Nashville, Tennessee

For most of my life I had no real interest in seeing to Nashville. I’m not sure what changed my mind, but at some point I realized that it was a part of the country I need to visit, if for no other reason than just to say I did. My husband’s family planned a reunion at an estate in Franklin, TN, and it facilitated a week in the area. What a wonderful surprise. When I left after a week, I wanted to go back. This time with some of my country music loving friends. Not to say that the city is only for country music lovers, because it is so much more than that, but it is definitely the home of country music and a place where all fans should spend some time.

The Grand Ole Opry

Turns out that I was wrong all these years, the Opry isn’t a place, it is a radio show. Apparently, it has had several homes and can be produced from anywhere. The current home of the Opry is a building that is known as the Opry House. Prior to this Opry House, the Ryman Theater was home to the Grand Ole Opry. The true essence of the Grand Ole Opry is the feeling that you get glimpsing into the family of musicians that has been created from the show. Artists are invited to join the Opry family, and most say that it turns out to be a highlight of their lives. The tour of the Opry House is led by an energetic storyteller with a passion for the Opry. It will take you to the studio that was the filming venue for many shows, including the long running Hee Haw. You will wander through the dressing rooms and the backstage area while the guide shares stories of the members and show experiences. As you walk across the stage you will get an opportunity to stand in “the circle” and have your picture taken. A true country artist might want to wait until they have a guitar in hand and a mic at the ready, although that opportunity will never happen for me since I can’t carry a tune in a bucket and only play air guitar. Still, it was a cool feeling. A “must see” stop on your Nashville tour.

The Country Music Hall of Fame

This museum is dedicated to the history of Country Music. Starting at the humble beginning and going all the way to today’s industry. One of the things that is very clear going through this museum is that country music has adapted and changed over the years. Starting with its roots in gospel and changing into something much more mainstream that we listen to today. If you were a country music fan at any time, you will find that era of music represented. You will walk through the various adaptions of the music, including movements by artists. Many chose to depart the Nashville scene to discover a different inspiration for their personal style of music. Interestingly, most return to Nashville to continue their careers in the home of country music. The museum has interactive exhibits, videos, and displays of everything used in music. You will find information on CMA members, including a hall of inductees. Be sure to plan several hours if you have any interest in country music. If you don’t, a couple hours will be enough.

The RCA studio B tour is an add on to the museum. You are shuttled by van to music row where the studio is located. During the drive your tour guide will share the history of the studio and the area surrounding it to help the time go quickly. You will see the studio where many of our favorite country music records were recorded. You will hear stories and see the instruments that were used in the recording. I would recommend adding this on to the museum. It is well worth the 90 minutes and additional cost. Although it is not considered to be a working studio, it is still rented to artists who desire the ambiance of days gone by for inspiration during their recordings.

printing press in the printshop

As long as there have been products to sell there has been a way to advertise those products. The music business is no exception to that rule. Although the product is more often an event than an item, the concept is the same. So, before everyone had a computer in their hands or a television on their walls, what would someone do to advertise? Print media of course. Thus, the birth of Hatch Show Prints, which is set up in the Country Music Hall of Fame. Since 1879 they have printed the advertising for every kind of show imaginable, and they still use the same letterpress method of printing today. During the tour you will hear about the company itself and how the printing process works. They even provide an opportunity to create a portion of a poster that you can keep as a souvenir. If you are just interested in seeing some of their famous prints, the store is available to shop and there is a viewing area to see the printing process without a tour. If you want all the information, take the tour. I can’t confidently say that I am glad we took the tour, I found it to drag on a bit and didn’t find the participation in the printing process to be very exciting. Next time I would skip the tour and use the money to buy a cool poster to take home.

Broadway

everybody has a honky tonk

The center of all the Nashville music scene is Broadway. The street is full of restaurants, museums, and bars. All rich and famous people need someplace to invest their money and Broadway is a great place to do that if you are a country music star. You will find many recognizable names in lights on the neon signs outside of the bars that line the street of Broadway. Each with a unique personality, they offer live music, drinks and food to the patrons that choose to stop and partake. The people on the street are plentiful and the music streams out of every bar providing an opportunity to dance on the sidewalk if you choose. I even had a moment of singing into my invisible mic as I walked past one of my favorite Trisha Yearwood songs coming out of the open doors and windows of The Bootleg. The energy is vibrant and contagious. Plan on spending your first evening there and you will be back every night to hang out and enjoy the ambiance and bask in the glow. And if you go, “give my regards to Broadway” because I can’t wait to see it again.

