Friday, June 5, 2026

Lang Lang and Gina Alice Redlinger: A Classical Music Piano Power Couple

  

Lang Lang is one of the most recognisable classical musicians of the 21st century.

From giving sold-out performances with the world’s leading orchestras, to spearheading high-profile crossover projects, to enthusiastically participating in music education outreach, Lang Lang has helped redefine what a modern classical pianist’s career can look like.

In recent years, his personal life has drawn increasing attention, too, particularly his marriage to Gina Alice Redlinger, a concert pianist, polyglot, and rising public figure in her own right.

Together, they have become one of classical music’s most visible power couples.

Today, we’re looking at the intertwined stories of Lang Lang and Gina Alice Redlinger, how they met, the cultural impact of their marriage, and how their shared passion for music education and collaboration continues to shape their careers, both as individuals and as a couple.

The Background of Superstar Pianist Lang Lang   

Lang Lang was born in 1982 in Shenyang, China.

He began piano lessons at the age of three after being inspired by hearing Liszt‘s Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2 in a Tom and Jerry cartoon.

Lang Lang

Lang Lang

When Lang Lang published his memoirs in 2008, he confirmed that his father had employed abusive tactics to push him to become a world-class pianist. That hard-edged approach led to a complicated relationship between father and son, and Lang Lang became determined not to replicate the dynamic in his own life.

They moved to Beijing when he was still a child, so he could study at the Central Conservatory. In 1997, they moved again, this time to the United States to study at the Curtis Institute of Music with piano teacher Gary Graffman.

Lang Lang’s breakthrough moment came in 1999, just a couple of months after he turned 17, at the Chicago Symphony’s Ravinia Festival. There, he filled in for André Watts and became an overnight sensation.

He has spent the last quarter-century touring the world, becoming one of the most in-demand pianists on the concert circuit today.

Pianist Gina Alice Redlinger’s Story  

Gina Alice Redlinger had a similar musical story.

She was born to German-Korean parents in Wiesbaden, Germany, in 1994. Her family valued education, especially music and languages. (She has gone on to speak five languages fluently as an adult: German, English, French, Korean, and Chinese.)

Gina Alice Redlinger

Gina Alice Redlinger © tatlerasia.com

Like Lang Lang, she was a child prodigy. She began playing the piano at four and performing publicly at eight.

In 2009, at the age of fifteen, she gave her solo recital debut. That same year, she entered the Frankfurt University of Music and Performing Arts.

Interestingly, like her husband, she studied with Gary Graffman, albeit at a later date than her future husband.

Meeting and a Fairytale Wedding

Lang Lang and Gina Alice Redlinger

Lang Lang and Gina Alice Redlinger

The couple met for the first time in Berlin in 2015.

They became a classical music power couple, inspiring reporting from magazines around the globe. They have proven to be especially popular in China.

In fact, when Lang Lang announced the wedding on his Weibo social media account in a post captioned “I found my Alice”, it instantly went viral. The hashtag “Lang Lang married” hit the top of Weibo’s trending topics, amassing over 240 million reads in a matter of hours.

The couple married in 2019 in a lavish ceremony at Paris’s Shangri-La Hotel, followed by a reception at the Palace of Versailles. At the reception, they played a piano duet; it was the first time they’d ever performed together in public.

Lang Lang & Gina – Four-hands performance   

Famous guests included pop star John Legend and his wife, model Chrissy Teigen; Prince and Princess Michael of Kent; and others.

The lavish event was followed closely by many in China. Gina Alice soon garnered the nickname “Princess Gina” online.

She has since appeared in a Chinese reality show called Gina’s Motel, which garnered an astonishing 300+ million viewers, making her a household name in China.

She has also begun working as a model, appearing on the covers of various prestigious fashion magazines.

It’s a somewhat unusual career path for a concert pianist or soloist’s spouse, but it also aligns with the couple’s shared passion for making classical music and classical musicians more visible to broader audiences.

Their Son Winston

Lang Lang and Gina Alice Redlinger's baby announcement

Lang Lang and Gina Alice Redlinger’s baby announcement

In October 2020, they made a joint announcement that Gina Alice was pregnant with their first child. The announcement included a sketch of a baby crawling next to a grand piano. Their son Winston was born in early 2021.

