Book Description
The best-selling banjo method in the world! Earl Scruggs's legendary method has helped thousands of banjo players get their start. The "Revised and Enhanced Edition" features more songs, updated lessons, and many other improvements. It includes everything you need to know to start playing banjo, including: a history of the 5-string banjo, getting acquainted with the banjo, Scruggs tuners, how to read music, chords, how to read tablature, right-hand rolls and left-hand techniques, banjo tunings, exercises in picking, over 40 songs, how to build a banjo, autobiographical notes, and much more! The book/CD version includes a CD with Earl Scruggs playing and explaining over 60 examples!
Customer Reviews:
Earl Scruggs Banjo Lesson Book.......2007-03-09
This book was exactly what they said it was prior to my order. I will continue to do business with amazon.
All Around Excellent Book So Far...and will continue.......2007-03-02
I began playing and tinkering with music in 2003. I finally purchased my own guitar in 2004 and have had a few instruments since then. I bought my banjo 1 month ago, have taken 2 lessons and absolutely...with loss of words, love this instrument, the way it is played, how it sounds and its history and how I plan to take my skills with assistance from this book. This book has changed my way of playing and I plan to study it thoroughly. I purchased the book/cd combo and it has over 50 tracks of practicing techniques that Earl has worked out for us. As said before, the history, over 40 tabbed songs, many techniques including scrugss style rolls and much more. The book is filled with every bit of useful information for the banjo player or enthusiast. Please consider purchasing if you are a beginner or finding yourself troubled with no instruction. My theory is that it is never too late to start a new instrument. The banjo and this book have changed my life. I feel as though I will devote the majority of my time towards the banjo and mastering scruggs style with this particular book. Start with this one for sure. Good luck.
A must-have classic for all bluegrass banjo players........2006-11-10
What more can I say that has not already been said? Perhaps a quote from my favorite teacher, Murphy Henry, from her column in the October 2006 Banjo Newsletter: "Start with Earl. Learn the basics the way Earl played them. Those are the tools you need to get you started. You do not have to reinvent banjo playing. Earl has already paved the way."
Much improved edition.......2006-08-22
I have the original and this updated version of the Earl Scruggs banjo method. This updated version is much improved with corrections to earlier tab errors, larger print and CD included. This book is a must for anyone serious about the banjo.
Earl Scruggs Banjo.......2006-08-10
I started to play banjo or tried to play banjo in the year
of 1969. My uncle got me this book and a record that you could get with the book. After a period of about two years I was playing 5 string banjo like Earl Scruggs, well almost. To make
this story short, this still is a great system to learn banjo.
Everett Boxdorfer
Book Description
Most beginning banjo books teach tunes with the rolls already incorporated into the song. With that approach most students find it difficult or impossible to figure out an arrangement on their own without reading the tab. This book uses a different approach. For each of the 23 tunes included, only the melody is tabbed out, no rolls. The student then learns he or she can play all 23 tunes using only the simplest roll--the pinch. They gradually learn to play the melody using any or all of seven different rolls. And after teaching banjo for 41 years, Wayne Erbsen is convinced the melody approach to teaching bluegrass works very well indeed.
Customer Reviews:
The "A-ha!" banjo book.......2007-08-25
I've tried to teach myself to play the banjo for about 10 years off and on. I'd give up each time. I was using the Earl Scruggs book. I just needed a better teacher. I get it now! I'm not an expert player yet, but I now understand enough to make practicing worthwhile. Slowly picking out tablature does not make sense to a non-player. Understanding the melody first and then exactly how increasingly more difficult picks and rolls fit in totally does!
Oh, and Wayne Erbsen is funny. It's a hoot to read.
A must for the beginner banjoist!.......2007-07-02
If you have ever thought that learning to play the five string banjo was impossible then this is the book for you! When I first picked up the banjo several seasoned guitarists told me and my husband that it would be extremely difficult or almost impossible to learn; that they tried it themselves and failed!
Well, I guess they failed only because they didn't have Wayne Erbsen's book! You can come in knowing absolutely NOTHING and come out on the other end a pickin' and a grinin'.
With a folksy vocabulary and a casual approach to theory, Mark Erbsen takes all the intimidation out of learning to play the banjo. You don't have to know how to read notes or tabs to get use out of this book. Everything is well charted, well explained and perfect for well... the ignoramus.
