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Doug Ramsey on Jazz and other matters...

Edging Out From Under The Weather

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The weather continues magnificent in the US Pacific Northwest.

Many thanks to a surprisingly high number of Rifftides readers for their good wishes following this week’s self-indulgent health reports. My doctor today put me on a course of antibiotics. I have taken the first installment and persuaded myself that I feel better already.

Longtime reader Jim Brown sent a comment that led to the embedding of an encounter between Art Tatum with Ben Webster. It observes our weather theme. To read the comment and hear a great performance, go here and scroll down.

Weather & Body, Part 2

Fair weather continues.

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So, too, does recuperation, if that’s what it can be called. For such details as exist, see yesterday’s Rifftides installment. For “Fair Weather” from 1958, click on the arrow below. Benny Golson is the composer.

The doctor is going to have a look tomorrow. I’m knocking on a large piece of oak.

The Weather, The Body And I

“Under the weather” is not quite the right phrase to describe what the Rifftides senior staff is experiencing this week. Who could ask for a better forecast than this one for the region east of the Cascade mountains?

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The problem may be a virus inhaled early last month on the flight from the US to Sweden. The Ystad Festival staff doctor made that as a possible diagnosis. “Let your body heal itself,” he said. The body is not rushing to complete the task. I am giving it all the help I can, but I have concluded that for a day or two—maybe longer—it is best to increase rest, decrease the number of assignments, and cool it. Listening to the right music seems to help a little.

Let’s try Louis Armstrong and Earl Hines from 1928. It can make a person feel better just to hear what trailblazers they were.

And goodnight.

Monday Recommendation: Shirley Horn

Shirley Horn Live at the 4 Queens (Resonance)

horn-4-queensThe Resonance label continues its parade of previously unissued recordings with this jewel by Shirley Horn, a supremely gifted pianist and singer (1934-2005). By the time of the 1988 performance in the music room of her favorite Las Vegas hotel, Ms. Horn, bassist Charles Ables and drummer Steve Williams had honed themselves into a group of uncommon tightness and empathy. They generated seductive swing at the slowest tempos, as in this album’s vocal versions of Lil Armstrong’s “Just For a Thrill” and Antonio Carlos Jobim’s “Meditation.” In outright piano trio swing, Horn is at her peak in Randy Weston’s “Hi-Fly,” an extended “Isn’t It Romantic,” “Blues for Big Scotia” by her early piano influence Oscar Peterson, and an amused romp through Cole Porter’s “You’d Be So Nice to Come To.” This is a welcome addition to Horn’s discography.

Weekend Extra: Alex Riel Meets Bill Evans

Listeners rarely have the opportunity to witness world-class musicians prepare for a performance. In the autumn of1966, pianist Bill Evans toured Europe with his regular bassist, Eddie Gomez. Danish drummer Alex Riel joined evans-riel-66them for a concert in Copenhagen that also included the Swedish singer Monica Zetterlund. New to Evans and his repertoire, Riel met him and Gomez in the studios of the Danish Broadcasting Corporation.

In our age of quick-hit internet videos, this 45-minute rehearsal may seem slow, but to those interested in how music is made, it can bring revelations. The high quality of the black and white video lends itself to full-screen viewing. Here and there, conversational levels are as low as the lighting—it can be helpful to keep your hand near the volume control. All rights to this video are reserved to Alex Riel and the Danish Broadcasting Corporation.

Consumer alert: the “related” item in the center position below contains a stretch of the same video in far lower quality.

To see Monica Zetterlund rehearsing with the Evans trio, watch this shorter,  better-known video.

Have a good weekend.

 

 

Brubeck Trio: Two “Indianas” Explained

Drummer, Rifftides reader and close listener Tarik Townsend expands here on his analysis of two 1949 Dave Brubeck Trio takes of “Indiana.” The discussion grew out of comments about differences between saxophonist Paul Desmond’s Brubeck Quartet solos on the later “The Way You Look Tonight” from the quartet’s Oberlin concert. Mr. Townsend explains

While the times, remarkably, are nearly the same, the two versions I posted are indeed two completely different takes of ‘Indiana’, recorded by Fantasy and their subsidiary label Cor0net. If you listen to the beginnings of both takes, you will notice a subtle difference. The recording in the first link begins with Dave modulating down as he states the opening bars, while the second link finds Dave modulating up as he states the opening bars. Again, it’s a subtle difference, but once the drums and bass come in, Brubeck’s ensuing solos are pretty different on the two takes. The trio sounds more energized and upbeat on the second link (and what I assume is the second take).

