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Alice Cooper Tickets, Tour Dates and Concerts
Alice Cooper Tickets, Tour Dates and Concerts

Alice CooperVerified

1,183,601 Followers
• 73 Upcoming Shows
73 Upcoming Shows
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Latest Posts

Alice Cooper
20 days ago
The nightmare doesn't stop. All October shows in Germany are on sale now, but we have to make a couple of pit stops in Paris (2 Oct) and Luxembourg (12 Oct) along the waymore
View More Posts

Alice Cooper merchamazonview store

iPhone 15 Alice Cooper – Spider Logo ...
$21.99
iPhone 15 Alice Cooper – Comic Book C...
$21.99
iPhone 14 Alice Cooper – Alice Cooper...
$21.99
iPhone 14 Alice Cooper – Art and Dagg...
$21.99
iPhone 14 Alice Cooper – Hollywood Bo...
$21.99
iPhone 14 Alice Cooper – Mad House Ro...
$19.99
iPhone 14 Alice Cooper – Top Hat Case
$21.99
– Classic Alice Photo On Navy Premium...
$26.99
– Madhouse Photo On White Tank Top
$23.00
– Sepia Portrait Long Sleeve T-Shirt
$34.99
– Madhouse Photo On White Premium T-S...
$26.99
Alice Cooper – Classic Alice Photo On...
$29.99
– Sepia Portrait Tank Top
$23.00
– Classic Alice Photo On Navy Sweatsh...
$39.99
– Classic Alice Photo On Navy T-Shirt
$24.99
Alice Cooper – Madhouse Photo On Whit...
$34.99
Alice Cooper – Madhouse Photo On Whit...
$24.99
– Sepia Portrait T-Shirt
$24.99
– Sepia Portrait Premium T-Shirt
$26.99
– Sepia Portrait Sweatshirt
$39.99
View All
Alice Cooper's tour

Live Photos of Alice Cooper

Alice Cooper at Saskatoon, Canada in Sasktel Centre 2024
View All Photos

Fan Reviews

Paul
October 12th 2023
Hobart Arena is a great place to see a show. Parking is a little wacky (parking in the park across the street) but once at the venue it is easy in and easy out. All the staff were super friendly. The seats were comfy while we waited for it to start. The sound was excellent as well, although at times the guitars seemed to be turned down a bit. Alice was Alice. Always a great show. He played for about an hour and 40 minutes. Yes he had the snake. Yes he had the guillotine. Yes he wore top hats and played with the props...lol. Always an entertaining show, but then again I am biased as I have loved Alice Cooper for over 45 years. Alice Cooper 2024!
Troy, OH@
Hobart Arena
Annette
October 7th 2023
Excellent show. Seemed like a greatest hits show - and there were plenty of them. The supporting band is excellent - seamless. Clearly have been together for a while. Honestly - I saw Alice Cooper last year for the first time. Just never was anything I thought I would want to go see - until I actually did go. And I will go every opportunity I have now. Seriously - it’s a great show. He does not disappoint. I missed the huge baby prop used during Billion Dollar Babies this time. But I get it - the stage was smaller and I don’t think they could safely use the prop in this venue. If you are wondering whether or not to go - just do it. Go. Great show.
Saint Augustine Shores, FL@
St. Augustine Amphitheatre
September 18th 2023
Been a huge fan of Alice since around 72 or 73. Of course I was one of the high school seniors out of many that celebrated their last day of high school driving around town playing School's Out on my 8 track as loud as I could in 74. This was my first time seeing him alive (birthday gift from my daughter and family!) and it was better than I expected but then I expected a LOT with him being THE ALICE COOPER. His performance was AMAZING, exhilerating, thrillling!!!!!! I am now disabled and walk with a cane but my cane and I danced to every song and I sang with most of them. I even did a some head banging. Only Alice has brought this out since my injury. I had a SPECTACULAR night because of Alice and his undeniable talent. Of course the band was awesome and so were his supporting performers who played their parts with vigor. BEST NIGHT EVER. If you have not seen him live, you are missing a lot!
Greenwood Village, CO@
Fiddler's Green Amphitheatre
View More Fan Reviews

About Alice Cooper

In 1975, Alice Cooper joined forces with longtime collaborator and producer Bob Ezrin to record his first solo album Welcome to My Nightmare, a theatrical concept album about the nightmares of a young boy named Steven. Now, he’s followed Steven into adulthood and presents Welcome 2 My Nightmare, a new but familiar concept album about the fear, anxiety and disgust that haunt Alice Cooper’s dreams in an era of Facebook, Lady Gaga, Sketchers and Angry Birds.

