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Alabama Music Hall
of Fame
When you think music, what city comes to
mind? Maybe the country music lyrics of
Nashville? Maybe Detroit
and the Motown sound? How about the sophisticated performances of
New York City, or the blues in Memphis? I bet you didn’t think about Muscle Shoals, Alabama, did you?
We
were surprised to learn just how influential this small northwestern
Alabama
community has been on the American music scene. But many of the biggest
names in the music industry have recorded at the Muscle Shoals studios
over the years. Indeed, we never realized how many famous musicians have
come out of
Alabama
.
The
Alabama Music Hall of Fame in Tuscumbia tells the story of the Alabama
music industry, from rhythm and blues, to country, gospel, and rock and
roll. Whatever you like to tap your toes to, it’s pretty certain an Alabama
musicians performs it and the Hall of Fame honors it.
Opening
in 1990, the Hall of Fame includes exhibits and displays on
Alabama
musicians and research facilities, along with the hallowed gallery where
top names in the music industry are honored for their accomplishments.
Every other year an induction banquet is held to select new performers
into the Hall of Fame.
For
decades musicians have found their way to nearby Muscle Shoals, where
they have recorded hits that went on to top the charts. Sam Phillips, a
versatile innovator who changed the face of popular music in the 1940s
and 1950s when he brought together the diverse elements that combined to
create rock and roll, got his start in neighboring
Florence, Alabama
and owned a radio station in Muscle Shoals. Phillips formed Memphis
Recording Service, working with such artists as B.B. King, Ike Turner,
Bobby “Blue” Bland, and James Cotton. After producing ten songs for
a newcomer named Elvis Presley, Phillips sold his contract to RCA
Records for $35,000 and used that money to expand his Sun Records label.
In
1969 four musicians opened the Muscle Shoals Sound Studios in an old
building that had once housed a casket company, and soon gained fame as
the Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section. The list of performers who have
recorded at the Muscle Shoals studios is long and lofty, including Joan
Baez, Percy Sledge, Wilson Pickett, Larry Gatlin, Aretha Franklin,
Little Richard, the Rolling Stones, Willie Nelson, Rod Stewart, Lynyrd
Skynyrd, Cat Stevens, the Commodores, Hank Williams Jr., the
Temptations, Bob Dylan, Cher, Earl Thomas Conley, Jimmy Buffett, T.
Graham Brown, John Conlee, Boz Scaggs, Joe Cocker, Linda Ronstadt, Eddie
Rabbitt, Mac Davis, Jerry Jeff Walker, Billie “Crash” Craddock,
Sawyer Brown, Dr. Hook, Delbert McClinton, Jerry Reed, Leon Russell,
Paul Simon, Bob Seger, the Osmonds, Art Garfunkel, Paul Anka, T.G.
Sheppard, and the Supremes. Today the Muscle Shoals Sound Studios is a
state-of-the-art complex located on the Tennessee River in Sheffield,
Alabama. The Hall of Fame has an impressive exhibit telling the story of the
Muscle Shoals influence on music.
The
list of top named performers who come from
Alabama
is amazing. Soul singer Percy Sledge came out of the fields where he
worked around his hometown of Leighton to become an international star
with such ballads as When A Man Loves A Woman. The son of a
Baptist minister from Montgomery, Nat King Cole sold over 50 million records on the Capitol Records
label.
Another
Alabama
singer who rose to stardom was Tuskegee
’s Lionel Richie, who has won almost every award given to performers
in the popular music field. Richie and five classmates at the famed
Tuskegee Institute formed the Commodores and signed with Motown Records
in 1971, racking up an impressive 22 gold records, six platinum, two
double platinum, and three triple platinum albums. Richie left the group
in 1982, and both he and his former singing partners continue to please
fans around the world.
Born
in a log cabin near the banks of the Tennessee River in Florence,
Alabama, in 1873, W.C. Handy became known as the undisputed “Father of the
Blues” for soulful tunes like Memphis Blues and Beal Street
Blues.
Alabama
has also produced many country singers. Tammy Wynette came from a tar
paper shack near
Red
Bay
to claim the title of “First Lady of Country Music” as she set new
standards for female vocalists. Signing with Epic Records in 1966, she
ended the decade with three consecutive CMA Female Vocalist of the Year
awards. Her classic Stand By Your Man stood for fifteen years as
the largest selling single in country music. During her career, Wynette
sold more than 30 million records and had 35 number one hits.
