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New Orleans Jazz

April 29, 2020 12:00 AM
Louis Armstrong, perhaps the most famous jazz musician to come from New Orleans, said “If you have to ask what jazz is, you'll never know.” Jazz is the human experience. Jazz is change and adaptation, cooperation and battle. Jazz is joy and pain and everything in between. But, most truly, jazz is indescribable. It is, however, experienceable, and one of the best places to soak it in is the very place it was born: New Orleans, Louisiana. History of NOLA Jazz“The memory of things gone is important to a jazz musician.”—Louis ArmstrongNew Orleans, Louisiana. NOLA. The Crescent City. This territory ruled by France, Spain, and France again was eventually incorporated into the United States with the Louisiana purchase. By this time people from the city’s three founding countries—as well as immigrants from Cuba, Germany, Haiti, Italy, Ireland, England, and enslaved persons from Africa—had gathered in New Orleans.
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Savor the Flavor of the Crescent City: Cajun Food Outside of New Orleans

March 30, 0014 12:00 AM
Walking into the restaurant, guests are immediately greeted with a whiff of onion, garlic, and cayenne pepper. Their ears fill with Louis Armstrong’s scatting. Dimly lit lamps tinted with vibrant colors hang low over the café-style seating. Guests might as well be in New Orleans—all that’s missing is the humidity.
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Reclaiming New Orleans

January 14, 0014 12:00 AM
Eight years after Hurricane Katrina, some areas of New Orleans are completely restored. “You would have never guessed that Uptown New Orleans, the Garden District, or downtown had even been affected by the hurricane,” says resident Freddie Hanson. “Parts of the city in the East and Ninth Ward, though, have barely come back, if at all. They still look like ground zero or a war zone.”
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Swamping in the Deep South

August 01, 0012 12:00 AM
The scaled head of a predator drifts through the water like the tip of an iceberg. He wanders closer toward the boat and blinks his beady, black eyes at the passengers. For a moment he lies motionless, and you could mistake him for a brown, misshapen rock. Yet when the tour guide throws a morsel of food toward the water, the alligator rapidly raises his monstrous body and snatches the food out of the air. Then the giant reptile smoothly sinks back down into the murky water and glides away, his tail shifting back and forth behind him like a snake.
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Voodoo, Vampires & Zombies

September 24, 0011 12:00 AM
Sinister secrets shroud the city of New Orleans, making it the ideal Halloween hideaway. Macabre attractions—perfect for the horror buff and light-hearted traveler alike—lie hidden in its winding streets. Add an element of intrigue to your vacation by experiencing the darker side of New Orleans’ history and culture.
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