 

With that settled (I hope), we can move on to jazz and other matters that have developed later than the 1940s and ‘50s. Your suggestions are always welcome. Thanks to Mr. Townsend for his hard work  on this.

For the Desmond solo and quotes discussion, go here.

Monday Recommendation: Kathrine Windfeld

Monday Recommendation: Kathrine Windfeld, Aircraft (Century Music)

Windfeld Big BandThe rich history of jazz in Scandinavia began more than a century ago. During the swing and bebop eras Sweden, Denmark and Norway produced major soloists, composers and arrangers. The emergence of Kathrine Windfeld’s big band brings assurance that the region’s new talents have the potential to equal achievements of players like Lars Gullin, Bengt Hallberg, Åke Persson, Jan Johansson, and writers of the stature of Bengt-Arne Wallin, Gösta Theselius and Harry Arnold. The evidence indicates that Ms. Windfeld, a Dane, could establish an equally impressive career. Her band’s first album has the musicianship, joy and drive of their performance at Sweden’s Ystad Jazz Festival a month ago. Ms. Windfeld tightly integrates the sections, but a feeling of looseness prevails. Among memorable solos are those from trombonist Petter Hängsel, trumpeter Andres Bergkrantz, tenor saxophonist Ida Karlsson and the leader at the piano.

Labor Day 2016

In the United States this is Labor Day, since 1894 a national holiday that celebrates working peoples’ contributions to the nation. Although the calendar says that summer doesn’t imagesend until September 22 this year, many Americans and our close neighbors in Canada consider that Labor Day, or Labour Day, marks the close of the season. This three-day weekend, they pile into their automobiles. Now that regular gasoline averages around $2.20 per gallon, motor trips are considerably less of a pain in the wallet than they were as recently as 2012, when gasoline hovered well above four dollars. Americans range through the land to camp out, have picnics, visit lakes and ocean beaches, get sunburned and watch fireworks. This being an election year, some in search of enlightenment or entertainment go to rallies and listen to candidates. It is also a day when many working people go to work because the stores that employ them have huge Labor Day sales. The irony.

There is no official song for this holiday, although Pete Seeger’s “Solidarity Forever,” Tennessee Ernie Ford’s “Sixteen Tons” and Dolly Parton’s “9 To 5” always get Labor Day airplay. From 1962—when the average price of a gallon of regular gas was 31 cents—here is the unofficial Rifftides Labor Day song. Cannonball Adderley introduces it. His sextet has Nat Adderley, Joe Zawinul, Yusef Lateef, Louis Hayes and Sam Jones.

Happy Labor Day. Try not to get sunburned.

Revisiting Desmond’s Full “TWYLT” Solo

Rifftides reader Frank Roellinger reports that a YouTube watcher who goesDesmond-At-Oberlin by the handle Swel1954 has identified a quote in Desmond’s celebrated solo on “The Way You Look Tonight” from Jazz At Oberlin. Swel1954 may not be the first to think he recognized a bit of “La Cucaracha”* in that masterpiece of joyful improvisation. Still, Mr. Roellinger’s message gives us a perfect reason to let you hear the solo. Here is the introduction to it from a May, 2013 Rifftides post.

Brubeck Oberlin 10 Inch For decades, only listeners who owned the 1953 10-inch vinyl Fantasy LP of the Dave Brubeck Quartet’s Jazz At Oberlin have been able to hear Desmond soaring unedited through chorus after breathtaking chorus of “The Way You Look Tonight.” It is a matter of conjecture why Fantasy cut a minute of the solo when they expanded the album to a 12-inch LP. All subsequent CD reissues perpetuated the cut. In any case, over the years most people have missed the portion of the solo that runs from 1:12 to 2:11 in the video below. Recently, a YouTube contributor known as Kocn53 liberated the complete solo from his copy of the 10-inch LP. He illustrated it with the cover of the 12-inch album. On the left we’re showing you the cover of the original LP, which had only four tracks. Fantasy added “How High the Moon” to the expanded release. How about a public service award for Kocn35, whoever he or she may be.