Ironically, she was rejected by five
Nashville
recording studios before she hit the big time.
Sonny
James, the Southern Gentleman, grew up in Hackleburg,
Alabama
and went on to record popular hits like Young Love and other
titles that went to Number One nationally. For years every record he
released topped the charts, and his record for the most consecutive
Number One hits in the recording industry stood until 1988.
Hank
William’s Jr. was born in
Shreveport,
Louisiana, but grew up in and around Banks, Alabama. The son of country music legend Hank Williams, he has delighted and
thrilled audiences for more than 25 years. He holds the record for
having had nine albums on the Billboard charts at one time.
Dothan
Alabama’s Bobby Goldsboro rose to the top of the country and pop charts in
1968 with his tearjerker Honey, selling six million copies
worldwide. Not only a singer, but also an award winning songwriter,
Goldsboro’s compositions have been recorded by John Denver, Dolly
Parton, Bette Midler, Aretha Franklin, and Roger Miller. He has received
26 BMI songwriter awards, and his song With Pen In Hand has been
recorded by over seventy artists.
Jimmy
Buffett grew up in Mobile and has grown into a cultural phenomenon with his beach ballads and
rousing good times tunes. His biggest hit, Margaritaville, has
become the anthem for an entire population of “parrotheads” who
follow Buffett on the concert circuit. Many of them are second
generation fans who grew up listening to songs like The Captain and
The Kid, Pencil Thin Mustache, and Havana Daydreaming.
At the
Alabama Music Hall of Fame, displays tell the story of the state’s
music and musicians. Galleries of exhibits include many of the most
popular stars, with stage costumes, instruments, original compositions,
even an elaborately decorated convertible that was used at shopping
center grand openings and other promotions and was featured on a Webb
Pierce album cover, as well as a tour bus used by the country music
group Alabama
.
As you
walk through the galleries, recorded music of the genre of the exhibits
plays in the backgrounds, and museum employees told us it is not unusual
to come across visitors dancing in the aisles.
Every
music fan will find something to admire at the museum, no matter what
they enjoy listening to. Here you may find your favorite star’s
handwritten lyrics on an old envelope, photos of recording sessions
never released to the public, or rare albums that have become
collectors’ items. Plan on arriving early and spending several hours
if you want to see everything the Hall of Fame has to offer. Bronze
stars in the Walk of Fame celebrate
many of the stars who lived within the state.
Besides
an impressive collection of exhibits, the Alabama Music Hall of Fame
hosts special events through the year. Thousands of fans come for
concerts in the outdoor amphitheater. At least one concert is held every
month from May through August. The summer concert series wraps up every
year on the third Saturday in September
with a concert held in conjunction with the Trail of Tears
Commemorative Motorcycle Ride. Past entertainers at the concerts have
included Shenandoah, Allison Krauss, the Oak Ridge Boys, Hank Williams
Jr., Wilson Pickett, Clarence Carter, Percy Sledge, the Charlie Daniels
Band, Martha Reeves, Steppenwolf, the Marshall Tucker Band, Billy Joel,
Leon Russell, Confederate Railroad and John Anderson.
Education
is an important part of the Hall of Fame’s contribution to music, and
many schools bring students here for field trips. Six times a year
school children come for special programs featuring famous performers
who talk to the students about their
careers and do live performances before the children tour the museum.
Every February an African American Spirit Celebration includes programs
about
Alabama
’s rich black musical heritage. Students from across the state contact
the Hall of Fame requesting information for music, history, and social
studies projects they are doing.
The
Hall of Fame Exhibit Hall is only the first of three planned phases for
the complex. The second phase will be a 2500 seat audio/video recording
auditorium that will offer the community a setting for concerts,
seminars, workshops, and plays with state of the art sound, lights, and
audio\ video recording capabilities.
Phase
Three will be a research library on southern music, with an emphasis on
the state of
Alabama, featuring outreach programs with literature designed for classroom use
for educational enrichment of
Alabama
’s school students. This expansion is in danger at the present time
because of state cutbacks on spending, and diversion of money to other
projects.
The Alabama
Music Hall of fame is located on US Highway 72 in Tuscumbia, and is open Monday
through Saturday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Sunday from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.
The parking lot can accommodate any size RV with ease. For more
information, call 800-239-2643 or visit their web site at www.alamhof.org
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