Lang Lang gave a frank interview to the Telegraph in 2023, describing how life changed for them after having a baby. He approaches his travelling schedules differently now, and Gina Alice and Winston can’t always come with him.

As for whether Winston will follow in the family business, Lang Lang told the interviewer:

“I think he likes conducting, cello and dancing more than piano. I can see that. He likes the piano, of course, but he knows that I play and his mother plays, so he’s not that keen to learn.”

He then related how Winston had recently seen a string quartet at a shopping mall and became fascinated with the cello. Gina Alice responded by buying him a small one.

When asked if he would ever push his own son the same way his father had pushed him, Lang Lang was firm:

“No. I will not. Only if he likes to perform, if he really wants it, then I probably will support him… I’m not going to push him.”

Interest in Education

Lang Lang and Gina Alice Redlinger

Lang Lang and Gina Alice Redlinger

Lang Lang has always been interested in music education, and even as his career has taken off, he has made time for masterclasses, fundraising, and other activities to support the cause.

Some classical music purists raised an eyebrow at his 2022 album The Disney Book, which consists of a variety of arrangements of famous tunes from Disney soundtracks.

But his intention with the project was more than just to record famous songs: it was to inspire young children, just as he had once been inspired by the Tom and Jerry cartoon.

Gina Alice joined him on this album in a surprising performance of “When You Wish Upon a Star”, revealing her talents as a singer.

Lang Lang and Gina Alice performing “When You Wish Upon a Star”  

He told the Chicago Symphony:

“I originally asked Pharrell Williams to sing this track. He freaked out! He’s like, ‘You can ask me to do something else. But this song, I’m afraid to sing it. Everybody knows the melody — it’s really hard to sing.’ It seemed like nobody wanted to do it. So I asked Gina, ‘What do you think?’ She said, ‘Look, I’m a pianist, not a real singer. Let’s do it.’ And she sings it beautifully!”

The couple appeared together in a Disney+ special that was filmed at the Royal Albert Hall in London.

Recording Projects

Lang Lang and Gina Alice playing Brahms’s Hungarian Dance No. 5   

Despite the vocal feature on The Disney Book, most of Gina Alice’s collaborations with Lang Lang have been on the piano.

She released her own debut album – Wonderworld – in 2021. The recording features a number of charming classical piano miniatures.

Her husband appears on the disc as a duet partner in an arrangement of Brahms’s Hungarian Dance No. 5 and Waltz, Op. 39, No. 15 for two pianos. He also provided advice on the project more generally.

Lang Lang and Gina Alice playing the finale of Saint-Saëns’ Carnival of the Animals  

More recently, they teamed up to record Saint-Saëns’ Carnival of the Animals with the prestigious Gewandhausorchester Leipzig, conducted by Andris Nelsons.

Their performing careers will no doubt continue to intertwine in the years to come, so keep an eye out for more collaborations in media, the field of music education, and more.

Conclusion

From parallel childhoods shaped by their prodigious talent to a shared commitment to expanding classical music’s reach, the relationship between Lang Lang and Gina Alice Redlinger reflects both continuity within the tradition of classical music and the art’s ongoing evolution.

It seems that these two will continue being influential figures on the global classical music stage, not just as performers, but as cultural ambassadors over the decades to come.

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 YUJA, PIANO RECITAL JAPAN TOUR

June 6-15, 2026
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Off the mark


 

Musicians and Artists: Forte and 6 Impressionists

Aldo Forte created Impressionist Prints: Six Masters in Two Galleries, using artworks by 6 of the greatest impressionists. Each painting captures a particular idea within Impressionism.

Aldo Rafael Forte

Aldo Rafael Forte

He opens with Monet’s work in London. Monet’s 1872 painting Impression, Sunrise, was the work that gave Impressionism its name, and so Forte makes reference to that in the name of his movement. The work he’s focusing on, however, comes from some 30 years later. Monet was in London in the autumn of 1899, and the early months of 1900 and 1901. Over those visits, he painted nearly 100 paintings of the Thames River from the viewpoint of his window in the Savoy Hotel or from the terrace at St Thomas’ Hospital. Those included about 19 paintings in which the Houses of Parliament were the subject, showing Parliament at sunset, in the fog, under a stormy sky, with the sun breaking through the fog, etc. Sunrise was never a time when he painted Parliament.

