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Beale
Street Blues Tour (3 hrs)
Rock
n Roll Tour (3 hrs)
Soul
Music Tour (3 hrs)
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In
the quest to identify the roots of American
music, all roads led to Memphis”
as stated by to the Smithsonian Museum.
The Music of Elvis and Graceland, BB King
and the Blues, the Gospel of Al Green,
Isaac Hays, Otis Redding, and the sounds
of soul ………………Memphis,
the epicenter of the Blues, Rock ‘n
Roll, Gospel and Soul……….
this is where it all began.
Each
one of our “Rhythms of Memphis”
tours begin with a music related sightseeing
tour, a visit to the Rock ‘n’
Soul Museum and one other music attraction.
All tours end on Beale Street, making
it convenient to add an optional Sweet
Magnolia lunch and/or dinner package at
B. B. King’s Blues Club, Alfred’s
on Beale, Kings’ Palace, Pig on
Beale or the Blues City Café.
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BEALE
STREET BLUES TOUR 
The lamenting sounds from the field hollers coming
from the African American slaves in the Mississippi
Delta cotton fields traveled to the juke joints
on Beale St where musicians like W. C. Handy,
B. B. King, Ma Rainey, Little Laura Dukes and
Albert King mixed it in, beat it out and sent
back out to the world as music that made Beale
St famous, the Down Home Blues. Memphis’
location at the northern most point on the Mississippi
Delta deemed it the beneficiary of the Blues,
the building blocks of modern American music.
Our Rhythms of Memphis Blues tour features a narrated
Blues history sightseeing tour that will include
sites such as Cotton Row, the Memphis Riverfront
and Tom Lee Park before stopping to tour the Rock
‘n’ Soul Museum in the Beale St. Historic
District. Why did Rock ‘n’ Roll and
the Blues come to Memphis and Beale Street before
going out to the world? You will find the answers
woven in the exhibits of the Rock ‘n’
Soul museum.
The museum’s digital audio tour guide is
packed with over 300 minutes of information, including
over 100 songs, and takes visitors at their own
pace through seven galleries featuring 3 audio
visual programs, more than 30 instruments, 40
costumes and other musical treasures.
The
next stop on your Rhythms of Blues tour will be
at the W. C. Handy House to hear the story of
how a preachers’ son from Florence, Alabama
became the first musician to pen the Blues. William
Christopher Handy settled in Memphis, Tennessee,
around 1909, using Beale Street's Pee Wee's Saloon
as his headquarters. His greatest contributions
to blues music were his compositions Memphis Blues,
St. Louis Blues, Yellow Dog Blues, and Beale Street
Blues. After a successful career as a music publisher,
Handy died in New York City in 1958 and is today
honored with the annual W.C. Handy Awards, The
Blues Foundation's equivalent to the Grammy's.
Departing the Handy House, your guide will take
you down Beale St., to see the Old Daisy Theater
where many of the famous Beale Street musicians
were discovered, W. C. Handy Park, the “Walk
of Fame” and A. Schwab’s 125-year-old
variety store. Beale St. features nightclubs and
restaurants offering a variety of food and live
music including traditional Blues, Rhythm and
Blues, Jazz, and Rock 'n' Roll. Shops and boutiques
throughout the district provide visitors with
the opportunity to purchase souvenirs, t-shirts,
memorabilia, and novelties.
Group minimum 25 passengers
Price $25.00 per person includes admission to
Rock ‘n’ Soul Museum, Handy House
and Beale St. History tour.
ROCK ‘N’ ROLL TOUR
“In
1912 W. C. Handy published a song called “Memphis
Blues,” the first published version of a
blues composition. Forty years later, Beale Street
and those same rhythms infected a young aspiring
musician named Elvis Aaron Presley. The contributions
of these two musical innovators made Memphis the
“Home of the Blues” and the “Birthplace
of Rock ‘n Roll.”In
1954 at Sun Studio Elvis recorded “That’s
All Right Mama” and forever changed the
face and the sound of American popular music.
On our Rhythm’s of Memphis Rock ‘n’
Roll sightseeing tour you will visit hot spots
where the Rock-a-Billy sound of early Rock ‘n’
Roll was heard, tour the original Sun Studio and
the Rock ‘n’ Soul museum.