Country Music Greats

You will find museums dedicated to some of the greatest country music legends of all times in Nashville. Each of them costs about $20 and will provide background, memorabilia, and music history of the legend you seek. The highest rated of them is the Johnny Cash Museum. We had intended to get there, but never made it due to the extra time we spent at the other museums. We did make the Glen Campbell Museum though, through a back channel. It turns out that the museum offers performances on their Crystal Stage, and looking for entertainment, we happened to stumble into a concert by blues guitarist, Stacy Mitchhart. The show was fabulous and if you ever get a chance to see him perform, go. The tickets to the show provided access to the museum and you get an hour to go through the museum prior to the concert. Since only the concert goers are in the museum, it is very easy to walk around and see everything in that hour. The price of the performance is less than the ticket price to the museum, which made it the best value of our trip. I would highly recommend checking out some of the shows the Glenn Campbell museum offers. Not only do you get a wonderful performance, but you also get into someplace you wouldn’t normally pay the price of admission to see.

Civil War History

When I find myself looking at war history, the Civil War is not the one that I found interesting. That is until this trip. Civil War history is plentiful in the area. Somehow, I always felt more attached to WWII or Vietnam, knowing people that lived through those times and participated in events. Having looked at the history of the Civil War, now I realize that it really isn’t that far removed from my generation. In the south, where the battles happened, the war is still very close to home, literally and figuratively. Franklin TN, just a little south of Nashville, is the area that one of the bloodiest battles of the war took place. You can see the battlefield, along with the houses that stood in the middle of that battle. The Lotz house and the Carter House both offer guided tours of the property. The home that was commandeered as a military hospital for the injured soldiers, Carnton Plantation, also offers an interesting tour. On the edge of that plantation is the confederate cemetery to which the Carntons assumed management after the war, offering the slain soldiers a final resting place. To see the effects of it so up-close it changes your perception of the war that forever changed our country. The history of slavery will always be a regrettable time in our history. For a “northern” girl, my awareness of the atrocities that happened during those times will be greater and more shameful. Perhaps the most inexcusable part of my understanding is how the oppression continues to live on in some areas of the country. At least I am less ignorant of the circumstances of the times and lives of the people in the South.

Plantation Life

Not all the preserved plantations are civil war associated. Hermitage is the former home of President Andrew Jackson. The home is well preserved and offers a good insight into the living situation of the former President and his family. The grounds are lovely to walk around, especially the garden. They have preserved many cottages, including the original home of the Jacksons prior to the construction of the large home. We took a horse drawn wagon ride through the plantation and it was a very good choice. We got to see all the grounds that way. It would have been too hot to make the walk and less interesting without the animated story telling by the wagon master. Be sure to stop in the museum and look through the exhibits there. If you move right to the mansion tour and finish with wine tasting, it is easy to overlook the museum, so make a point to do that first if possible.

Belle Meade is another great historical site. This plantation was made famous for assisting in the history of horse racing in the south. Bonnie Scotland was the plantation’s first stud horse, and he is the ancestor of 11 of the 13 triple crown winners. The plantation was famous for not only breeding but racing horses. The grounds are beautiful to walk, and the stables and carriage house offers some original equipment to view. The home itself is a nice tour with good stories of the family and the history of the plantation. At the time of the Emancipation Proclamation signing Belle Meade had more enslaved people than any other planation in Tennessee. After that time, many stayed on to tend to the grounds and the horses. Be sure to stop by the ice cream store and the restaurant on the upper level of the entrance. The food was good and reasonably priced.

Lane Car Museum

All the car lovers out there would not forgive me for failing to mention this museum. It is two stories of unusual and classic cars from many parts of the world, focusing primarily on European cars but offering others as well. You will wander through the cars and be amazed by the variety. They have all kinds of videos to show information about many of the cars, which are interesting and informative. This is a must stop for any car lover. Be sure to get there early so you can see the basement, otherwise, you will only get to tour the top floor.

Guitars

My husband’s favorite stops were the guitar shops. Gibson Garage offers everything Gibson including a custom shop. Although I don’t play, or know anything about guitars for that matter, I enjoyed sitting on a comfortable couch in a cool place while he looked around and played various instruments. We also spent an hour at Carter’s Vintage Guitars, which is set up so you can play any one of the over a hundred guitars in the shop. He enjoyed getting his hands on instruments that he’s never had an opportunity to play, and it was great to see him like a kid in a candy store. If you are traveling with someone that plays, be sure the set aside some time to just go and strum away.