We’ll take one of the many views as indicative of Forte’s inspiration, in this case, the House of Parliament, painted in 1900 and 1901, where the sun is starting to set, and the buildings are outlined against the sky and reflected in the water.

Monet: Houses of Parliament, London, 1900–1903 (The Art Institute of Chicago)

Monet: Houses of Parliament, London, 1900–1903 (The Art Institute of Chicago)

Forte divided his Impressionist Prints into two Galleries. The first has paintings by Monet, Degas, and Van Gogh, and the second by Renoir, Seurat, and Toulouse-Lautrec. Forte’s music emphasises the loneliness of the building on the river through the use of an upward running motif in the English horn. At the same time, there’s a solidity and presence of the building in the music.  

Next, we’re in Degas’ world of the stage and dance. Instead of focusing on the backstage world of the corps de ballet, we’re in the audience, in a box, looking down onto the triumphal acknowledgement of the prima ballerina at centre stage. The backstage world intrudes in the back, with the other dancers waiting to make their appearance, and a stage manager on the left, watching to make sure all is going as it should.

Degas: Ballet / The Star / Dancer on the Stage, 1876–1877 (Musée d'Orsay)

Degas: Ballet / The Star / Dancer on the Stage, 1876–1877 (Musée d’Orsay)

Forte takes the upward-running motif from his first movement and animates it by making it faster and longer. We can hear the dancer’s whirls and twirls in the music, the actions of the corps de ballet as it acts as her backdrop against her virtuosic actions, building to her solo climax.  

Now we’re in the other world of impressionists: the outdoors. In one of his final works, Van Gogh captured an intense yellow wheatfield, cut through by dark lanes, with the sky filled with flying crows. The sky is a bright blue with clouds just appearing on the horizon.

The lack of figures in the expansive landscape and the uncertain direction of the crows’ flight give a tremendous sense of isolation in the image. For Van Gogh, crows were considered the most observant of birds and symbolised both death and rebirth. The end of the road is invisible, but by leading it to the cloud, it seems to have a more optimistic spirit.

Van Gogh: Wheatfield With Crows, 1890 (Amsterdam: Van Gogh Museum)

Van Gogh: Wheatfield With Crows, 1890 (Amsterdam: Van Gogh Museum)

Forte sees the building clouds as foretelling storms, or is the storm within the artist? A robust bass melody is highlighted by the woodwinds above while the percussion keeps up a driving pressure. The winds whirl and perhaps there’s even some thunder and lightning, all in keeping with the movement in the painting.   

Thus closes Gallery I, and we go on to Gallery II, opening with high fashion.

Pierre-Auguste Renoir’s La Parisienne made its first public appearance at the First Impressionist Exhibition in 1874. The elegant woman in blue turns to the viewer as she pulls on her gloves. Originally, she stood before a doorway on the left and a curtain on the right, but Renoir removed these to leave her floating in an indeterminate background. One early critic bemoaned what he couldn’t see, declaring that ‘Her dress does not reveal enough of her body. There is nothing more annoying than locked doors’. Twenty years later, it was described as ‘simple, fresh, and beautiful’.

Renoir: La Parisienne, 1874 (Cardiff, Wales: National Museum / Amgueddfa Cymru)

Renoir: La Parisienne, 1874 (Cardiff, Wales: National Museum / Amgueddfa Cymru)

Forte picks up the many shades of blue in his setting, to which he has added the title ‘Elegance and Beauty’. After the frenetic action of the wheatfield and crows, the woman’s stillness rings through.

The strongest proponent of pointillism, Georges Seurat, sought to demonstrate what could be achieved with the style. In Circus Sideshow, Seurat gives us the strongest contrast he could by depicting a nighttime outdoor scene lit by the artificial light of the Circus Corvi. The nature of pointillism still gives us sharply defined pictures, but the juxtaposition of colours enables the artist to depict many kinds of shadows, as befits a nighttime scene. Behind the man on the right is the head of the line for the box office, while the players draw attention for the scenes behind the canvas.

