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Trombone Shorty

Trombone Shorty replaces boy's stolen trombone

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — A 14-year-old whose trombone was stolen at gunpoint has a new one thanks to musician Troy Andrews, much better known...

Trombonist proposes on stage at Jazz Fest

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — The crowd applauding Big Sam's Funky Nation got another reason to cheer when trombonist and band leader Sam Williams went...

Blues museum to call St. Louis home, sweet home

A woman pushes a stroller past the site of the National Blues Museum, set to open next year, in St. Louis. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson) by Alan Scher ZagierAssociated Press ST. LOUIS (AP) — Die-hard music lovers, casual fans and globe-trotting tourists readily embrace Chicago as the home of the blues, spurred in large part by the Great Migration northward of Southern Blacks in the early and mid-20th century. Robert Johnson, the genre's godfather, famously sang of "Sweet Home Chicago," and the Chicago Blues Festival draws more than 100,000 people each summer. But come next year, the National Blues Museum won't find a home in Chicago, but in a rival Midwest city 300 miles to the south.

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