Akiko Suwanai (諏訪内 晶子 Suwanai Akiko, born February 7, 1972) is a Japanese classical violinist.
At the age of 18, she became the youngest winner of the International Tchaikovsky Competition in 1990. In addition, she was awarded second prize in the Paganini Competition and Queen Elisabeth Competition in 1989 and is a laureate of the Music Competition of Japan.
She has studied with Toshiya Eto at the Toho Gakuen School of Music, with Dorothy DeLay and Cho-Liang Lin at the Juilliard School of Music while at Columbia University, and with Uwe-Martin Haiberg at the Universität der Künste Berlin.
After graduating from Toho Girls High School Music School, she completed the Toho Gakuen University Solo Diploma Course.
Akiko Suwanai studied abroad at the Juilliard School of Music as an Agency for Cultural Affairs overseas dispatch . Also at Columbia University which is implementing the unit exchange system with the Juilliard School of Music, he studied the history of political thought.
In 1995, she completed her master's course at the Juilliard School of Music. She studied under Dorothy Delay at the same hospital .
She also learned at Berlin College of Art .
In 1981, she ranked No. 1 in the All Japan Student Music Competition (Elementary School Division, East Japan Tournament).
In 1985, she ranked No. 1 in the All Japan Student Music Competition (Junior High School Division, National Convention).
In 1987, she ranked No. 1 in the Japanese music competition .
In 1988, she was No. 2 in the Paganini International Competition .
In 1989, she was No. 2 in the Queen Elisabeth International Music Competition .
In 1990, at Tchaikovsky International Competition she ranked first (the youngest, the first Japanese, the championship of all the judges). At the same time, she won Bach's Best Performer Award and Tchaikovsky's Best Performer Award.
She currently plays the 1714 Dolphin Stradivarius, which is on loan from the Nippon Music Foundation.
Tomomi Nishimoto (西本智実) is a Japanese conductor.
Tomomi Nishimoto was born in Osaka, Japan on April 22, 1970. Her experience learning to play the piano from her mother at the age of three as well as her mother's musical influence is what fueled her interest to become a conductor in the future. After receiving her Bachelor of Music in Composition from Osaka College of Music in 1994, she was admitted to the Saint Petersburg State Conservatory.
Although she had the experience of conducting opera during her years in Osaka College of Music as a vice conductor, her formal conducting career started in 1998 with the Kyoto Symphony Orchestra. Since then she has conducted many famous Japanese orchestras and has received various awards, such as the Idemitsu Award (1999), St. Stanislav Medal (1999) and Sakuya Konohana Award (2000).
Her professional career in Russia started in 1999 when she conducted the Saint Petersburg Philharmonic. In 2002, she was appointed as the chief conductor of the Bolshoi Symphony Orchestra "Millennium". In addition, she has served as the principal guest conductor of the St. Petersburg Mussorgsky State Academic Opera and Ballet Theatre (2004–2006) and was also appointed as the Chief Conductor and Artistic Director for Russian Symphony Orchestra of the Tchaikovsky Foundation (2004–2007). In 2005, she conducted the first public performance of completion of Tchaikovsky’s unfinished Symphony "Life" that the Tchaikovsky Fund had commissioned.
Ayako Uehara (Uehara Ayako, July 30, 1980 ) is a Japanese pianist from Takamatsu city, Kagawa prefecture, raised in Kakamigahara city, Gifu prefecture. She graduated from Kakamigahara Municipal Naka Junior High School, Gifu Prefectural.
She began playing the piano at the age of 3, joined the Yamaha master class from 1990. She won the first prize at numerous competitions and became the first Japanese in the 12th Tchaikovsky International Competition Piano Division of 2002 and won the world's first victory as a woman, and she took up a topic not only in the classical music world but also in various fields.
She entered the music university and has a background of a different color as a Japanese pianist.
Since then, she has repeatedly collaborated with prominent orchestras around the world. Also, as a Japanese pianist, she has a record contract with EMI Classics for the first time.
Akiko Tomioka comes from Hyogo prefecture. She completed vocal music course at Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music and Master's course at the graduate school. She received the Akasaka Prize while she was in school, and won the Acanthus Prize / Voice Award at the time of graduation. She had scholarship to learn at the Palma Conservatoire in Italy from the Rom Music Foundation.