“Alice hates technology, disco is still a nightmare for him and working in a cubicle from nine-to-five would give him cold sweats,” Cooper says. “At the same time, this is a nightmare so all these normal life things are thrown into this crazy world that’s only logical when you’re in the nightmare. You could have an elephant in your garage, and you’re on the lawn in a pink tutu cooking hot dogs. And at the time it’s fine. But when you wake up you go, ‘How insane is that? Where did that come from?’ So we realized that having Alice in a modern-world nightmare is a great place to come from theatrically because we can go anywhere we want and make it as insane as possible.”

A wild, surreal odyssey, Welcome 2 My Nightmare provided Cooper and Ezrin the opportunity to work with numerous musicians and experiment with various musical styles. The three surviving members of the original band, guitarist Michael Bruce, bassist Dennis Dunaway and drummer Neal Smith, co-wrote three songs and they all played on “When Hell Comes Home,” a gritty ‘70s-style rock track about the nightmare of domestic abuse. “I wanted the song to feel like it was off of Love it to Death or Killer, Cooper says. “But we never had to talk about playing the song ‘70s-style, they just did it. It was great and there was nothing we could do to make it any more ‘70s ‘cause that’s just the way these guys play.”

The collaborations with his fellow original band members stemmed from their 2010 induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, for which they reunited to play four songs. “I was always looking for a logical reason to work with them again,” Cooper says. “When we broke up there was no bad blood. Most bands break up and they start suing each other. We never broke up on that level. We broke up on a very friendly level. ‘You go do what you’re gonna do, I’m gonna do what I’m gonna do. Let’s see what happens.’ When we got in the Hall of Fame I called them up and I said, ‘We have to do four songs. Let’s get together and rehearse.’ And they sounded great. They played great. We did a few projects after that. We played a couple times together. And I said, ‘Let’s keep it going. Let’s get these guys on the album.’ And Bob said, ‘That’s a great idea. Let’s write with these guys.’ It just worked.”

The first single from Welcome 2 My Nightmare, “I’ll Bite Your Face Off,” is about a gorgeous but deadly female who takes Alice by the hand and guides him through the various scenes of his nightmare. The song was co-written by Neal Smith and features a swaggering ‘60s British rock rhythm, brash, bluesy guitars and sneering, seductive vocals. “We tried to make this sound as much like early Rolling Stones as possible and we really did capture that,” Cooper says. “We’ve been doing it onstage and the audience sings along without knowing the song.”

On “Disco Bloodbath Boogie Fever,” Cooper combines a tongue-in-cheek disco beat and rhythm with near-rap vocals and lyrics about taking a machine gun to zombie disco dancers who refuse to die. Then there’s the zany surf rock of “Ghoul’s Gone Wild,” the derelict down-on-his-luck slur of “The Last Man on Earth,” and the Beatles meet Gary Glitter show tune “The Congregation,” which stars Rob Zombie as a narrator describing such modern-day nightmares as telemarketers, lawyers, pimps, mariachi bands and mimes.

One of the highlights for Cooper is the throbbing, modern rocker “What Baby Wants,” which stars Ke$ha as the devil. “Some people thought I was crazy to have Ke$ha on the record, but I never saw her as one of these Britney Spears diva girls. I saw her more as a rock singer. So I said, ‘Let’s present you not as a diva, but as a rock singer on this.’ We wrote the song together and in the end the darker lyrics were hers.”

Like The original Welcome To My Nightmare, which was highlighted by “Only Women Bleed,” Welcome 2 My Nightmare also features a lovelorn ballad, “Something to Remember Me By,” which was written with Dick Wagner back when they released “I Never Cry” in 1976. “We never used it on an album before because I never felt I was good enough to sing that song,” Cooper reflects. “It was never in my key, I could never get it right. Finally, we got it where my voice is in the right place so we included it and it may be the prettiest ballad we ever wrote. Steve Hunter played guitar on it and we really got a nice Beatles-y sound out of it. So when you’re listening to it you hear this really pretty romantic song and then you realize that in the Nightmare Alice is singing to a pile of bones that used to be a girl.”

