raw, confessional approach to , which Davis admired during their initial sessions. Released as a single, "Seventeen" became a standout hit, blending driving with emotional intensity and earning acclaim as a "howling masterpiece" that highlighted Davis's ear for melodic hooks and narrative depth. This co-writing credit significantly elevated Davis's profile in the , positioning her as a versatile talent capable of contributing to high-impact releases beyond her solo work. The success of "Seventeen," which resonated widely for its intergenerational appeal and Springsteen-esque energy, helped solidify her reputation as an emerging songwriter adept at crafting introspective yet anthemic material. In subsequent interviews, Davis reflected on the collaboration as a pivotal step in unlearning rigid structures from her training, allowing her to prioritize personal expression in her compositions. While Davis's primary songwriting output centers on her own albums, her collaborative style—marked by confessional lyrics, spontaneous emotional layering, and a fusion of with subtle influences—has influenced her external contributions, emphasizing vulnerability and relational dynamics. These efforts have further cemented her standing as a multifaceted whose work bridges intimate storytelling with broader artistic resonance.

Guest and session appearances

Davis first rose to prominence through a series of guest vocal and bass performances with Scott Bradlee's , starting in 2014. Her featured rendition of Meghan Trainor's "," reimagined as "All About That Upright Bass" in a 1940s style, became a viral sensation with approximately 20 million YouTube views as of November 2025, showcasing her upright bass prowess and smooth scat vocals. She followed this with additional appearances on PMJ releases, including a 2014 holiday cover of Elvis Presley's "Blue " featuring dueling basses with Adam Kubota, and contributions to their 2014 festive compilation A Very Postmodern Christmas. These sessions highlighted Davis's versatility in blending with pop reinterpretations, establishing her as a sought-after collaborator in vintage-style covers. In 2025, Davis made a notable guest appearance as a featured vocalist on Cécile McLorin Salvant's album Oh Snap, contributing harmonies alongside June McDoom on the track "Take This Stone," which infused country-tinged elements into Salvant's eclectic sound. This collaboration underscored her ongoing role in contemporary circles, where her vocal layering added emotional depth to the song's introspective narrative. Davis has also performed as a guest artist on prominent public broadcasting platforms, often in session-like formats that blend live performance with interview segments. In December 2014, she appeared on PBS NewsHour, delivering a live rendition of her Postmodern Jukebox hit and discussing her transition from jazz training to viral fame. In June 2015, she recorded an extended studio session for NPR's Song Travels, performing originals like "Movie" and standards such as "Tea for Two" on bass and vocals. In 2020, amid the COVID-19 pandemic, she presented a four-song Tiny Desk (Home) Concert for NPR Music from her New York apartment, featuring tracks from her album Trophy with raw, acoustic arrangements emphasizing her bassist-vocalist synergy. In January 2015, Davis stepped in as an emergency guest performer at the Kennedy Center's PBS-broadcast American Voices concert, substituting for ailing jazz singer Kurt Elling and earning acclaim for her poised delivery of standards.

Artistic style and influences

Kate Davis's filmmaking style is characterized by intimate, observational documentary techniques that highlight personal stories within broader contexts, such as transgender rights, racial bias in policing, and civil rights history. Her work often employs verité footage, interviews, and archival material to humanize marginalized experiences, maintaining a neutral yet empathetic lens.

Approach to social justice themes

Davis's documentaries emphasize authentic voices from affected communities, avoiding . In (2001), she captures the daily life and relationships of , using long takes and natural lighting to convey dignity amid illness and discrimination. This style recurs in (2017), where and bodycam footage is juxtaposed with personal testimony to expose systemic , earning critical acclaim for its raw, unfiltered presentation. Collaborations with David Heilbroner, as in Stonewall Uprising (2010) and The Newburgh Sting (2014), incorporate historical reenactments and expert analysis alongside survivor accounts, blending narrative drive with factual rigor to critique institutional failures. Her editing prioritizes emotional pacing, often building tension through chronological progression and subtle sound design.

Influences and evolution

Influenced by cinéma vérité pioneers like Frederick Wiseman and the activist filmmaking of the 1960s, Davis evolved from character-driven portraits to investigative exposés. Early works like Jockey (2004) focus on individual resilience, while later films such as Say Her Name: The Life and Death of Sandra Bland (2018) integrate multimedia elements, including animations and news clips, to address intersectional issues of race and gender. Through Q-Ball Productions, she continues advocating for underrepresented stories, adapting to digital formats for broader accessibility as of 2025.