Seurat: Circus Sideshow (Parade de cirque), 1887–1888 (Metropolitan Museum of Art)

Seurat: Circus Sideshow (Parade de cirque), 1887–1888 (Metropolitan Museum of Art)

Forte makes the dotting of pointillism the basis of his setting, with a swooping imagining of what the central trombonist is doing. The other wind instruments twitter behind him and try to set up a dramatic anticipation for the rest of the unseen sideshow.

The cabaret Moulin Rouge was founded in 1889 and is known as the home of the cancan. Bringing wealthy Parisians to Montmartre, where they could meet people from all walks of life, proved profitable. The original café-concert was soon outstripped in fame by its cabaret, and the posters for the house, made by Jules Chéret, Alfred Choubrac, and, most famously, Henri Toulouse-Lautrec, brought fame to the dancers of the house, including La Goulue, Jane Avril, la Môme Fromage, Grille d’Egout, Yvette Guilbert, and others. In this image, La Goulue, with her back to the viewer, arranges her hair. Seated at the table are dancers La Macarona and Jane Avril (noted for her red hair), as well as photographer Paul Sescau, poet Édouard Dujardin, and vintner Maurice Guibert. The face lit in shocking green is the singer May Milton – a deliberate move on the artist’s part to emphasise the Moulin Rouge’s innovative use of electric light. The two men at the centre back are the diminutive artist and his cousin, the physician Gabriel Tapié de Céleyran. Toulouse-Lautrec places the viewer in the middle of the action, and with the singer May Milton at your table, you must be famous!

Toulouse-Lautrec: At The Moulin Rouge, 1892–1895 (Art Institute of Chicago)

Toulouse-Lautrec: At The Moulin Rouge, 1892–1895 (Art Institute of Chicago)

Forte takes us directly to the dance floor, the orchestra plays, the trombones swoop, and suddenly, we’re in the middle of a can-can. Our attention is constantly shifted from here to there as famous people enter, the dancers take to the stage, and the clever use of the Can-Can melody in the low brass, with the upper winds flittering away, gives us the perfect image of the dancers’ skirts in motion.

Forte paints the many worlds of impressionism in music with great success. There are references to the images in the painting, but he also leaves space for your own imagination. Considered as a set of mini tone poems, they’re great fun!

Elegant Plagiarisms: Classical Themes in Popular Songs

 

The Great American Songbook is a term describing the canon of the most important and influential popular songs from roughly the 1920s to the 1950s. During this era, popular songs were widely disseminated in the United States via phonograph records, radio, sheet music sales, and live big band performances. They were replete with beautiful melodies. People from all walks of life became familiar with the mainstream top hits of the day. Singers were constantly looking for good material, and in the 1930s, 40s, and 50s, an interesting trend arose for composers and arrangers to borrow themes from classical music and create popular songs from them. Most were drawn from the romantic era.

Listeners who were familiar with classical music would probably recognise them, but listeners who were unfamiliar could enjoy the pieces without knowing of the connection. In several cases, major performing artists who embraced such material had beautiful voices and could well have become classical singers had they so chosen.

A fine example is the pop song “Tonight We Love” (1941), which was an adaptation of the piano concerto number 1 in B flat minor by Peter Tchaikovsky (1875).

Tchaikovsky – Piano Concerto No. 1 – 1st Movement

Classic FM Orchestra, Georgii Cherkin, piano soloist   

Orchestra leader Freddy Martin arranged the music and Bobby Worth wrote lyrics for it. It became a major hit for Martin in 1941.

Freddy Martin

Freddy Martin

Martin’s arrangement is taken from a very long passage of Tchaikovsky’s original work. He recorded it twice with two different soloists. The soloist on this one is tenor Tony Martin (no relation to Freddy Martin).

Tony Martin – Tonight We Love (1941)   

The pop song “Till The End of Time” (1944) was an adaptation of Frédéric Chopin‘s Polonaise in A flat major, Op. 53 — the “Polonaise héroique” (1842).

Rubinstein plays Chopin: Polonaise op. 53 (live, correct pitch, HQ)   

The pop song was written by composer Ted Mossman and lyricist Buddy Kaye. It was a major hit for Perry Como in 1945.

Perry Como

Perry Como

He said it was his favourite of all the songs he recorded in his long career.