*(Following the initial posting of this piece, saxophonist, composer and arranger Bill Kirchner, always alert to such matters, pointed out that what Swel1954 pegged as a “La Cucaracha” quote at 1:44 is in fact a snippet of “Mexican Hat Dance.” Si, es verdad.)

Paul Desmond, 1924-1977

Monday Recommendation: Fred Hersch Trio

Fred Hersch Trio, Sunday Night at the Vanguard (Palmetto)

fredherschtrio_sundaynightatthevillagevanguard_mcAfter all their years together, take it for granted that pianist Hersch, bassist John Hébert and drummer Eric McPherson listen intently to one another and mesh with elegance on every level. However, taking for granted anything about the Hersch trio can only open you up to surprises. Many of the surprises here involve time. There are no Dave Brubeck excursions into 9/8, Charles Ives flings with 15/16, or other unconventional time signatures. Instead, Hersch, Hébert and McPherson flex the time, vary it, sometimes improvise with it as surely as they do with harmonic content, and never lose forward motion. Hersch’s “Serpentine” is a prime example. The trio’s Village Vanguard playlist contains Thelonious Monk’s “We See,” Jimmy Rowles’ “The Peacocks,” Paul McCartney’s “For No One,” and among several Hersch compositions a delicious solo piano encore, “Valentine.” Close listening to this album brings great rewards.

Weekend Extra: George Russell, Just Because…

…just because it has been too long since you’ve heard it, even if you heard it a russell190few minutes ago. It is a B-flat blues called “Honesty,” composed by trombonist Dave Baker and played by a sextet led by George Russell (pictured). We hear seven musicians thoroughly experienced in the post-bop mainstream who were also immersed in the freedom that in 1961 was introducing new colors into jazz. Indeed, Russell had been an encourager and trailblazer of that freedom since he wrote for Dizzy Gillespie in the late 1940s. His 1950s and ‘60s work featuring pianist Bill Evans, trumpeter Art Farmer and tenor saxophonist John Coltrane, among others, is some of the best of the music of those decades, written with the soloists’ characteristics and personalities in mind.

What, you say you’ve never heard “Honesty?” This is your lucky day.

Don Ellis, trumpet; Dave Baker, trombone; Eric Dolphy, alto saxophone; George Russell, piano; Steve Swallow, bass; Joe Hunt, drums. It’s from the album Ezz-thetics, recorded in New York in May, 1961.

Weekend Listening Tip: Two Herman Drummers & Friends

Jim Wilke alerts us that his Jazz Northwest  broadcast this weekend features two drummers who at different times drove Woody Herman’s Herd.  Jeff Hamilton and Joe LaBarbera will co-lead an all-star big band that includes another Herman alumnus, baritone saxophonist Gary Smulyan. Herman was known as “The Road Father” because he mentored countless young musicians who later became stars in their own right. The concert was recorded at this summer’s Jazz Port Townsend on Washington state’s Olympic Peninsula. In the Jim Levitt photo we see (left to right) pianist John Hansen, Hamilton, bassist John Hamar, LaBarbera and trumpeter Terrell Stafford.

Drummers Jeff Hamilton (L) and Joe LaBarbera (R) lead the Faculty All-Star Big Band Tribute to Woody Herman, at 2016 Jazz Port Townsend. Travis Ranney, tenor; Jay Thomas, tenor; Tracy Knoop, tenor; Gary Smulyan, bari sax; Brad Allison, trumpet; Sean Jones, trumpet; Terell Stafford, trumpet; Thomas Marriott, trumpet; Oliver Groenewald, trumpet; Wycliffe Gordon, trombone; David Marriott, trombone; Greg Schroeder, trombone; John Hansen, piano; Jon Hamar, bass; Jeff Hamilton, drums; Joe LaBarbera, drums

From Mr. Wilke’s note about the program:

Jazz Northwest airs Sundays at 2 PM PDT and is recorded and produced by Jim Wilke exclusively for KPLU-FM, 88.5. The program also streams at kplu.org and is available anytime after broadcast at jazznw.org. Next week’s show will feature the opening concert from this year’s festival, with tenor saxophonist JD Allen and trumpeter Sean Jones (September 4).