Each song is given as a bare-to-the-bones melody. The pages opposite provides licks and rolls that range from (in his terms) ice cold to red hot. He points out which fingers are supposed to do what, when you're supposed to tap your foot and gives suggestions on how to make the song your own.
This book is a MUST HAVE for anyone trying to learn to play the banjo or are too intimidated to start.
In a short time you're sure to be surprised how far you can get with your banjo and Wayne Erbsen's book at your side.
Bluegrass Demystified.......2007-01-12
This is a great book for a beginner who is learning bluegrass on their own. It makes SENSE of how the rolls work around a melody. Wayne Erbsen has a real talent for simplifying and explaining how to play the banjo.
Fantastic Book to Teach Yourself Bluegrass Banjo.......2006-09-27
Most people take up the banjo to play music. In contrast to other banjo training books, this book will get you playing a lot of different songs with a minimum amount of effort. The book then allows you to enhance on these same songs with other roll variations as you improve. In short order, this book will give you a sense of accomplishment and an interest in learning more. Wayne truely understands how to make learning the banjo enjoyable. I am now over half way thru his book "Starting Bluegrass Banjo". I highly recommend this second book after you have some level of competence in the Ignoramus book.
REM: CD along with book.......2006-07-10
The book is much more valuable if used with the included CD. The book was a bit hard for a hammer head like me to understand but was easier after I used the CD. Together, the CD and the book are a great package.
Product Description
In 2003 Patrick Costello set out to write down some tips on playing the five-string banjo for an after school banjo club. A few weeks later the original collection of notes had grown into a book. A few years later that book was, and still is, inspiring people all over the world to start making music with the five-string banjo. The How and the Tao of Old Time Banjo has a lifetime of information stuffed into its 168 pages. From the absolute basic picking skills to music theory and tips on improvisation, The How and the Tao of Old Time Banjo presents folk music as something alive. Something to explore and take part in within your own community. The How and the Tao of Old Time Banjo is not a book that you read once and put away. Because it was originally written for young banjo students, The How and the Tao of Old Time Banjo is a book that you will come to again and again as you make your journey in life as a folk musician.
Customer Reviews:
The Best Banjo Book Ever!.......2007-10-07
If you really want to learn to play the banjo, this is far and away the best book out there. Patrick Costello is a superb instructor -- entertaining and thorough in his teaching. It doesn't get better than this! You will learn to play the banjo!
The best way to start playing the banjo.......2007-09-21
I first found out about this book from Patrick Costello's YouTube video instructions, which match up well with this book. When I got the book in my hands, I was very excited. It matched exactly what I wanted to learn, and how. It starts you with the basic frailing strum (bum-ditty), and quickly has you playing a song to get the feel for the rhythm of this style of playing. There are plenty of songs to keep you busy for quite awhile, and Patrick's storys in the "Tao" portion of the book will have you smiling.
Excellent book.......2006-02-25
I am a fledgling (at best) banjo player. I have read and researched many books, articles, and websites pertaining to banjos. This is an excellent book. I wish I had found this one first. I may not have purchased some of the others(?).
A great book.......2006-02-01
Being a beginner myself, I have found this book very helpful in trying to understand some of the basics of banjo playing.
A great way to learn to be a banjoist & a musician.......2004-12-28
Pat's How and the Tao of Old Time banjo is one of the best basic instruction books of any kind that I have ever seen. I don't just mean banjo, but any kind of music, and I am sure people writing other instruction books can learn from this too.
Too many banjo books center on the author showing off his own virtuosity and presenting a course that really isn't helpful to a beginner. This book IS oriented at getting a beginner going playing the banjo, learning how to do everything practically. You will be playing tunes quickly, but more importantly you will be learning basics about the banjo that will take you further places.
All along, Pat has very good and basic tips about banjo playing that often are not in banjo books that can save a beginner who cannot afford a teacher much trouble.
What impresses me is that this book teaches basic concepts of music to the new player without going into things an old time banjoist doesn't need to know. Pat's concept of a player is someone who is really getting to learn more broadly about music itself than what a particular instrument can do. This is a good approach, but I have never seen it done as practically as in this book.
My only quibble is Pat's obession with doing everything in the G tuning. One is taught to play in other keys by making chords and positions from the G tuning, something that I've never heard of before in an instruction book, although I confess I have done this playing in bands when my knowledge of the banjo was scant and inaccurate.