Perry Como – “Till The End of Time” (1945)   

The pop song “Full Moon and Empty Arms” (1944) was an adaptation of the second theme of the third movement of Piano Concerto number 2 in C Minor, opus 18 by Sergei Rachmaninoff (1901).

Bruce Liu – Rachmaninoff: Piano Concerto No. 2, Op. 18: III. Allegro scherzando

Orchestra dell’Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia, Bruce Liu, piano soloist. The relevant passage begins at 1:54 in this recording.   

This pop song was also written by composer Ted Mossman and lyricist Buddy Kaye. It was a major hit for Frank Sinatra in 1945.

Frank Sinatra

Frank Sinatra

FRANK SINATRA – Full Moon and Empty Arms 1945   

The pop song “Stranger in Paradise” was an adaptation of music composed by Alexander Borodin, the Gliding Dance of the Maidens from the Polovtsian Dances in the Opera Prince Igor (1890).

Symphonic Gems: Borodin’s Prince Igor – Polovtsian Dances – Noseda | Concertgebouworkest

Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra. The relevant passage begins at 0:45 in this recording.   

The pop song is from the musical Kismet (1953) by Robert Wright and George Forrest.

In this performance, the soloist is Tony Bennett, for whom it was a major hit in 1953.

Tony Bennett

Tony Bennett

Tony Bennett “Stranger In Paradise” on The Ed Sullivan Show   

The pop song “I’m Always Chasing Rainbows” (1918) was an adaptation of a passage from Frédéric Chopin’s Fantaisie-Impromptu in C sharp minor, op. posthumous (1834).

Dmitry Shishkin – Fantasy-impromptu in C sharp minor Op. 66 (third stage)

The piano soloist in this recording is Dmitry Shishkin. The relevant passage begins at 1:10.   

Harry Carroll composed the music and Joseph McCarthy wrote the lyrics for the pop song for the musical Oh Look in 1918. In this clip from Ziegfeld Girl (1941), a movie about the Ziegfeld Follies, Judy Garland sings a particularly emotional rendition of it that depicts her successful audition to become a Ziegfeld girl.

Judy Garland

Judy Garland

I’m Always Chasing Rainbows-Judy Garland   

The era that inspired these transformations had faded by the 1960s. However, the use of classical themes in popular songs continues in full force to this day, but now it encompasses many vastly different styles that appeal to vastly different audiences. In contrast, in the years of the Great American Songbook, those early examples would have reached a much broader spectrum of the American public and had a much wider influence than any particular style of popular music does today.

For those of us who love classical music and perhaps are intrigued by those elegant plagiarisms and want to explore them further, opportunities abound. Thanks to recording and film technology, there is a treasure trove of them waiting for us to enjoy.

Donna Arnold is the long-time music reference librarian at the large music research library at the University of North Texas in Denton, Texas. She answers questions on a wide range of subjects for the university community, national, and international patrons. She holds a Ph.D. in musicology from the University of North Texas. Her many research interests include the Great American Songbook.

The Three Pillars of Western Classical Music

  

Bach built the architecture. Mozart gave it a human voice. Vivaldi taught it to paint.

No single mind invented Western classical music. It was assembled across centuries — through faith, craft, theatre, and intellectual daring. But among its many masters, three names stand like load-bearing columns: Johann Sebastian Bach, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, and Antonio Vivaldi.

Each rewired music in a different direction. Bach gave it depth. Mozart gave it grace. Vivaldi gave it weather.

Placing them side by side isn’t really a biographical exercise. It’s a way to see three completely different visions of genius: the mind that orders the universe, the spirit that sings before it reasons, and the ear that hears storms inside a violin.

1. Bach: The Architect of Musical Law

Johann Sebastian Bach playing the organ (c. 1881)

Johann Sebastian Bach playing the organ (c. 1881)

Bach is not a beginning or an ending in music history. He is the sea into which earlier rivers flowed, and from which everything afterward continued to drink. The Turkish conductor Gürer Aykal once described him as the man who wrote the constitution of music — and the phrase sticks because it’s exactly right.

Counterpoint as architecture. In a Bach fugue, independent melodic lines move at the same time without cancelling each other. They answer, resist, complete. The result isn’t cold math; it’s a cathedral made of sound. Every note carries structural weight. Remove one carelessly and the whole thing begins to tremble.