And So…

Nashville has something to offer everyone, music, history, art, food, excitement. It has been relocated from my “why would I go there” list to the “want to go again” list. We spent a week in the area, and I was left wanting more. I’m sure you will find it to be entertaining and energetic with a wide variety of activities to meet everyone’s taste.

What You Will Find There:

Music, museums, dancing, shopping, and entertainment.

Memphis, Tennessee

When I think of Memphis, I think of music.  It is known for great musicians and genres that got their start there. Would we know of the Blues and Elvis without Memphis?  However, the city of Memphis is so much more than its music.

Must See Museums

Science, music, art, history, culture, historical sites, and the Mississippi river are all highlighted in museums around the city.  There are enough to make every museum-goer happy.  With only two and a half days we hit the ground running when we arrived in the city.

National Civil Rights Museum

As I walked down Main Street on my way to the National Civil Rights Museum, I had no idea where I was going and what I was going to see.  We turned down the walkway and the Lorraine Motel came into view.  I can only imagine what the view looked like to an African American in the 1960s, when that was a rare refuge for them, a motel that would accept patrons of their skin color.  Well until April 4, 1968, when Martin Luther King Jr was assassinated on the balcony outside of his room.  He was in the city to help fight for the rights of sanitation workers.  He spoke at the Mason Temple the night before and spoke of how he had been to the mountain “And I’ve looked over. And I’ve seen the Promised Land. I may not get there with you. But I want you to know tonight, that we, as a people, will get to the Promised Land. So I’m happy, tonight. I’m not worried about anything. I’m not fearing any man.” Across the street from his motel stood a boarding house that housed a gunman that day, James Earl Ray, who would end the life of the Reverend.  Thankfully, he did not end the movement for civil rights.  

The museum is dedicated not only to America’s Civil Rights Movement, but also to the events that lead to its necessity.  The museum masterfully takes you on the journey through some of the greatest injustices in history.  Thinking it was only a small museum due to its outside appearance, I was pleased to be wrong.  The front of museum maintains the Lorraine Motel appearance, however, the inside provides hours of enlightenment.  As someone who thought they were educated about the Civil Rights Era, I realized how very little I really knew. I have revered Martin Luther King Jr. through his writings and speeches, and to stand only a few feet from the place he spent his last day and took his last breath was very sobering. The final steps of our self-guided museum tour were to the boarding house where Ray took aim and fired the fatal shot.  Upon leaving the museum I was moved even more by the presentation.  I continued to ponder how I would have behaved if I had lived in Memphis in the 1960.  I want to believe that I would have been an agent for change in the world.  I want to believe that King is right, someday the “promise land” will be seen by all.

BBQ Museum?

Ok, there isn’t really a BBQ museum.  Just feel like we need some good food after that somber paragraph. When you finish at the museum, head around the corner to Central BBQ, one of Memphis’ hot spots for its famed BBQ.  Try the pulled pork, it was amazing…and the sweet tea, don’t forget the sweet tea, oh, and the peanut butter pie.  Have that first, you might not have room after the BBQ.  If it is anytime close to a meal hour, plan on waiting a long time to order.  I was again reminded that everything moves slower in the South, and efficiency is not a popular innovation. This is really the only food advice I will provide for the city.  Well except, try the fried green tomatoes.  So good!

The Cotton Exchange

cotton prices
Current cotton prices

Cotton was a very plentiful crop in the South.  Planting, weeding, watering, harvesting, and cleaning cotton took an enormous amount of labor, all provided by slaves before 1865.  After the end of the Civil War, the labor was provided as a crop share with former slaves and landowners.  By the turn of the century, Memphis had become the trading capital of cotton, with 70% of the crop being grown within 200 miles of the city.  That trading took place at the Cotton Exchange.  The exchange closed to floor trading in 1978 with the conversion to computerized trading.  The exchange now houses a cotton museum dedicated to the history of the crop and its importance in creating the South.  It is well worth the hour or two that we spent there.  They have several interactive exhibits that provide information without all the reading, just in case that is appealing to you.

