This is ____ ____. She’s ____ and she’s a ____. Charlotte plays ____ ____ and sings on the South Bank in London. Today, she’s busking ____ the ____ ____. ‘On a typical day when I’m going busking, I get the train ____ ____ and I walk to the London Eye. I start ____ ____ ____ ____ and I play until one. Then I take a lunch break. And sometimes I stay until six or seven p.m. but in the winter when it gets dark I go home ____ ____ ____.’ You can find buskers ____ – in the streets, in shopping centres, outside bars and restaurants and in the parks of most British cities. In London, you can also listen to ____ while you’re on the London Underground. Buskers play or sing all kinds of different music – ____, ____, ____ and ____. ‘I like music that’s on the radio, Ed Sheeran and things like that, and some older music from the 60s, ____ ____ ____.’ But busking isn’t always easy. London is a busy city and there are ____ ____ buskers, which means you can’t just play music wherever you like. ‘You need to get a ____ to busk in London, and pass an audition, but when you do, there’s a really nice community and busking in London becomes easy.’ So buskers like Charlotte have to ____ ____ ____ of London to sing and play in. They share this area with ____ ____ and sometimes they have to wait for the other buskers to finish. Charlotte lives in ____, ____ ____ ____. In ____ ____, she writes her own songs and practises. ‘I love ____ ____. I love writing my own music.’ For Charlotte, there are good and bad things about life as a busker. ‘I like meeting new people and sharing my music ____ a ____ ____. I don’t like it ____ ____ ____ ____.’

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