Old time banjo is played in a multiplicty of tunings. Indeed, the adjustment of the tuning is really key to this approach to music unlike the tenor banjo, plectrum banjo, bluegrass banjo, or guitar. Even a beginner who hopes to play old time music should learn the double c tuning, the D tuning, and the sawmill tuning.
Despite this one drawback, this is a great instruction book. The thinking is clear and easy to understand. The book addresses practical problems a beginner will face in clear and easy and instructive language, there is a good selection of real old time songs here that are worth the price of the book.
This is a good book to use, but once you get picking look around for information about other tunings
Book Description
This is the basic manual for banjo players at any level. Covers all the fundamentals of strumming, hammering-on, and pulling-off. Includes folk and traditional songs all with melody line, lyrics, and banjo accompaniment, and solos in standard notation and tablature.
Customer Reviews:
Not the Key.......2007-08-11
I agree with other reviewers that this book has historical merit and is interesting to have on your shelf. But inside the cover Pete Seeger says himself that the one useful revision of this book would be to rewrite it for G tuning. Why did he or a colleague NOT do so? When buying this book over the internet it is not apparent that the whole book is written in C tuning. Hence the book as an instruction manual on how to play the 5 string banjo was pretty useless for me. I would rather have spent my $$s elsewhere.
Carole M
Something Nice To Own.......2007-05-28
This edition, with its facsimile handwritten notes inside the covers, has that something extra over and above the books value as a banjo tutorial.
It's nice to have it there on the shelf and the enjoy looking at from time to time, and there's also a feeling of carrying on something traditional for future generations.
Music is a wonderful social thing; something we can share with family and friends, and today's electronic generation have maybe lost that. Books like this encourage us to start over. Even if you're not going to take up the banjo in the end you can at least learn the songs and pass them on.
I'd encourage you to buy this book as an investment for future generations if for no other reason.
Claw Hammer Banjo Book.......2007-02-01
There wasn't any way I could tell when I ordered this book that it was written for C tuning banjo. I was interested to learn with G tuning. The book was helpful but not what I was looking for.
banjo from a to z condensed.......2006-12-12
pete seeger has given us a over view of many styles of banjo play-ability along with some historical background.Many tabbed songs from the 19 teenth and early twentieth century. Not just bluegrass but frailing/clawhammer(old time) styles also, along wtih some jazz and other timing variations. Very light in it's approach
with his whimsical comments through the book.
Second Generation.......2006-05-31
I hadn't realized just how much I had worn out this delightful, Pete Seegerish banjo manual until my daughter wanted to take up the instrument. We dug out my 1962 red-covered edition and between the stains, rips and tatters, I saw all the things that made me love it way back when. It's probably not the perfect way to learn for absolutely everyone, as Pete himself would certainly agree, but it is the perfect way to learn the banjo while being warmed by the insight and soul of this wonderful American.
Product Description
Irish and Celtic Banjo Book with CD
Customer Reviews:
You want to go pan-celtic?.......2007-10-10
Do you want the quick version of this review? If you want to expand your banjo technique and repertoire into the pan-Celtic realm, BUY THIS BOOK.
Fin.
Alright, a slightly longer review... Tom Hanway has put together a fantastic "middle point" to learning how to integrate your 5-string banjo playing into that large, mashed realm of "celtic" music. You get tunes of Irish, Scottish, British, Canadian, and American origin all played with an ear towards the Celtic tradition.
It's a "middle point" because the book is NOT for beginners. The book assumes that you have facility with playing melodic (and some single string) style on the 5-string, and it takes you from there. You learn techniques that many Scruggs style players will consider advanced. Lots of inside rolls - often on the same string or combining two strings for a run of several notes and multiple hammer-ons and pull-offs are used.
There is light at the end of the tunnel, though. These techniques will make you a better banjo player. There are a _ton_ of tunes in this book so you can get a flavor of the various sub-styles to determine where your interests lie. It also comes with a CD where the author plays through about two thirds of the tunes in the book as well as playing through the exercises to learn the techniques. The banjo in these recordings is VERY prominent with just a hint of guitar and bodhran percussion in the back.
Finally, the book is packed with the history of the music as well as tips on jamming, playing etiquette, and how to approach playing backup (probably the most important thing in a jam).