Slave Haven and Underground Railroad Museum

We were quite excited to go to this museum which is in a house that was owned by a German immigrant named Jacob Burke. He assisted runaway slaves in heading North towards freedom. The tour requires reservations and takes you though a series of rooms in the small home. Each room is focused on one aspect of the history, starting with the enslaved people being brought from Africa and ending in the small space under the house where the runaways would hide. I wish that our tour guide had been a little more experienced in giving tours, she talked very fast and seemed to get off on tangents that felt a lot more like propaganda than historical facts. One of them was about how the slaves ate watermelon because it was a “superfood”, and how the pictures of African Americans eating watermelon is a way to oppress them today. I think that the museum was interesting. It would have been much more so if the docent had been more about the presentation of the house’s use and less about her personal agenda. I did learn a lot and the hour that I spent going through the house was worth the time and price of admission.

Rusty’s TV and Movie Car Museum

Batmobile
Michael Keaton’s Batmobile

In a little city about an hour east of Memphis called Jackson, TN you will find a small museum that houses some of your favorite vehicles from TV and the movies. If you grew up watching the shows of the 70’s and 80’s, many of those cars will bring back wonderful memories of your younger years. When I heard that they had the Starsky and Hutch car used in the TV show, I knew I had to go. Every Thursday evening, I would get special permission to stay up late and watch the show with the cutest guy on TV since David Cassidy. The collection includes cars from favorite shows such as Knight Rider, The A-Team, Scooby Doo, Breaking Bad, Beverly Hillbillies, Munsters, and Batman. Movies are equally represented including Ghostbusters, The Blues Brothers, Back to the Future (with the flux capacitor), Fast and the Furious, Wayne’s World, National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation, Jurassic Park, and Transformers. Be sure to take lots of pictures to make your friends at home jealous.

Fun Stops

Memphis Pyramid

When you look up the top things to do in Memphis you will see the Bass Pro Shop mentioned over and over. Not because the store itself is so wonderful, but because it is housed in the city’s pyramid. They have a glass pyramid built on the side of the river, next to Mud Island. It is indeed very nice inside. They have a large aquarium and a large pond filled with huge sturgeon and catfish that you watch from bridges built over the water. There is even a small area with baby crocodiles. An elevator to the top of the structure for viewing or to dine at the restaurant, is available for a fee. They also have a hotel in the structure, The Big Cypress Lodge, a themed hotel that looks like an interesting place to stay, if you are so inclined.

Trippin’ on the Mighty Mississip

Put on your deck shoes and take a boat trip down the Mississippi River. This was one of the most enjoyable things we did in Memphis. Mississippi River Boats offers a 90-minute tour and a dinner cruise on certain days. The boat is large and comfortable. They offer an entertaining guide that shares stories of the river and the area around. He was funny and engaging and made the trip something more than a boring boat ride. They also had music from the area playing when the guide wasn’t talking. It added a little more entertainment than just cruising down the river, plus an opportunity to do a little river dancing. If you ever wanted to take a ride on a paddle boat, you should put this on your list. Although don’t expect to get stuck if the paddle stops working, since it is just for show. It was worth the price and a good way to spend part of your afternoon.

Samuel T. Bryant Distillery

While you are visiting the fun cars in Jackson, make a quick stop at this distillery for some amazing moonshines. Conveniently located right off the interstate, you will find this creative distiller of spirits. The moonshine products are unlike any I have seen and are so varied that anyone inclined to partake will find something they want to take home with them. There is a tasting fee that will be waived with a minimum purchase. We enjoyed it so much we walked out with a case to last us for the trip and then some. The cream moonshines are amazing and are perfect over ice or in coffee.

Music Scene

Let me start a post on Memphis music by saying that I am not an Elvis fan. It isn’t that I don’t like Elvis. My parents weren’t really into his music so whenever I heard an Elvis song it was always because someone else was playing it. I’m sure that makes the music scene in Memphis a little different for me. Just between you and me, we didn’t even go to Graceland. We all decided that we didn’t want to spend $75 per head. The things we spent our time on in the short three days we had were more than enough to make me feel like I made the right choice.