While we’re Hermanizing, here he is as encourager-in-chief with the 1977 edition of the Herd. 24-year-old Jeff Hamilton is the drummer. The tenor saxophone soloists on “Giant Steps” are Frank Tiberi and Joe Lovano. You’ll catch a glimpse or two of Pat Coil at the piano.

Rudy Van Gelder, 1924-2016

Van Gelder 2Rudy Van Gelder, who recorded thousands of albums by musicians including some of the most important in jazz, died today at 91. As a young man, Van Gelder began recording in a room in his parents’ house in Hackensack, New Jersey. Among his recordings were early albums by Miles Davis and Thelonious Monk. He was a practicing optometrist, but he said in recent years that when he first found himself in a recording studio, he had a feeling that “this is what I should be doing.” He went on to acquire the most sophisticated equipment and learned to use it to create what was sometimes labeled the Van Gelder sound. There was widespread speculation about how he achieved that sound, but he never disclosed his recording secrets. He ultimately left optometry and established his own studio in nearby Englewood Cliffs. Over the years he engineered classic sessions by Gil Mellé, John Coltrane, Cannonball Adderley, Art Blakey, Sonny Rollins, Horace Silver and dozens of others. Van Gelder’s work made up substantial portions of the output of the record companies Savoy, Prestige and—especially—Blue Note.

As an example of the Van Gelder sound, from pianist, composer and arranger Duke Pearson’s 1966 album Sweet Honeybee here is a nifty blues in F. The soloists are Freddie Hubbard, trumpet; Joe Henderson, tenor sax; James Spaulding, alto sax; Duke Pearson, piano; and Ron Carter, bass. The drummer is Mickey Roker. Pearson named the piece, “Ready Rudy?”

For an appreciation of Van Gelder from a New Jersey news organization, go here. Embedded in the obituary is video of an interview with Van Gelder about his life and work.

Rudy Van Gelder, RIP.

Recent Listening: Steven Lugerner On Jackie McLean

Steven Lugerner, Jacknife: The Music Of Jackie McLean (Primary Records)

51b-jRMJwZL._SS500After his studies at The New School in New York ended a couple of years ago, alto saxophonist Steven Lugerner returned home to the San Francisco Bay area and took Jackie McLean with him. Not in person, of course; McLean died in 2006, and Lugerner never met him, but the young man became immersed in McLean’s music. The audacity of McLean’s attack is apparent in everything that Lugerner plays. The aggressiveness, rough edges and incisiveness of McLean’s conception are apparent from his successor’s first solo, in “On the Nile.” If Lugerner’s pugnacity goes a bit over the top in the piece, trumpeter JJ Kirkpatrick brings theLugerner, S. emotional heat down in the transition to his solo, and there is an interlude of relative calm before Kirkpatrick cranks the energy back up. McLean composed three of the six tunes on Jacknife. His frequent trumpet companion Charles Tolliver wrote two. Another is by drummer Jack DeJohnette.

McLean had affinity for the innovations of Ornette Coleman, and while there is no free-jazz abandonment of conventional rules in the album, Lugerner applies Coleman phrasing and harmonic leaps in “Cancellation.” The dramatic “Melody for Melonae,” introduced by McLean on his 1962 Blue Note album Let Freedom Ring, incorporates simultaneous improvisation by Lugerner and Kirkpatrick. Pianist Richard Sears, bassist Garret Lang and drummer Michael Mitchell, already making an impression on the California jazz scene, are likely to receive further attention through their work with Lugerner and Kirkpatrick in this stimulating collection.

Toots Thielemans 1922-2016

Toots Thielemans, the man who made the harmonica a well-known jazz instrument died today in Brussels, Belgium, his hometown. He was 94. Thielemans was recently hospitalized after a fall that resulted in a broken arm, but neither his family nor management representatives specified the cause of his death.

