А№ђаёћаёґаё‡а№ђаёѓа№€аёі Аёўаёёаё„ 90 А№ђаё€а№‡аёљаё€аё™аё€аёёаёѓа№ѓаё™а№ѓаё€ [аё­аёґаё™аё„аёі,аё­аё±аёєаё™аёµ & Аё§аёєаё±аё™аё•а№њ,а№ђаёљаёґаёја№њаё” Аё˜аё‡а№„аёљаёў]гђђlongplayгђ‘ Apr 2026

: This bracketed section usually lists artists or categories (e.g., "Indie," "Pop," "Rock").

If you have the original file or link, you can try using an Online Mojibake Decoder to restore the original characters. Selecting as the source and Cyrillic (Windows-1251) or Thai as the target often resolves these specific "Ð" and "Ñ" patterns. : This bracketed section usually lists artists or

import urllib.parse text = "Ð°â„–Ð‚Ð°Ñ‘Ñ›Ð°Ñ‘Ò Ð°Ñ‘â€¡Ð°â„–Ð‚Ð°Ñ‘ÐƒÐ°â„–â‚¬Ð°Ñ‘Ð† аёўаёёаё„ 90 เจ็บจนจุกในใจ [аё­аёґаё™аё„аёІ,аё­аё±аёЄаё™аёµ & аё§аёЄаё±аё™аё•а№Њ,Ð°â„–Ð‚Ð°Ñ‘Ñ™Ð°Ñ‘Ò Ð°Ñ‘ÐˆÐ°â„–ÐŠÐ°Ñ‘â€ Ð°Ñ‘Â˜Ð°Ñ‘â€¡Ð°â„–â€žÐ°Ñ‘Ð‰Ð°Ñ‘Ñž]гЂђLONGPLAYгЂ‘" # Many of these are Cyrillic characters in a weird encoding. # Let's try to map the "Ð" patterns which often represent Cyrillic in UTF-8/ISO-8859-1. # а is often 'а' # Ñ‘ is often 'е' or part of a two-byte sequence. # Let's try a common fix: UTF-8 -> ISO-8859-1 -> UTF-8 or similar # But the previous attempt failed because of non-latin1 chars like № and Ò. def decode_mojibake(text): # This looks like it was double-encoded or mangled via multiple code pages. # The string "Ð°â„–Ð‚Ð°Ñ‘Ñ›Ð°Ñ‘Ò Ð°Ñ‘â€¡" looks like Cyrillic. # Let's look for specific patterns. return text print(decode_mojibake(text)) Use code with caution. Copied to clipboard import urllib