Fans of the first Welcome To My Nightmare will recognize melodic references to the original woven throughout the new record. For example, in the cinematic minor-key song “The Nightmare Returns,” Ezrin plays the theme from “Steven” when Cooper sings, “I think we’ve heard that song before.”

“I really like the idea of having some of the musical identity of the first album showing up in the second album,” Cooper says. “It really connects the two and if you’re a real Alice fan and you hear those themes it makes you feel comfortable.”

Welcome To My Nightmare, which came out in 1975, was a landmark album for Cooper. It was his first solo release, following a historic string of anthems written and recorded by the original band between 1971 and 1974, including “School’s Out,” “No More Mr. Nice Guy,” “Elected,” and “I’m Eighteen.” A multimedia smash long before the dawn of music television, Welcome To My Nightmare proved that Cooper could remain popular musically and could take theatricality to an entirely new level of dream by exposing audiences to the crippling fears of a seven-year-old child with an active imagination.

Welcome To My Nightmare spawned two major singles, the ominous, anthemic title track and the beautiful, melancholy acoustic ballad “Only Women Bleed,” and featured narration by horror movie icon Vincent Price. In addition to touring the live “Welcome To My Nightmare” show, Cooper created the prime time special The Nightmare, which was essentially the first long form music video. The program debuted in April 1975. In September he shot the concert film “Welcome To My Nightmare” at London’s Wembley Arena.

“A seven-year-old kid is pretty sure there’s something living in the closet and thinks that something is waiting for him under his bed,” Cooper says. “His toys are probably coming to life and trying to kill him. And I thought, ‘Well, that’s a good general approach for the album because we’ve all been kids and we’ve all had those nightmares.’”

From his first solo album, 1975's Welcome to My Nightmare through releases such as 1994's The Last Temptation and 2000's Brutal Planet, concept albums have been a specialty of Alice's, and this time he spins the story of a serial killer who imagines himself as the most predatory of all insects, trapping his prey, killing them, then enveloping his eight victims in silk, taking a leg from each of them. A web of intrigue, wrapped around some serious hard rock.

Co-produced by Alice with the team of Danny Saber [Black Grape, Rolling Stones, Ozzy Osbourne, David Bowie] and Greg Hampton [Bootsy Collins, Buckethead], songs like the opening "I Know Where You Live" and "Vengeance Is Mine," featuring a snaking metal guitar solo from Slash himself, evoke such classic Alice anthems as "Is it My Body," and "Under My Wheels" along with landmark albums like Love It To Death, Killer and School's Out. There's also a patented rock ballad in the tradition of "Only Women Bleed" and "I Never Cry" with "Killed by Love." Along Came a Spider features Cooper's touring band of drummer Eric Singer, bassist Chuck Garric and guitarists Keri Kelli and Jason Hook. Songwriting was handled by Alice with Saber, Hampton, Garric, Kelli and a few friends including former band member Damon Johnson and Warrant's Jani Lane.

Along Came a Spider has elements of serial killers such as Hannibal Lecter, Son of Sam, Ted Bundy, Jack the Ripper, Sweeney Todd and Psycho's Norman Bates with Alice himself taking the central part, acting out the murderer's diary -- challenging reality by Alice Cooper inhabiting the identity of a serial killer who imagines himself a spider. As he has in the past, Alice chronicles a classic battle between good and evil, with inevitable results.

"Evil should get punished," says Alice. "It should never win. And that, to me, is what's most satisfying. I may love Darth Vader when I watch Star Wars, but I feel relief when he finally gets what's coming to him."