She won 2nd place in Flaviano · Rabo International Vocal Competition 2008, 2nd place in the 80th Japan Music Competition Vocal Music Section in 2011, and won many prizes at domestic and international competitions.
In the opera, she appeared at Mozart "Marriage of Figaro" at the Aya National Art Theater in 2004, and started with the role of Cherubinoat in the Parma Opera "Testigraph" Pesaro · Rossini Festival "Journey to Reims", Ozawa Seiji Music School and Saito Kinen Festival "Sequiller Doctor".
In July 2012, "Cavalleria · Rusticana" is her debut in the Tokyo Second Fair with Laura and also appeared in the partnership performance "Il Trovatore" Ines in the Tokyo Second session and the Palma Royal Opera in 2016. In June of the same year, in The Nikko Theater "The Barber of Seville "Rosina, she has gained a higher reputation drawed attention as a mezzo-soprano, and a soloist of religious songs and so on.
She has also performed with many more conductors and orchestras while studying abroad, especially Tokyo Philharmonic and Kyoiko.
Tokunaga Nioio (Tokuinaga Tsukio, November 20, 1946 -) is a Japanese violinist.
Born in Yokosuka city, Kanagawa Prefecture. My father is Violinist Shigeru Tokunaga and my older brother is Kenichiro Tokunaga. Following his father's gifted education, he also studied with Saburo Washimi. In 1958, when he was in elementary school sixth grade, he won first prize at the 12th All Japan Student Music Competition National Competition. Proceed to Toho Gakuen University music department, studied under Hideo Saito. In 1965, he won the third prize at the 34th Japan Music Competition.
In 1966, he joined the Tokyo Symphony Orchestra as the youngest concertmaster of Japan Rhythm History at that time. In 1968, he went to Berlin as an overseas trainee of the Agency for Cultural Affairs and studied under Michel Schwarbe. In 1974 he participated in the Tchaikovsky International Competition and received the Diploma Prize.
In 1976, he became a concertmaster of the NHK Symphony Orchestra. After that, he went on to become a solo concert master after a leading concert master. My brother, Kenichiro Tokunaga, a cellist, was also a member. In 1994, withdrawing.
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He is a music producer for the Miyazaki International Music Festival, a comprehensive producer, JT Art Hall Chamber Music series. Professor, Kunitachi College of Music, Professor at Toho Gakuen University, guest professor at Shoei Gakuen University. In 2016, the commissioner for the Agency for Cultural Affairs.
Junichi Hirokami (広上 淳一 , Hirokami Jun'ichi, born May 5, 1958) is a Japanese conductor.
Born in Tokyo, Hirokami studied conducting, piano, musicology, and viola at the Tokyo College of Music. He won the first Kondrashin International Conducting Competition in Amsterdam in September 1984 at age 26. One of the judges of that competition, pianist Vladimir Ashkenazy, then engaged Hirokami to conduct the NHK Symphony Orchestra on a tour of Japan with Ashkenazy in May 1985.
From April 2013, he became a visiting professor at Kyoto City Arts University.
In November 2016, he was awarded the 36th Arima Award for contributing to raising the voice of the NHK Symphony Orchestra with a great collaboration with excellent musicality and unique strong performances .
From April 2017, he became the Friendship Guest Conductor of the Sapporo Symphony Orchestra .
Ken-Ichiro Kobayashi is a Japanese conductor and composer. Born in Iwaki, Fukushima, Kobayashi's father was a high school music teacher, and mother was a primary school teacher. Kobayashi started composing music at the age of 11, studied composition and conducting under Mareo Ishiketa (composition), Kazuo Yamada (conducting), and Akeo Watanabe (conducting) at Tokyo University of the Arts.
Kobayashi won the 1st prize and the special award at the International Conductors Competition on Hungarian television in 1974. He has led orchestras in Germany, Austria, Britain, and Netherlands. Kobayashi has been resident conductor of the Tokyo Metropolitan Symphony Orchestra and Kyoto Symphony Orchestra. Kobayashi was appointed to the principal conductor of Japan Philharmonic Orchestra (1988–90), chief conductor (1990–94, 1997–2004), music director (2004–07) and conductor laureate since 2010.