It’s all about the Blues

Beale Street at night

Having only seen the blues played in the movies, my exposure was limited to small screen clips. Truthfully, the one impressionable blues scene that I remember was from Adventures in Babysitting where she sang the “Babysitting Blues” to get passage. I just assumed that blues lyrics were all impromptu. Silly, I know. In Memphis, you will find blues coming from bars all over Beale Street, as well as from a few other areas. We met a guitarist who was in from Chicago to play at Rum Boogie Cafe’. He had made the trip to play with his brothers at this dive bar with guitars hanging everywhere. It had too much character to not find myself giddy as I was wandering around checking out the atmosphere. It was indeed a very cool place that drew a crowd as soon as the music filled the corner of Beale Street and B.B. King Blvd. I discovered what people came from all around to see and experience. A dark bar with an eclectic mix of memorabilia (and furniture) and a small group of musicians playing the blues with all the heart and soul they have in their bodies. We all found ourselves dancing in the walkway, struggling to make ourselves stop. Knowing nothing about the blues, I found myself wanting more. Something that had I found disinteresting in the movies now came alive for me to enjoy and experience, and that is the heart of the music scene in Memphis, falling in love with Blues, for the first time or the millionth time.

There is so much more to see and do, however, than dancing in the dimly lit dive bars on Beale Street.

Stax Studio

There are two famous studios that are a must see when you are in Memphis. The first is Stax Studio. Stax was started as a studio behind a record shop by a brother sister team. They created an easy friendly atmosphere that cultivated some of the greatest musicians of the time. The museum takes you through an amazing journey of how they began and how the music and its musicians transformed through the years. You find yourself taking an emotional ride as you walk through the ups and downs of the studio, and it’s struggles. The museum is focused more on the history of the Memphis music scene than on the studio itself. I found it to be informative and interesting. It took us a lot longer than expected and we started cutting out information by the end just to make a prescheduled tour. Plan a couple hours at least and expect to be very surprised at the information and the journey it takes you through.

Sun Studio

THE microphone that the greats used!

The second studio is Sun Studios. That experience could not be more different from Stax. Sun offers a 40-minute tour led by an energetic story telling docent. There are only two rooms besides the entry area. The first part of the tour goes up the stairs to a memorabilia room. It is full of equipment and pictures, and you are regaled with stories of the studio’s beginnings. Then you head down into the recording studio itself. Again, the stories are entertaining, however hearing them in the actual place that they happened somehow seems more extraordinary poignant. Standing in the place where Elvis, Johnny Cash and Roy Orbison, among many others, stood to record some of the most important recordings in music, is worth the price of admission.

And so…..

Whether you are an Elvis fan or not, Memphis is a stop you want to add to your list of adventures the next time you are in the South. So put on your blue suede shoe, and start “Walking in Memphis”, you too will find your “feet ten feet off of Beale.”

Oxford, Mississippi

College towns always have a very special charm.  The feeling of comradery that melds all the residents in a common purpose.  Oxford is one of those cities.  Home to the University of Mississippi, Ole Miss as it likes to be known, keeps this college town full of enthusiasm.  Its charm is the old southern feeling that you get when you walk the streets, eat in the restaurants and shop in the stores.

Ole Miss

The Ole Miss campus is the center of the spirit of the city.  It is a beautiful, stately campus with original buildings from the 1800’s.  There are memorial plaques identifying the buildings that are original.  The buildings were constructed by enslaved men and women who had been loaned and rented to the college for the construction; for me, a reminder of the struggles of the southern people not that long ago.  Ole Miss was the location of a riot in 1962 to prevent a black man from attending school.  He was allowed to register and attend classes after 3,000 federal soldiers broke up the protests.  It seems that it continues to get a bad grade on its racial inclusivity. The campus is large and worth a drive through just to explore the area. The locals will regale you with stories of the epic tailgating parties in The Grove if you give them a chance.

The Square

“rest your bones”

The town square is the center of the city charm. It is several blocks on each side with the Lafayette Country courthouse in the center.  Built in 1872, this regal building even houses a clock tower for that old town feel.  The square is full of all kinds of shops, restaurants, and bars.  We ate lunch at the Ajax Café, which offered a great variety of southern favorites.  There was so much to choose from that we all ordered something different and shared.  Later we found a bar that would normally have been filled with college students.  Fortunately, we arrived just as the students were moving in, so it wasn’t as crowded as one would expect.  Their $3 tequila sunrise was amazing, and we walked away down $20 and feeling good about the hour we sat there people watching with cocktails in our hands.

The shopping on the square consisted of boutique stores with higher priced clothing, shoes, and accessories.  I would have needed to find the perfect thing to want to spend the money they required.  My perfect thing turned out to be signed hard cover books at Square Books.  There are three of these bookstores around the square and each one offered different types of books.  We spent awhile shopping in two of the three stores, and I walked out with four autographed hard copies.  There was no additional charge for the autograph and the number they had on the shelves was very impressive.  They also had first edition signed copies that were more expensive. Two of my books were by John Grisham, a former local resident who often writes about the small cities of the south, including Oxford.