...Read Alice's full biography @ AliceCooper.com
Show More
Genres:
Shock Rock, Rock, Rock N Roll
Band Members:
GLEN BUXTON - GUITAR, NITA STRAUSS - GUITAR, GLEN SOBEL - DRUMS, NEAL SMITH - DRUMS, DENNIS DUNAWAY - BASS, RYAN ROXIE - GUITAR, CHUCK GARRIC - BASS, CURRENT BAND:, ORIGINAL BAND:, ALICE COOPER - VOCALS, TOMMY HENRIKSEN - GUITAR, MICHAEL BRUCE - GUITAR
Hometown:
Phoenix, Arizona

Latest Posts

Alice Cooper
20 days ago
The nightmare doesn't stop. All October shows in Germany are on sale now, but we have to make a couple of pit stops in Paris (2 Oct) and Luxembourg (12 Oct) along the waymore
View More Posts

Live Photos of Alice Cooper

Alice Cooper at Saskatoon, Canada in Sasktel Centre 2024
View All Photos

Alice Cooper merchamazonview store

iPhone 15 Alice Cooper – Spider Logo ...
$21.99
iPhone 15 Alice Cooper – Comic Book C...
$21.99
iPhone 14 Alice Cooper – Alice Cooper...
$21.99
iPhone 14 Alice Cooper – Art and Dagg...
$21.99
iPhone 14 Alice Cooper – Hollywood Bo...
$21.99
iPhone 14 Alice Cooper – Mad House Ro...
$19.99
iPhone 14 Alice Cooper – Top Hat Case
$21.99
– Classic Alice Photo On Navy Premium...
$26.99
– Madhouse Photo On White Tank Top
$23.00
– Sepia Portrait Long Sleeve T-Shirt
$34.99
– Madhouse Photo On White Premium T-S...
$26.99
Alice Cooper – Classic Alice Photo On...
$29.99
– Sepia Portrait Tank Top
$23.00
– Classic Alice Photo On Navy Sweatsh...
$39.99
– Classic Alice Photo On Navy T-Shirt
$24.99
Alice Cooper – Madhouse Photo On Whit...
$34.99
Alice Cooper – Madhouse Photo On Whit...
$24.99
– Sepia Portrait T-Shirt
$24.99
– Sepia Portrait Premium T-Shirt
$26.99
– Sepia Portrait Sweatshirt
$39.99
View All
Alice Cooper's tour

Fan Reviews

Paul
October 12th 2023
Hobart Arena is a great place to see a show. Parking is a little wacky (parking in the park across the street) but once at the venue it is easy in and easy out. All the staff were super friendly. The seats were comfy while we waited for it to start. The sound was excellent as well, although at times the guitars seemed to be turned down a bit. Alice was Alice. Always a great show. He played for about an hour and 40 minutes. Yes he had the snake. Yes he had the guillotine. Yes he wore top hats and played with the props...lol. Always an entertaining show, but then again I am biased as I have loved Alice Cooper for over 45 years. Alice Cooper 2024!
Troy, OH@
Hobart Arena
Annette
October 7th 2023
Excellent show. Seemed like a greatest hits show - and there were plenty of them. The supporting band is excellent - seamless. Clearly have been together for a while. Honestly - I saw Alice Cooper last year for the first time. Just never was anything I thought I would want to go see - until I actually did go. And I will go every opportunity I have now. Seriously - it’s a great show. He does not disappoint. I missed the huge baby prop used during Billion Dollar Babies this time. But I get it - the stage was smaller and I don’t think they could safely use the prop in this venue. If you are wondering whether or not to go - just do it. Go. Great show.
Saint Augustine Shores, FL@
St. Augustine Amphitheatre
September 18th 2023
Been a huge fan of Alice since around 72 or 73. Of course I was one of the high school seniors out of many that celebrated their last day of high school driving around town playing School's Out on my 8 track as loud as I could in 74. This was my first time seeing him alive (birthday gift from my daughter and family!) and it was better than I expected but then I expected a LOT with him being THE ALICE COOPER. His performance was AMAZING, exhilerating, thrillling!!!!!! I am now disabled and walk with a cane but my cane and I danced to every song and I sang with most of them. I even did a some head banging. Only Alice has brought this out since my injury. I had a SPECTACULAR night because of Alice and his undeniable talent. Of course the band was awesome and so were his supporting performers who played their parts with vigor. BEST NIGHT EVER. If you have not seen him live, you are missing a lot!
Greenwood Village, CO@
Fiddler's Green Amphitheatre
View More Fan Reviews

About Alice Cooper

In 1975, Alice Cooper joined forces with longtime collaborator and producer Bob Ezrin to record his first solo album Welcome to My Nightmare, a theatrical concept album about the nightmares of a young boy named Steven. Now, he’s followed Steven into adulthood and presents Welcome 2 My Nightmare, a new but familiar concept album about the fear, anxiety and disgust that haunt Alice Cooper’s dreams in an era of Facebook, Lady Gaga, Sketchers and Angry Birds.