Oh, and the author is a great guy who will answer your e-mail with any questions that you might have.
Given the general dearth of material in this area and the fact that this is a fantastic resource for playing the 5-string in this style, making the decision to buy shouldn't be too difficult.
Excellent!.......2007-09-25
A large collection of Celtic music for the banjo, well documented, giving good explanations. The including CD contains the music to listening along. You don't need to have powerfull skills to play the music; Good for beginners, but also interesting for advanced players.
Comprehensive with good selection of tunes.......2005-11-28
Good introduction to Irish banjo tab and music. Recommended.
Book Description
Every style of music is represented in this giant volume of over 200 songs arranged for the 5 string banjo in easy-to-play tablature. Includes complete lyrics to folk songs, sentimental favorites, Christmas and Chanukah songs, sing-alongs. Tin Pan Alley, funny and sad songs, and more.
Customer Reviews:
Well-presented and a lot of fun.......2000-05-13
Simple clawhammer arrangements of a lot of folk and other songs, grouped by category ("A parcel of rogues", "All over this land", etc.) and with a short introduction to each song.
Most of the tunes are what you'd expect from a book of this type (Shady Grove, Sweet Betsy from Pike, etc.) but there are a few from left field - a whole section on Stephen Foster, for example, and a few Jewish tunes which are arranged quite well.
If you already own a book or two of folk tunes, you can probably do without this, but it's a great book for someone just starting out on the banjo (it was for me!)
Book Description
Most people arenÕt aware that the guitar was not always king in the United States. Until the 1930Õs, the guitar actually played Õsecond fiddleÕ to other fretted instruments. This book chronicles the history and development of guitars, banjos, and mandolins in America. 800 color photos detail the evolution of these instruments, from primitive minstrel banjos to elaborately inlaid classic banjos and jazz banjos; from ÕtaterbugÕ mandolins to classic Gibson models signed by the legendary Lloyd Loar; and a wide array of flat top, archtop, and resonator guitars. 8 1/2 inch. x 11 inch.. 320 pages.
Customer Reviews:
The Bible for those who go "Unplugged".......2004-06-24
The name of George Gruhn is to the dealing of fine acoustic instruments as "Martin" or "Gibson" is to the manufacturing or "Chet Atkins" is to playing.
This is THE coffee table book for the household that includes an acoustic instrument afficionado. Guitars are covered A to Z, but so are mandolins, ukes, banjos, dobros, etc. The photos are absolutely beautiful, and the accompanying text is VERY enlightening regarding the history of the instruments and the instrument makers. Included are the first published photos of Lead Belly's 12-string, plus a loving tribute to the first Martin D-45, probably the most valuable guitar in existence, and not just because it's first owner had his name, "Gene Autrey" inlaid into the fingerboard, before he became famous in movies as "Oklahoma's Singing Cowboy".
Fascinatin' stuff for the acoustic guy or gal in your family.
The Authoritative Book on Acoustic Guitars.......2000-05-10
George Gruhn is not only the best know dealer of collectible instruments in the US, he's also an absolute fount of information and a heck of a nice guy, too. Each of his books is *the* authoritative source of information on the guitars featured inside.
If you're a collector, you need this book. If you'd like to be a collector, you need it even more. And if like most of us, you just love looking at beautiful pictures of guitars, you need it even more.
Acoustic Guitars and other Fine Fretted Instruments.......1999-12-21
This is one of the best books on Acoustic Guitars for the collector or anyone that has a passion for vintage guitars. Great pictures and detailed discussion.
Book Description
Just as in his other book, Constructing a Bluegrass Mandolin, Roger's simple and concise step-by-step instructions show you the how and the why of it all, leading you on a path that blends discovery with pure joy. Over 200 photos and illustrations provide the kind of valuable reference no other book in the field can offer. Roger has used his technical knowledge on design, sound, and all of the important stages of construction that go into the building of a musical instrument, and has incorporated these ideas into one text. The end result is this valuable book of information that will help you to learn more about the makeup of a 5-string banjo, and more importantly, will give you the satisfaction and pride in being able to accomplish the building of a banjo that you can play and enjoy for years to come.
Customer Reviews:
Make it, then play it........2007-06-27
Very detailed instructions for each part in a chapter for each part. Full size plans in a fold-out section. Mr Siminoff knows his stuff and suggests various approaches depending upon your skills or facilities.