Screen Shot 2016-08-22 at 8.54.23 PMOn an instrument often dismissed as a novelty, Thielemans’ advanced musicianship and individuality made him a respected colleague of Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, Benny Goodman and George Shearing, with all of whom he played. In Shearing’s quintet, he played both harmonica and guitar. Thielemans inspired a number of younger musicians to concentrate on the harmonica. In the 1950s, saxophonist Eddie Shu added the harmonica to his performances, as did Howard Levy later. Contemporary players include Grégoire Maret, William Galison, the young Swedish musician Filip Jers and the German virtuoso Hendrik Muerkens. None of them has achieved Thielemans’ popularity or the level of familiarity he attained through exposure on movie soundtracks, guest shots on albums by Billy Eckstine, Billy Joel and Julian Lennon, and appearances on television’s Sesame Street. For a thorough review of Thielemans’ career, see the obituary by Peter Keepnews in today’s New York Times.

The following piece from the Rifftides archive reports on a Thielemans club appearance that had all of the elements that made his performances endearing and musically rewarding

Toots And Friends
November 14, 2005

My heavily-traveled weekend with an assemblage of couples out for a good time included an evening at Jazz Alley in Seattle eating well and hearing Toots Thielemans, Kenny Werner and Oscar Castro-Neves. Thielemans is a member of that astonishing corps of world-class jazz octogenarians (Hank Jones, Marian McPartland, James Moody, Dave Brubeck, ClarkTerry, Buddy DeFranco) who seem uninterested in slowing their pace, let alone retiring. At eighty-three, his polish, harmonic daring and swing on the harmonica keep him the undisputed champion not only of that unlikely jazz instrument but of all instruments that show up in the jazz magazines’ “miscellaneous” poll categories.

When it comes to Thielemans’ level of musicianship, categories don’t matter. He would likely be as creative if he played comb and tissue paper.  Thielemans and Werner, long established as a formidable duo, became a virtual chamber orchestra with the addition of Castro-Neves’ guitar. There were moments at Jazz Alley when the piano, guitar and harmonica melded into chords so expansive and deep, it seemed impossible that they came from only three instruments. The authenticity of Castro-Neves’ Brazilian rhythms and bossa nova spirit were an essential part of the set’s air of happiness. An inveterate quoter, Thielemans now and then broke himself up with some of his allusions. He threw sly glances at Werner as he worked snatches of several other Frank Sinatra hits into his solo on “All The Way.”

On some pieces, Werner supplemented his piano with an electronic keyboard. His goal may have been to create atmospherics, but rather than enhance the sublime quality of the ensemble, his synthesizer “sweetening” diluted it. A pianist of his protean capabilities needs no digital reinforcement, as he demonstrated in brilliant solos on “The Dolphin,” “Chega de Saudade,” and an unlikely neo-samba treatment of “God Bless America.”

The trio’s treatment of the Irving Berlin classic inspired a standing ovation, then a short speech by Thielemans about how jazz and the American people drew him to move to the United States from Belgium in 1957 and to become a US citizen. He talked about his love of Louis Armstrong. Then, as an encore, Thielemans, Werner and Castro-Neves played “What a Wonderful World.” For the ninety minutes of their set, the world, the band, the audience, the club, were wonderful. Everything was wonderful.

Here are Thielemans and Werner seven years later, without Castro-Neves, at Théâtre Maisonneuve in Montreal, playing “The Days of Wine and Roses,” a song associated with Thielemans nearly from its birth.

Toots Thielemans, RIP.

Jazz today also lost pianist Derek Smith, 84; trumpeter Louis Smith, 72; and Irish guitarist Louis Stewart, 74.

Monday Recommendation: Toots Thielemans

Toots Thielemans, Yesterday & Today (Out Of The Blue) TT Yesterday & TodayThe loss today of the harmonica virtuoso makes this survey of his career poignant and rewarding. Two CDs with thirty-eight tracks, most previously unreleased, follow Thielemans from 1946, when he was a 23-year-old guitarist with a Belgian swing band, to a 2001 harmonica performance of “What A Wonderful World” with pianist Kenny Werner. In the late 1940s and early ‘50s, when many European musicians were struggling with the style, Thielemans had a firm grasp of bebop. Playing through the decades with George Shearing, Hank Jones, J.J. Johnson, Elis Regina, Mulgrew Miller, Shirley Horn and a few dozen others, Thielemans is astonishing on both instruments, but it’s his harmonica that brings grins of joy.