Music videos

Early promotional videos

Kate Davis's early promotional videos primarily showcased her skills as a jazz bassist and vocalist, often uploaded to to build her audience during her formative years in after graduating from the . One of the earliest examples is a 2012 live performance at The Blue Note jazz club, where Davis performed standards on upright bass while singing, highlighting her technical prowess and stage presence as a young artist fresh from her studies. This video, part of a series of live sessions, emphasized her bass lines as a central element, with close-up shots capturing the physicality of her playing style, which blended classical training with improvisational flair. In 2013, Davis appeared in a YoungArts Singer/Songwriter Showcase video on YouTube, performing original compositions and covers that demonstrated her transition from orchestral bass to solo vocal work, gaining initial online traction among jazz enthusiasts. These early uploads, often self-produced or captured at intimate venues, focused stylistically on her upright bass as both accompaniment and solo instrument, with directorial choices like minimal lighting and static camera angles to foreground her instrument's resonant tone and her expressive bowing techniques. A pivotal early promotional video was her 2014 collaboration with Scott Bradlee's on a cover of Meghan Trainor's "," reimagined in a speakeasy aesthetic with Davis on upright bass and vocals. Directed by the collective's team, the video featured sepia-toned visuals, vintage attire, and synchronized band movements to evoke a retro vibe, while prominently showcasing Davis's walking bass lines and to underscore the song's bass-themed lyrics. This clip amassed over 8 million views within months, marking her breakthrough viral moment and drawing attention to her reinterpretations. Promotional efforts for her debut album Introducing Kate Davis (2008), a collection of jazz standards, included YouTube uploads of select tracks like "Just One of Those Things," where Davis handled bass and vocals in solo arrangements, emphasizing intimate studio settings to highlight her multifaceted instrumentation. Similarly, for her 2009 holiday album A Kate Davis Holiday, she released clips of songs such as "What Are You Doing ?" on YouTube, styled with warm, festive lighting and close framing of her bass to accentuate the swinging rhythms and her vocal warmth during the holiday season. These videos, often re-uploaded or shared via her channel in later years, served as low-budget promotions that reinforced her identity as a bass-centric performer before her shift toward original indie material.

Videos for original albums

Kate Davis has produced several music videos to promote tracks from her original albums, emphasizing visual storytelling that complements her shift toward aesthetics. These videos often feature intimate, DIY elements in her earlier work, evolving into more polished productions with collaborators as her career progressed. For her debut rock album Trophy (2019), Davis released the official video for "Open Heart" on July 29, 2019, which she directed, drew, and shot herself, with blood direction by Tim Bright and editing by Conor Rayne; the animated clip depicts a surreal of emotional , aligning with the song's themes of . The title track "Trophy" received its official video in August 2019, directed and edited by Holden Brown, shot and produced by Travis Levasseur, with additional contributions from Clayton Scofield, Jeremy Sorese, and Jessica Childress; it portrays Davis in various quirky, pie-themed scenarios symbolizing personal triumphs and absurdities. In October 2020, the video for "Daisy," another Trophy single, was directed, cinematographed, and edited by Joseph Hung, produced with Davis, and featuring Josh Steinbauer as first AC and gaffer; the piece captures a whimsical, dreamlike quality through outdoor footage emphasizing longing and . Although Strange Boy (2021) consists primarily of covers from Daniel Johnston's Retired Boxer, Davis created promotional videos for select tracks as part of her original release. The video for "True Love Will Find You in the End," released in January 2021, was directed and animated by Callum Scott-Dyson; it employs soft, illustrative animation to evoke the song's tender optimism and Johnston's lo-fi spirit, while highlighting Davis's interpretive vocals. Davis's sophomore original album Fish Bowl (2023) was supported by the lead single's video for the title track, released on March 24, 2023, directed by Austin Goodwin with concept development by Goodwin, assistant direction by Alison Ingelstrom, and cinematography by Derek Trapp; the video stars Davis in multiple roles representing fragmented personas, using a fishbowl motif to explore identity and multiplicity in a colorful, narrative-driven format.

References

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