Kobayashi served the principal guest conductor of the Kansai and Kyushu orchestras. He was general music director of Nagoya Philharmonic Orchestra from 1998 to 2001, music director from 2001 to 2003, is now appointed to the conductor laureate since 2003. Kobayashi was appointed to the special guest conductor of Yomiuri Nippon Symphony Orchestra in August 2011, appointed to the music director of Tokyo Bunka Kaikan in June 2012.
In Europe, Kobayashi served the principal conductor of Hungarian State Symphony (now Hungarian National Philharmonic) from 1987-97, and is now conductor laureate of the orchestra. Kobayashi was the first Asian conductor who had conducted Czech Philharmonic at the Prague Spring International Music Festival in 2002. He has held the regular guest conductorship with Czech Philharmonic. He was one of three conductors who primarily led the orchestra after the resignation of Gerd Albrecht from the chief conductorship orchestra in 1996 and before advent of Vladimir Ashkenazy in 1998.
In 2006, he became vaste dirigent ('permanent conductor') of Het Gelders Orkest of Arnhem, Netherlands. He is a former music professor of Tokyo University of the Arts(now holds the emeritus professorship), the emeritus professor of Tokyo College of Music and Franz Liszt Academy of Music.
Inoue Michiyoshi (December 23, 1946 -) is a conductor in Japan, a pianist. Passionate about the arts from a young age, Michiyoshi Inoue began piano lessons very early and studied ballet for ten years before deciding, at the age of fifteen, to pursue a career as a conductor. On entering the renowned Toho Gakuen School of Music, he studied under the late Hideo Saito, one of the country’s most prominent music scholars and mentor to conductors such as Seiji Ozawa, Hiroshi Wakasugi and Kazuyoshi Akiyama.
From 2007 to 2018, he was engaged as Artistic Adviser of the Ishikawa Ongakudo and as Music Director of the Orchestra Ensemble Kanazawa, with which he very successfully toured Europe in the summer of 2008. Also, from 2014 to 2018 he served as the Principal Conductor of the Osaka Philharmonic Orchestra.
Taijiro Iimori is one of Japan's most distinguished conductors, widely respected for his broad repertoire and particularly as a strong advocate of Wagner.
After receiving his musical training at the Toho Gakuen Junior College, Mr.Iimori made his opera debut with a production of Puccini's Suor Angelica by the Fujiwara Opera Company, thus beginning a career strongly associated to the world of lyric theatre. He went on to win prizes at the Dimitri Mitropoulos International Music Competition for Conductors (1966), and at the First Herbert von Karajan International Conducting Competition (1969).
Taijiro Iimori currently holds the positions of Artistic Director of Opera at New National Theatre Tokyo(NNTT), as well as Chief Conductor at the Sendai Philharmonic Orchestra, and Honorary Conductor Laureate at the Tokyo City Philharmonic Orchestra and the Kansai Philharmonic Orchestra.
As Principal Conductor at the Tokyo City Philharmonic Orchestra (a post he held from September 1997 to March 2012) and the Kansai Philharmonic Orchestra (from January 2001 to December 2010), he has been praised for his exciting programming in both cities. Highlights include a semi-staged version of Wagner's Ring Cycle and performances of the complete works of Beethoven. Also as Principal Conductor of the Nagoya Philharmonic (from April 1993 to March 1998), he earned the Agency for Cultural Affairs' 1996 Arts Award for a live recording of the Philharmonic's 30th Anniversary Concert in Tokyo.
Taijiro Iimori has been active in Europe, particularly in Germany, where he held various posts, notably at the Richard Wagner Festival in Bayreuth where he has been a musical assistant from 1970 until 1992. He was active in opera houses such as Bremen and Mannheim as conductor and pianist. During this time he won the Education Minister's Art Encouragement Prize for Freshmen in Tokyo (1972), the prize for ‘Best Conductor of the Season' in Barcelona Gran Thetro del Liceu, Spain (1972). In the same year he conducted the Vienna Symphony Orchestra at the Vienna Festival and a year later was invited to the Teatrocomunale di Bologna. He went on to hold posts as Resident Conductor at the Hamburg State Opera. From 1978 to 1983 he was principal conductor of the Opera Forum Enschede in Holland, where he was also active as a conductor of the Enschede City Conservatory Orchestra until 1995.