Ystad Followup: Kathrine Windfeld

K. Windfeld 2The Rifftides wrapup report on the Ystad Sweden Jazz Festival included a brief, enthusiastic comment about a performance by the Kathrine Windfeld Big Band of her piece “Aircraft.” This young Danish composer, arranger and pianist writes for 15 young musicians from Denmark, Sweden, Norway and Poland. They negotiate her demanding charts with aplomb, intensity and obvious appreciation for one another’s talents. Following the video, I’m including their names for you to remember because we are undoubtedly going to be hearing further important work from Ms. Windfeld’s band. There is no video from the Ystad concert, but here is “Aircraft” from an earlier appearance in Copenhagen.

Again, the solists on “Aircraft” were Göran Abelli, trombone; Erik Kimestad, trumpet; and Henrik Holst Hansen, drums. Here are the names, instruments and countries of all the members.

TRUMPETS: Rolf Thofte (DK); Erik Kimestad (NO); Magnus Oseth (NO).

TROMBONES: Göran Abelli (SE); Johan Norberg (SE); Anders Malta (DK).

SAXES: Jakub Wiecek (PO); Søren Høst (DK); Roald Elm Larsen (DK); Marika Andersen (DK); Toke Reines (DK).

RHYTHM SECTION: Viktor Sandström, guitar (SE); Johannes Vaht, bass (SE); Henrik Holst Hansen, drums (DK) Kathrine Windfeld, piano, leader (DK).

Ms. Winfield studied piano with Jan Lundgren, the festival’s artistic director and one of its stars. I asked him if he also taught her arranging. “No,” he said. “Playing  the piano and arranging are the same thing.”

Bobby Hutcherson: 1941-2016

imagesBobby Hutcherson, whose vibraphone playing developed deep and complex harmonies, died on Monday at home in Montara, California. He was 75. When Hutcherson came to prominence in the early 1960s, he was in the forefront of young musicians already adept at bebop but seeking greater freedom. He expanded his instrument’s range of tonal colors, with particular attention to dramatic use of resonance, and he was open to ideas pioneered by free jazz saxophonist Ornette Coleman. Along with saxophonists Eric Dolphy and Joe Henderson, pianist McCoy Tyner, trumpeter Freddie Hubbard and other musicians in their twenties, Hutchinson flourished rhythmic and harmonic adventuring beyond bop conventions. In the title tune from his 1965 album Components, we hear a headlong sense of excitement and a bit of the time-play in which Hutcherson loved to indulge. Soloists are Hubbard; alto saxophonist James Spaulding; Hutcherson; and pianist Herbie Hancock. Ron Carter, the bassist, does not solo on this track.

In 2010 Hutcherson became a Jazz Master of the National Endowment for the Arts. For a thorough review of his career, see Jesse Hamlin’s article in The SanFrancisco Chronicle’s SF Gate.

Hutcherson was the subject of an NPR Jazz Profiles program that Capitol Public Radio’s Paul Conley produced in 2001. To hear excerpts from it and Hutcherson’s own words about his music and career, click here.

Monday Recommendation: Bill Charlap Trio

Bill Charlap Trio: Notes From New York (Impulse!)

81yLDy4+3dL._SX522_In Thad Jones’s “Little Rascal On A Rock,” pianist Charlap, bassist Peter Washington and drummer Kenny Washington summon up the dynamics of the Thad Jones-Mel Lewis big band’s 1976 debut recording of the piece. Their twenty years together have given them sensitivity to one another that allows the strength and subtlety needed for such a feat. Charlap and the Washingtons are masters of a kind of jazz piano trio playing that recalls Ahmad Jamal, Hank Jones and George Shearing at their peaks. With jazz often stuck in place or flailing around, it is encouraging that this trio has high exposure and acceptance. Charlap includes welcome rediscoveries of neglected songs by Harry Warren, Harold Arlen and Burton Lane; a joyous Tiny Grimes blues; and what may be the world’s slowest, most endearing solo piano version of “On The Sunny Side Of The Street.”

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Doug Ramsey

Doug is a recipient of the lifetime achievement award of the Jazz Journalists Association. He lives in the Pacific Northwest, where he settled following a career in print and broadcast journalism in cities including New York, New Orleans, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Seattle, Portland, San Antonio, … [MORE]

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