“Alice hates technology, disco is still a nightmare for him and working in a cubicle from nine-to-five would give him cold sweats,” Cooper says. “At the same time, this is a nightmare so all these normal life things are thrown into this crazy world that’s only logical when you’re in the nightmare. You could have an elephant in your garage, and you’re on the lawn in a pink tutu cooking hot dogs. And at the time it’s fine. But when you wake up you go, ‘How insane is that? Where did that come from?’ So we realized that having Alice in a modern-world nightmare is a great place to come from theatrically because we can go anywhere we want and make it as insane as possible.”

A wild, surreal odyssey, Welcome 2 My Nightmare provided Cooper and Ezrin the opportunity to work with numerous musicians and experiment with various musical styles. The three surviving members of the original band, guitarist Michael Bruce, bassist Dennis Dunaway and drummer Neal Smith, co-wrote three songs and they all played on “When Hell Comes Home,” a gritty ‘70s-style rock track about the nightmare of domestic abuse. “I wanted the song to feel like it was off of Love it to Death or Killer, Cooper says. “But we never had to talk about playing the song ‘70s-style, they just did it. It was great and there was nothing we could do to make it any more ‘70s ‘cause that’s just the way these guys play.”

The collaborations with his fellow original band members stemmed from their 2010 induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, for which they reunited to play four songs. “I was always looking for a logical reason to work with them again,” Cooper says. “When we broke up there was no bad blood. Most bands break up and they start suing each other. We never broke up on that level. We broke up on a very friendly level. ‘You go do what you’re gonna do, I’m gonna do what I’m gonna do. Let’s see what happens.’ When we got in the Hall of Fame I called them up and I said, ‘We have to do four songs. Let’s get together and rehearse.’ And they sounded great. They played great. We did a few projects after that. We played a couple times together. And I said, ‘Let’s keep it going. Let’s get these guys on the album.’ And Bob said, ‘That’s a great idea. Let’s write with these guys.’ It just worked.”

The first single from Welcome 2 My Nightmare, “I’ll Bite Your Face Off,” is about a gorgeous but deadly female who takes Alice by the hand and guides him through the various scenes of his nightmare. The song was co-written by Neal Smith and features a swaggering ‘60s British rock rhythm, brash, bluesy guitars and sneering, seductive vocals. “We tried to make this sound as much like early Rolling Stones as possible and we really did capture that,” Cooper says. “We’ve been doing it onstage and the audience sings along without knowing the song.”

On “Disco Bloodbath Boogie Fever,” Cooper combines a tongue-in-cheek disco beat and rhythm with near-rap vocals and lyrics about taking a machine gun to zombie disco dancers who refuse to die. Then there’s the zany surf rock of “Ghoul’s Gone Wild,” the derelict down-on-his-luck slur of “The Last Man on Earth,” and the Beatles meet Gary Glitter show tune “The Congregation,” which stars Rob Zombie as a narrator describing such modern-day nightmares as telemarketers, lawyers, pimps, mariachi bands and mimes.

One of the highlights for Cooper is the throbbing, modern rocker “What Baby Wants,” which stars Ke$ha as the devil. “Some people thought I was crazy to have Ke$ha on the record, but I never saw her as one of these Britney Spears diva girls. I saw her more as a rock singer. So I said, ‘Let’s present you not as a diva, but as a rock singer on this.’ We wrote the song together and in the end the darker lyrics were hers.”

Like The original Welcome To My Nightmare, which was highlighted by “Only Women Bleed,” Welcome 2 My Nightmare also features a lovelorn ballad, “Something to Remember Me By,” which was written with Dick Wagner back when they released “I Never Cry” in 1976. “We never used it on an album before because I never felt I was good enough to sing that song,” Cooper reflects. “It was never in my key, I could never get it right. Finally, we got it where my voice is in the right place so we included it and it may be the prettiest ballad we ever wrote. Steve Hunter played guitar on it and we really got a nice Beatles-y sound out of it. So when you’re listening to it you hear this really pretty romantic song and then you realize that in the Nightmare Alice is singing to a pile of bones that used to be a girl.”