Taijiro Iimori has totally 21 various recordings, mainly on Fontec. Among them, eleven with the Tokyo City Philharmonic Orchestra (including two versions of Beethoven the complete symphonies), two with Kansai Philharmonic Orchestra, two with the Nagoya Philharmonic orchestra, two with Tokyo Metropolitan Symphony Orchestra,all of which have been received to great acclaim: his recording Bruckner Symphony No. 4 was one of Gramophone Japan's March 2000 Critic's Best Choice 3.
Taijiro Iimori is the recipient of numerous citations, including the 32nd Suntory Music Award (2001), the 54th Arts Encouragement Prize of the Minister of Education (2004), Japan's Medal with Purple Ribbon(2004), 43rd Osaka City Cultural Contributor Award(2008), Japan Art Academy Prize (2013), 56th Mainichi Art Awards (music division, 2015). In 2010 he awarded the Order of the Rising Sun, Gold Rays with Rosette, the highest honor in Japan. He has been named Person of Cultural Merits of Japan in 2012, and a member of the Japan Art Academy since 2014. .
Senju Mariko (Senju Mariko, April 3, 1962 ) is a Japanese violinist. The record label is EMI Music Japan (now Universal Music). She graduated from philosophy department of Keio University Faculty of Letters.
In the following 1973, she won the 1st place in the competition of the national competition elementary school student at the same competition Tokyo contest. In 1975, she collaborated with the NHK Symphony Orchestra at the 1st NHK young bud concert and debuted at the age of 12. In 1977, at the age of 15, she won the 46th Japan Music Competition the youngest player. In 1979, at the age of 17, she won the youngest award at the 26th Paganini International Competition (No. 4).
She holds concerts and recitals, appeared on television and radio, as well as writing essays, and she is active in a wide range of fields. In the 1981, she appeared in "Ranch Girl role."
From the 1990's, she participated in the research of stage hall acoustics as a researcher at Professor Hideki Tachibana at the University of Tokyo production research institute.
Kaori Muraji is a Japanese classical guitarist. She is the first Japanese artist to have signed an exclusive international contract with Decca Music Group.
Born in Nishinomiya, Japan, Hisako Kawamura moved to Düsseldorf, Germany, with her family at the age of 5, where she started studying piano with Kyoko Sawano. She continued her studies with Malgorzata Bator-Schreiber in Göttingen, who provided her with a musical and artistical training, and Prof. Vladimir Krainev at the Hannover University of Music and Drama, who nourished her developing artistic personality.
Kawamura's international concert career kick-started by outstanding successes at renowned international piano competitions. As well as receiving First Prizes at the Concours Clara Haskil in Vevey, the A. Casagrande International Piano Competition in Terni, the G.B. Viotti International Music Competition in Vercelli and the European Chopin Competition in Darmstadt, she was named Laureate at the Concours Géza Anda in Zurich, the ARD International Music Competition in Munich and the Queen Elisabeth International Music Competition in Brussels.
In June 2016, Hisako Kawamura performed Rachmaninov's Third Piano Concerto during her tour in Japan with Kazuki Yamada and City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra. Following the success of this tour, she has invited to perform Beethoven's Fourth Piano Concerto with the orchestra in February 2017. Elsewhere, she played with the NHK Symphony Orchestra under Paavo Järvi in June 2017, the Tokyo Metropolitan Symphony Orchestra under Michael Sanderling in November 2018.
Hisako Kawamura has performed with orchestras including the Vienna Symphony Orchestra, the Rundfunk Sinfonieorchester Berlin, Czech Philharmonic, Hungarian National Philharmonic Orchestra, the Radio Symphony Orchestra Moscow, the Moscow Virtuosi, the St. Petersburg Philharmonic Orchestra, the Russian National Orchestra, the Japan Philharmonic Orchestra, the Yomiuri Symphony Orchestra, the Kyoto Symphony Orchestra and has worked with conductors Jiří Bělohlávek, Paavo Järvi, Alan Buribayev, Alexander Dmitriev, Vladimir Fedosseyev, Junichi Hirokami, Eliahu Inbal, Marek Janowski, Zoltán Kocsis, Alexander Lazarev, Erwin Lukac, Mikhail Pletnev, Tatsuya Shimono, Yuri Temirkanov and Kazuki Yamada among many others.