If you're even just a little bit handy then you should be able to make a worthwhile instrument from this book.
A Down To Earth Guide To Banjo Lutherie.......2007-04-08
This guide is aimed at people with a fair degree of woodworking skills. It covers the high points and provides very good pictures and advice. Although plans for building a banjo are included, none of the more useful jigs are drawn up - consistent with the aim of the book, but holding it back from be excellent and most thorough. Bottom line? Worth every penny.
Good book on banjo construction.......2005-03-29
While this is a good book and will teach you many things about wood selection and how to cut, what materials to select, how to stain and with what-basically it takes you from the lumbar yard for selection of raw materials to the back porch and pickin your newly constructed banjo there are some well known errors in the book-particularly with the proper length of the fretboard for correct intonation. overall this is a very good book and if you keep a keen eye open for the inconsistancies you will build a killer banjo (or at least a killer kit banjo)
Incredible resource.......2003-02-26
I am an advanced woodworker and know what I am looking at in regard to how-to wood working books. This book is so definitive and complete that it is the standard I will use for other books of its kind. Although it is a technical book there is also bits of supporting theory about the "why" of the "how-to". Although there were some things I know little about, such as inlaying work, I found myself inspired to get into areas that before I would avoid. Great book, Roger.
A Basic Handbook for Banjo Builders.......2000-03-02
Every prospective banjo builder should have this book. It is thorough and exhaustive. If you have the proper tools and are willing to take your time, you can build a perfectly good banjo with the information in this book.
Roger shows the prospective builder how to construct almost every major part of the instrument, from the rim to the neck to the resonator. Fortunately for the tyro, it is not necessary to go quite this far in the building process. It is now very easy to obtain semi-finished parts from many sources, so you don't have to slot your own fretboard or bend your own rim, unless you really like to get down to the most basic type of building.
This book has been out for fifteen years now, and some of the suppliers in his list have gone out of business. So the list should probably be updated.
If you do an internet search for banjo parts, you will be able to buy almost everything you need in semi finished form to construct a great banjo, using this book as a guide along the way.
Book Description
Find the banjo chords you need instantly! Handy manual includes many fingerings for each chord, charts for using chords in any key, a complete tuning chart, and more.
Customer Reviews:
Chords made easy.......2007-04-05
This book really helps in learning chords and very helpful for learning the chords to play in a different chord
important for old time banjoists and improvisors.......2005-06-27
A lot of banjoists won't think they need this chord book. Chords and old time banjo playing especially are not recognized as friends. If you play old time, then you get a lot of non sense from guitar players or even people trained to play tenor or classic banjo about chords.
However, I find this chord book pretty useful for trying to build backup patterns, even if they are done not by strumming chords, but by playing rolls and frailing patterns where I am not actually making the whole chord but playing the notes of the chord.
I played guitar for about 35 years before I played banjo. I developed a repertoire of songs based on chords. Having this chord book helped me to learn some of the chords that might seem normal in a guitar players repertoire that seem distant for old timey banjo players. For example, I did an arrangement of my friend Raeford Starke's song "Roughed" up that has a BM7.
I could not have figured it out without this book.
You will also find that a practice especially jazz players do with a chord book can be useful by trying to play arpeggios of the notes of a chord. This can get you a lot of notes and how they go together. It can give you a good bunch of ways to harmonice or play leads around tunes.
Just because you play old time banjo, does not mean that you should be ignorant of music!
A bargain.......2001-07-10
Well, if you've been playing banjo for a while, you may not need this. But if you're starting out (like me), you'll find it invaluable. It's a slim line book that will fit in your banjo case behind the neck (yes, its that slim). And its just pages of chord diagrams. The sections of the book are different tuninings (ex: G tunining, C tuning, etc.) So if you've tuned to a different key, you can quickly see how to make any chord. It also covers multiple ways to make the same chord, in case you're up the neck. I'm going through "Earl Scruggs and the five string banjo" to learn to play, and this little book is the perfect accessory to reference.