Writers

William Faulkner

Oxford is located about an hour southeast of Memphis and four hours southwest of Nashville.  One of the big draws to the area is a literary tour they offer.  Oxford is or was home to many authors.  The tour would include a visit to Rowan Oaks, the home of William Faulkner.  Regrettably, it was closed when we were there so we missed touring the estate.  I would recommend checking the calendar for open dates and times. We found in the south that things tend to be closed on Mondays.

And so…

This charming old city is worth a stop or even worth the trip from Memphis.  Some of the best parts of this diversion is the journey.  Seeing the cotton fields, talking with the people, stopping for BBQ in a little roadside restaurant, those things were a lot of the magic of our two-day trip.  Rent a car and take a slow drive to Oxford, take the back roads when you can.  Robert Frost was right, take the road less traveled, it will make all the difference.

You will find:

Great food, interesting shops, music, and dancing

Dancing Shoes
Party Shoes
Museum Shoes

Clarksdale, Mississippi (birthplace of the blues)

I didn’t know what to expect when we were headed to Clarksdale. Yes, it’s the birthplace of the blues, yes, it’s the location of the legendary crossroads, where bluesman Robert Johnson was reported to have sold his soul to the Devil, but other than that I had no idea. When you drive into town and get out of the car, it hits you. This is the gritty reality, the real deal, you can almost feel the blues oozing out of this place!

Clarksdale claims Muddy Waters, Sam Cooke, Howlin’ Wolf, and Ike Turner among many other bluesmen and women, as native progeny. It attracts such superstars as the Rolling Stones, Led Zeppelin, and ZZ Top, who come to learn, and to honor the blues traditions. Actor Morgan Freeman, a local himself, co-owns a blues club here called Ground Zero, which is as gritty and real as they come. We stayed in the Ground Zero Blues Club Apartments but there seems to be a LOT of choice as to lodgings. (I was particularly intrigued by the Shack Up Inn, about three miles out of town, which is an eclectic collection of cabins renovated from old sharecroppers cabins and grain silos, and has their own juke joint and bar.) The Ground Zero Apartments are located perfectly in the center of the action. Besides sitting right on top of one of the premier juke joints in town, most places that you’re going to want to visit are just a short walk away.

The Blues Museum is definitely a must-see. Wow! What an education. You can follow the evolution of the blues from it’s African origins to present day, and learn about all the musicians who have taken a part. Their highlight is the cabin where Muddy Waters was born, reconstructed inside the museum, and the guitar that Billy Gibbons (from ZZ Top) had made from a board of the cabin.

So yeah, the town looks like it’s at least 50% abandoned, but there are a lot of new businesses moving in, ready for the revival! Walking around, we stumbled upon Cat Head Delta Blues and Folk Art, a music store with it’s finger on the pulse of the local scene, and Hambone Art and Music Gallery, where Stan Street hosts music and events, besides offering local delta inspired art. The proprietors were all SUPER friendly and took time to talk to us about their town, what it has to offer, and to tell a few stories. And there are plenty of places to sample local style food, too. Notably Our Grandma’s House of Pancakes served up a breakfast feast of pancakes, eggs, grits, and all the trimmings, and Hooker Grocer and Eatery served up a slightly elevated, but still down-home dining experience, with lovely outdoor dining.

Live music abounds in this small town, with most evenings offering at least a few choices of venues. Sean Apple, of the Bad Apple Blues Club, performs most days at 3pm, giving an intimate and entertaining lesson on on blues culture and the different styles of blues, and later we saw Lucious Spiller play at Ground Zero for a thoroughly danceable evening of bluesy rock. (We also marveled at the decor. Almost every inch of that place has been signed by guests with sharpies!) There are many music festivals in Clarksdale throughout the year, besides the internationally acclaimed three day Sunflower River Blues and Gospel Festival in August and the Juke Joint Festival in April. This is definitely THE place to go to immerse yourself in an authentic blues experience! And I have to say, as gritty as Clarksdale was, the streets were tidy and the people were warm and welcoming.

Check out the website www.clarksdale.com for a really good list of places to stay, eat, and hear music.

You will find:

Music, dancing, food, history, and culture.