As a soloist, Kawamura has participated at major music festivals such as Klavierfestival Ruhr, Festspiele Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Festival Auvers-sur-Oise, Carinthian Summer, Klavierwoche Ernen and the Chopin Festival Duszniki-Zdroj.
She is also a sensitive chamber musician, performing with cellists such as Clemens Hagen, Maximilian Hornung with whom she regularly works.
In Autumn 2014 she released ‘Rachmaninoff-Album’, her fourth album with the RCA Red Seal label including Rachmaninov's Second Piano Concerto with the Czech Philharmonic under Jiří Bělohlávek, and the Sonata for Cello and Piano with soloist Clemens Hagen. Her previous releases include ‘Chopin Ballades’, ‘Hisako Kawamura plays Chopin’ and ‘Chopin Sonata No. 3 and Schumann Humoresque’, which were all critically acclaimed. Other recordings include works by Mozart, Schubert and Prokofiev released on the “DiscAuvers” label, and works by Schubert and Schumann on the “audite” label.
She has been encouraged by numerous scholarships from prestigious organizations, including the German piano company Ibach, the European Yamaha Foundation, Deutsche Stiftung Musikleben and the Rohm Music Foundation. In Japan, Kawamura’s music activity was awarded the prestigious Art Encouragement Prize for New Artists of Music in the Spring of 2012 by the Minister of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology. She was also awarded three important music prizes in 2009; the Fresh Artist Music Prize from the Nippon Steel Corporation, the IDEMITSU Music Prize from Idemitsu Kosan and the Prize of the Chopin Society Japan. Kawamura received also Iue-Culture and Art Prize from Iue Memorial Foundation and the Hotel Okura Music Prize.
Kawamura is committed to sharing her musical experience with the next generation: as well as a professorship at the Folkwang University of Arts in Essen, Germany, she holds a position at the Tokyo College of Music.
Kyohei Sorita (September 1, 1994) is a Japanese pianist, born in 1994.
In 2012, while still in high school, he won both 1st prize and Special Audience Award at the 81st Japan Music Competition. He studied at Toho Gakuen School of Music in 2013, then applied for Moscow Tchaikovsky Conservatory in Russia under the recommendation of Professor Mikhail Voskresensky and entered with the highest score in 2014.
He is studying at The Fryderyk Chopin University of Music (The Fryderyk Chopin Academy of Music) with Professor Piotr Paleczny since 2017.
And Kyohei has performed with some of the world’s major orchestra including the Mariinsky Orchestra, RAI National Symphony Orchestra, Warsaw National Philharmonic Orchestra, NHK Symphony Orchestra, and so on.
In this year, He will be performed “Concert tour” with the Russian National Orchestra under the baton of Mo. Mikhail Pletnev. Kyohei is high in demand both in Japan and overseas. He has exceptional talent and we look forward to a promising and exciting future.
Mayuko Kamio (神尾 真由子, born June 12, 1986 in Toyonaka, Osaka) is a Japanese violinist.
Kamio currently studies with Zakhar Bron at the Hochschule Musik und Theater (HMT) in Zurich, Switzerland. She plays a Stradivarius from 1727, previously owned by Joseph Joachim, on loan from Suntory. She has appeared with renowned orchestras, including the Orchestre Philharmonique de Monte Carlo, the Russian National Orchestra, the BBC Philharmonic, and the Zürcher Kammerorchester. She won the Young Concert Artists International Auditions in 2000 and first prize for violin in the International Tchaikovsky Competition in 2007.
Kamio was one of three people (along with pianist Adam Neiman and Young Concert Artists manager Susan Wadsworth) who were the subjects of the 2003 documentary film Playing for Real, directed by Josh Aronson. The film documents the difficulties in establishing a career in classical music.
In 2010, Kamio toured Japan with the Budapest Festival Orchestra under Iván Fischer playing the Mendelssohn Violin Concerto. On 2 October 2010, she played Fantasía sobre Carmen de Sarasate in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Sachio Fujioka was born in Tokyo in 1962 and from the age of 16 studied conducting with both Kenichiro Kobayshi and Akeo Watanabe. In 1990 he moved to the UK taking up post-graduate studies at the Royal Northern College of Music in Manchester, where he was the first holder of the Sir Charles Groves Conducting Fellowship. Since 2001 he has held the position of Chief Conductor of the Kansai Philharmonic Orchestra in Osaka.