Fans of the first Welcome To My Nightmare will recognize melodic references to the original woven throughout the new record. For example, in the cinematic minor-key song “The Nightmare Returns,” Ezrin plays the theme from “Steven” when Cooper sings, “I think we’ve heard that song before.”

“I really like the idea of having some of the musical identity of the first album showing up in the second album,” Cooper says. “It really connects the two and if you’re a real Alice fan and you hear those themes it makes you feel comfortable.”

Welcome To My Nightmare, which came out in 1975, was a landmark album for Cooper. It was his first solo release, following a historic string of anthems written and recorded by the original band between 1971 and 1974, including “School’s Out,” “No More Mr. Nice Guy,” “Elected,” and “I’m Eighteen.” A multimedia smash long before the dawn of music television, Welcome To My Nightmare proved that Cooper could remain popular musically and could take theatricality to an entirely new level of dream by exposing audiences to the crippling fears of a seven-year-old child with an active imagination.

Welcome To My Nightmare spawned two major singles, the ominous, anthemic title track and the beautiful, melancholy acoustic ballad “Only Women Bleed,” and featured narration by horror movie icon Vincent Price. In addition to touring the live “Welcome To My Nightmare” show, Cooper created the prime time special The Nightmare, which was essentially the first long form music video. The program debuted in April 1975. In September he shot the concert film “Welcome To My Nightmare” at London’s Wembley Arena.

“A seven-year-old kid is pretty sure there’s something living in the closet and thinks that something is waiting for him under his bed,” Cooper says. “His toys are probably coming to life and trying to kill him. And I thought, ‘Well, that’s a good general approach for the album because we’ve all been kids and we’ve all had those nightmares.’”

From his first solo album, 1975's Welcome to My Nightmare through releases such as 1994's The Last Temptation and 2000's Brutal Planet, concept albums have been a specialty of Alice's, and this time he spins the story of a serial killer who imagines himself as the most predatory of all insects, trapping his prey, killing them, then enveloping his eight victims in silk, taking a leg from each of them. A web of intrigue, wrapped around some serious hard rock.

Co-produced by Alice with the team of Danny Saber [Black Grape, Rolling Stones, Ozzy Osbourne, David Bowie] and Greg Hampton [Bootsy Collins, Buckethead], songs like the opening "I Know Where You Live" and "Vengeance Is Mine," featuring a snaking metal guitar solo from Slash himself, evoke such classic Alice anthems as "Is it My Body," and "Under My Wheels" along with landmark albums like Love It To Death, Killer and School's Out. There's also a patented rock ballad in the tradition of "Only Women Bleed" and "I Never Cry" with "Killed by Love." Along Came a Spider features Cooper's touring band of drummer Eric Singer, bassist Chuck Garric and guitarists Keri Kelli and Jason Hook. Songwriting was handled by Alice with Saber, Hampton, Garric, Kelli and a few friends including former band member Damon Johnson and Warrant's Jani Lane.

Along Came a Spider has elements of serial killers such as Hannibal Lecter, Son of Sam, Ted Bundy, Jack the Ripper, Sweeney Todd and Psycho's Norman Bates with Alice himself taking the central part, acting out the murderer's diary -- challenging reality by Alice Cooper inhabiting the identity of a serial killer who imagines himself a spider. As he has in the past, Alice chronicles a classic battle between good and evil, with inevitable results.

"Evil should get punished," says Alice. "It should never win. And that, to me, is what's most satisfying. I may love Darth Vader when I watch Star Wars, but I feel relief when he finally gets what's coming to him."

...Read Alice's full biography @ AliceCooper.com
Show More
Genres:
Shock Rock, Rock, Rock N Roll
Band Members:
GLEN BUXTON - GUITAR, NITA STRAUSS - GUITAR, GLEN SOBEL - DRUMS, NEAL SMITH - DRUMS, DENNIS DUNAWAY - BASS, RYAN ROXIE - GUITAR, CHUCK GARRIC - BASS, CURRENT BAND:, ORIGINAL BAND:, ALICE COOPER - VOCALS, TOMMY HENRIKSEN - GUITAR, MICHAEL BRUCE - GUITAR
Hometown:
Phoenix, Arizona

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