A bridge into modern tonality. The Well-Tempered Clavier didn’t single-handedly invent the modern tuning system, but it did something equally important: it proved that every major and minor key could become a living territory for thought and feeling.

Discipline, not glamour. Bach was orphaned young. He grew through work, study, and stubborn apprenticeship. The legendary story of his long walk on foot to hear the organist Dieterich Buxtehude has become a symbol of artistic devotion — a reminder that genius is partly a gift, but mostly hunger and craft. His final years, shadowed by failing eyesight, only deepened the tragic weight of an already superhuman career.  

2. Mozart: The Heavenly Genius and the First Freelance Rebel

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

If Bach is the mind that gives music its laws, Mozart is the heart that makes those laws breathe.

His music has a strange illusion of effortlessness — as if melodies arrive already finished, waiting in the air. The old line that other composers reach toward heaven while Mozart seems to descend from it is exaggerated, but it captures the astonishment his work still provokes.

An inner ear that worked at impossible speed. Popular myth simplifies Mozart’s process, but the manuscripts and letters reveal something real: he could hold huge structures in his mind and transfer them to the page with extraordinary fluency. Discipline and inspiration, fused.

A revolt against artistic servitude. This matters as much as the music. In an age when musicians were treated as servants of court or church, Mozart broke with the Salzburg establishment and tried to build an independent career in Vienna. He became one of the symbolic ancestors of the modern freelance artist — admired, brilliant, and economically exposed.

Opera as social X-ray. The Marriage of Figaro puts a servant on stage outwitting his aristocratic master. Beneath the elegance and wit, Mozart understood desire, jealousy, forgiveness, and class tension with unnerving clarity. His death at thirty-five, followed by a modest Viennese burial, sealed one of the most enduring tragedies in artistic history.  

3. Vivaldi: The Red Priest Who Painted Nature in Sound

Antonio Vivaldi

Antonio Vivaldi

Vivaldi is the most vividly pictorial of the three. Where Bach builds cathedrals and Mozart lets human emotion speak with luminous ease, Vivaldi paints motion. Wind. Birds. Rain. Pursuit. Fever. Cold.

Sound as image. The Four Seasons is not just a string of attractive melodies — it’s one of the most famous works of program music written before the modern era. It asks you to see through sound. Spring opens into birdsong. Summer thickens into storm. Autumn dances itself drunk on harvest. Winter shivers through icy textures and sharp rhythmic gestures.

The violin as actor. In Vivaldi’s hands, the bow becomes wind, wing, lightning, breath. This is why his music remains so immediately accessible: it doesn’t only ask you to understand form, it lets you walk straight into a scene.

A career, a silence, a rediscovery. Nicknamed the Red Priest for his clerical background and red hair, Vivaldi spent much of his life connected to the Ospedale della Pietà in Venice, composing for and teaching highly trained young female musicians. His rhythmic energy and bold contrasts shaped the Baroque concerto. Yet his reputation faded after his death, and his work only fully returned to public consciousness in the twentieth century. Vivaldi’s modern fame is, in part, a story of resurrection.  

Three Visions of Immortality

Bach, Mozart, and Vivaldi don’t represent the same kind of greatness. Their genius moves in different directions.

Bach reveals the vertical depth of music — architecture, counterpoint, spiritual order. Mozart reveals its horizontal grace — melody, drama, human vulnerability. Vivaldi reveals its outward eye — nature, atmosphere, physical sensation.

There is also a quietly human thread connecting them. None of these masters lived a life equal to the gifts they gave the world. Each met pressure, neglect, or hardship. And yet the music survived every limitation imposed by biography. It outlived courts, patrons, fashions, and institutions.

What remains is not just a repertoire. It’s a civilization of sound — an invisible temple where intelligence, beauty, and feeling still meet.

Tunacan Tuna is a Turkish cultural writer, radio host, and singer-songwriter currently pursuing postgraduate research in Culture and Arts Management at Yıldız Technical University in Istanbul. His work explores music, cultural memory, and urban life. He writes cultural essays for TürkTime and hosts a radio program on Viyana FM devoted to music, cities, travel, and contemporary cultural thought.

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