Product Description
This is the ideal beginner's book, presenting the basics of playing the 5-string banjo is a way that is both fun and produces quick results. Janet Davis takes you on an extensive tour of this instrument's fundamental techniques as well as some intermediate possibilities including rolls, chords, bluegrass banjo techniques, playing up the neck, licks, endings, and other basic information needed to play bluegrass and melodic-style banjo. Thorough performance notes are provided from beginning to end revealing the secrets of this versatile traditional instrument. The companion DVD video is included (The DVD teaches through Lesson 22.).
Customer Reviews:
This is a great starter banjo book . .......2007-09-21
This book is very thorough for a beginner . I play guitar and want to learn banjo as well . Janet Davis begins each lesson slowly , then she will play the song in normal speed .
The DVD is great , but does not cover every song in the book . I would highly recommend buying the companion CD . The CD covers every lesson .
A great start.......2007-02-06
Well, after short-cuts and fooling myself I was learning, this book set me right on track. Its clear, easy, and the progress is very well charted in order to advance steadily without any boredom. I set myself a comfortable timing, and work each lesson until I'm ready for the next, and it works. I can recommend this for an easy and real fun start to pickin a banjo. Thanks to Janet Davis
great starter book.......2006-11-13
Recently purchased a Banjo and it came with this book and DVD. Have been playing guitar for years but thought would like to have something different to play on occasion and always liked the sound of a banjo. Didn't want to buy a Banjo-guitar which uses guitar chords but wanted the "real" thing. And the "real" thing means I needed a good book to get me started. Have had the banjo for around 3 weeks now and it has really been a fun instrument. Janet's book was exactly what I needed. She makes it easy to understand and takes you through progressively more difficult activities as your skill improves. Also like the DVD that came with it as her style is very low key and encouraging as she explains the secrets of playing a banjo. Her demo's of the 4 types of rolls and explanation of your hand and finger postions is essential to getting you started correctly. She makes it sound simple and it is in concept, but getting your fingers to move correctly takes a lot of practice. I generally do not like the Mel Bay music books but this one I can strongly recommend for the beginning banjo player. Also read some reviews by others who thought the book was too simplified and easy but I would bet that none of them can play any of the songs in this book well. Sort of the same type of individuals who talk up a great golf game but when you see them actually play they can't play worth a darn. Yes the cover is rather dorky but then this is a great example of why you shouldn't judge a book by its cover. Buy it and have some fun with the 5 string banjo.
A great book that progresses naturally.......2006-10-12
I really like this book. In fact, I like it enough that this is the book I use with my banjo students. I particularly like how the lessons progress in a logical way. Each lesson seems to pick up from what you've just learned and then adds something to it. But what's probably even more important is that quite often there's a little bit of text reminding you what you've already learned. For example, in a piece of music there may be a notation that "this measure uses a forward roll". Then, "This measure uses a mixed roll". Or even, "This is a mixed roll but you've move one finger to a different string". That kind of teaching reinforces what you've already learned by reminding you later on as you use it in a slightly different way.
I havn't found a need to use the CD, but I've been playing guitar, mandolin and banjo for quite a few years. However, it has helped some of my students to learn a tune when they can hear how it's suppose to sound. So I think the CD is a valuable addition.
Yes, the cover's a bit goofy. If you're an adult student it can feel a bit silly to be working from what looks like a little kids coloring book. But the material inside is really solid. This is very much a case where you shouldn't judge the book by it's cover. It's a much better book that it appears to be.
This one works for me!.......2006-04-03
I bought a 5-string banjo eight weeks ago. When I did I purchased a couple of tutorial books, one of which was Janet Davis' "You Can Teach Yourself Banjo".
In the very beginning I thought I might benefit more from one of the other approaches, but as the first couple of weeks passed I found that by working with the exercises in this book I was making more progress - and having more fun! - than I was with the others.
I'm now up to page 43, working on "Sunnyvale Breakdown" and having a great time. I practice an hour a day, and more on Saturday and Sunday afternoon.
I wouldn't recommend that you buy the book unless you were going to get the DVD and CD along with it. Those are absolute necessities. But with the three you are well-armed to make good progress with your banjo.
The only criticisms I would make are (first) the video quality on the DVD is only fair, probably because it was recorded off of a VHS tape that was not of the best quality. Secondly, by the time you reach page 43 (where I am) the video is at an end and you must rely entirely on the book and audio CD. That's ok, but it would have been better to remaster the video and make it cover the entire book.
Overall though, I have to give it five stars because it has been so helpful to me.
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