Following his very successful debut with the Japan Philharmonic Orchestra at Suntory Hall, Tokyo in May 1995, he was appointed a regular guest conductor and now returns to work with the orchestra on a number of occasions each season. He also works regularly with many other Japanese orchestras including the Yomiuri Nippon Symphony, Tokyo Metropolitan Symphony, Sapporo Symphony and Hiroshima Symphony Orchestras.
Following highly successful productions with the Opera de Oviedo (Spain) of Britten’s Turn of the Screw in the 2006/07 season, (a production that won a Teatro Campoamor Opera Award for Best Production) and Ariadne auf Naxos in 2009/10, Maestro Fujioka has been reinvited to conduct Madama Butterfly in 2014.
Sachio Fujioka has made a number of recordings of music by the distinguished Japanese composer Takashi Yoshimatsu with the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra for Chandos Records.
Michie Koyama (May, 3 1959) is a Japanese classical pianist.
In 1982, she ranked the third place at Tchaikovsky International Competition, the fourth place at the Chopin International Piano Competition in 1985 and she is the only Japanese pianist who wins both big international competitions.
Michie Koyama was born in Sendai city, Miyagi prefecture, and raised in Morioka city, Iwate prefecture. The pianist graduated from Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and began playing the piano at the age of 6 and prepared to become a pianist after participating in the Tchaikovsky international competition. It is unusual that despite being a award-winning pianist at a prominent foreign competition, she has still not studied overseas. Michie Koyama also has performed numerous collaborations with domestic and international orchestras and well-known conductors.
Michie Koyama was the judge of the International Competition, the Sendai International Music Competition, the 10th Tchaikovsky International Competition (1994), the Ron-Tibaud International Competition (2004), the 16th Chopin International Piano Competition (2010), the Munich International Music Competition (2014).
Kasumi Shimizu is a Japanese mezzo-soprano singer.After graduating from the Vocal Music Department at the National Music College. she received the Takeo Prize and the NTT Docomo Award and appeared in the Momoka Rakudo Ogami Concert, Yomiuri Shinken Concert. At the completion of the graduate school, she received the award "National College of Music studies research scholarship". By the way, scholarship is " funds for overseas training and study abroad, and purchasing personal computers".
After completing the graduate school, she joined the New National Theater Opera Training Institute and experienced the stage with numerous training center performances. After finishing the training institution, he studied abroad in Bologna, Italy for 1 year as an overseas trainee of the Agency for Cultural Affairs. While studying abroad, she also stepped on the stage of the Vienna Barten Municipal Theater Opera.
Kamie Hyato is a famous baritone singer in Japan. He graduated from Vocal Music Department of Tokyo National University of Fine Arts. When graduating from undergraduate, he received Matsuda Toshi Prize, Acanthus Prize, Honorary Voice Award, etc,.
In 2005, Jiang deux scholarship association 34 th recruitment opera scholarship, he was selected to study abroad in Italy as a 2008 scholarship of the Meiji Yasuda Creative Foundation. He performed at MITO Music Festival held in Milan 2009, San Marco Temple in 2010, at the Santa Fiorea Music Festival and the 2011 Verdi Festival, Mr. Marriotti conducts, "Il Trovatore" by Parma Royal Opera Orchestra (Concert style) performed at the Verdi Theater in Buddhist, in the Magnani Theater in Fidenza, he received a praise by the Count of Luna.
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This article uses material from the Wikipedia article "Kamio Mayuko", "Mariko Senju", "Kaori Muraji", "Michie Koyama", "Kyohei Sorita", "Akiko Suwanai", "Kasumi Shimizu", "Sachio Fujioka", "Kunio Tokunaga", "Taijiro Iimori", "Hisako Kawamura", "Junichi Hirokami", "Tomomi Nishimoto", "Kenichiro Kobayashi", "Ayako Uehara (piano)", "Michiyoshi Inoue (conductor)", which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share-Alike License 3.0.
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