Imagine
standing on the same spot where Elvis recorded
what is considered by some to be the first Rock
‘n’ Roll song and Jerry Lee Lewis
pounded out the Rock-a-Billy super hit “Whole
Lotta Shakin’ Going On.” And where
B. B. King, Rufus Thomas, Howlin' Wolf, Ike Turner
and other talented Black artists mixed in the
sound of soul while Johnny Cash, Carl Perkins,
and Roy Orbison added Country to the melting pot
of Sam’s Phillips’ Sun Studio.
As
our Rock ‘n’ Roll music adventure
continues you will make two more “Hot Rock”
stops. The first is at Pop Tunes, where a virtual
“who’s who” of Memphis recording
studio owners would gather to discuss business
of the day and Elvis would hang out to see if
anyone was buying his records. The next stop is
at the Rock ‘n’ Soul Museum where
you will hear the original music; see genuine
instruments and countless artifacts of this music
that changed the world.
Group minimum 25 passengers.
Price $29.00 per person includes Sun Studio, Rock
‘n’ Soul Museum and Rock ’n’
Roll History tour.
SOUL
MUSIC TOUR
For many years, the Memphis neighborhood known
as Soulsville USA was a bustling and thriving
community where a young grocery sacker named David
Porter became one of Stax Records' most famous
songwriters, where Aretha Franklin was born and
sang in her father's Metropolitan Baptist Church,
where Calvin and Phinneas Newborn honed their
jazz skills, where Al Green recorded his super
hits of the 1970s at Willie Mitchell's Royal Studios,
where Maurice White grew up and grew into Earth
Wind & Fire, and where Elvis Presley sneaked
into Rev. Herbert Brewster's East Trigg Avenue
Baptist church as a teenager to listen to gospel
music, much of which Rev. Brewster had written
for Mahalia Jackson.
Our
Rhythms of Memphis Soul Music Tour will take you
to the Stax Museum of American Soul Music, located
at the original site of the legendary Stax Records
in the heart of Soulsville USA. What began as
a tiny record store in an old movie theater at
the corner of McLemore Avenue and College Street
in Memphis, Tennessee, grew to become one of the
most important music recording studios in the
world. When the modest Capitol Theater in the
heart of Soulsville USA was transformed into Stax
Records in 1959, it began launching the careers
of unknowns who would become icons, cranking out
a massive catalog of smash soul hits by the likes
of Isaac Hayes, Otis Redding, the Staple Singers,
Wilson Pickett, Luther Ingram, Albert King, the
Bar-Kays, Booker T. & the MG's, Johnnie Taylor,
Rufus and Carla Thomas, and dozens of other artists
whose influence remains vital in the music of
today. On its many and varied labels, Stax Records
also recorded such legends as Big Star, Rev. Jesse
Jackson, Bill Cosby, Moms Mabley, and the Grammy-winning
comedic genius Richard Pryor.
This
tour features a narrated Soul -Rhythms &
Blues music history sightseeing tour that will
include sites in Soulsville not included on standard
Memphis tours, such as Willile Mitchell’s
Royal Studio where Al Green recorded and the early
childhood home of “Lady Soul” Aretha
Franklin. Aretha Franklin as one of the giants
of soul music, and indeed of American pop, as
well, was born in Memphis on March 25, 1947. Her
astonishing run of late -'60s hits with Atlantic
Records included a song called “Respect”
written by the legendary Stax writer/recording
artist Otis Redding.
From Soulsville your Rhythms of Memphis Soul Tour
will take you to the Beale St Historic District
to tour the Rock‘n’Soul Museum. To
hear the story of why it happened in Memphis and
how Memphis possessed a kind of earthy electricity
that spawned musical innovation, one that’s
unique and sometimes beyond description. You will
hear the original music, see genuine instruments
and countless artifacts of the music that changed
the world.
Group minimum 25 passengers.
Price $27.00 per person includes
admission to Rock ‘n’ Soul Museum,
Stax Museum of American Soul Music, and Soul Music
History tour.
Terms
& Conditions: A deposit of $100.00 will be
due 30 days in advance. The balance is due two
weeks in advance. After this time all monies are
non-refundable. If you have questions or you wish
to book your tour date please call.
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