Showing posts with label Muscle Shoals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Muscle Shoals. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 12, 2024

2024 May 20, 21, 29, Sites we took AVA

 2024 May 20, Monday, Trip to Space and Rocket Center 

Today we rode to Huntsville to the Space and Rocket museum 

We took Ava she loves museums.

We saw Science on Orbit, Space Craze, Your mission begins here, Huntsville Rocket City Home of USA Redstone Arsenal. There were games to play, rides, space shuttle, rockets, helicopters, planes, and pictures of every astronaut that has flown in a rocket or shuttle. There was a lot of construction going on and a lot of the area visitors were not allowed to enter.

Ava got inside one of the modules where you have to lie down with your feet propped above your head. We looked inside “Ch-47D Chinook Helicopter. Two soldiers were guarding the shuttle(they were statues)

We saw Saturn’s Brain and Saturn’s steering. There were several school groups and we met a family from Sweden.  

 

We ate lunch at Culvert in Madison.

We were going to Cracker Barrel but got caught by a train so we turned around and went to Culvert 

Hubby and I shared a three-piece hand-cut, hand-battered fried cod meal with onion rings and Coleslaw.  We ordered the flavor of the day yogurt Snickers swirl.

We ordered a kid’s chicken fingers meal with fries and a drink for Ava.

She also ordered one scoop of chocolate yogurt but was brought the Snickers Swirl which she would not try

So hubby ate hers and we bought her a chocolate yogurt 

They also forgot our coleslaw and hubby had to go to the counter to get one. They were out of coleslaw upfront 

I guess they didn’t want to go to the back to find more

I think they had a new employee. Everyone was ready for bed that night. 

Ava and the Space Shuttle 


2024 May 21, today we took Ava to Muscles Shoals Municipal Court Building, Spring Park and Tuscumbia Train Depot  

To see the TVA display and display about Muscle Shoals.

We saw cicadas covering all their Crapes Myrtle’s.

Inside I met a worker for the City of Muscle Shoals and we talked about the history of the area. He told me there were graves of American Indians with stone markers and you cannot read the names. He said there were graves all over the shoals that were unclaimed and destroyed. He said I had worked here for years before I took the time to read all the history here. He said when I was growing up I didn’t care much for history but he knew a lot about the area. He said that once he and another worker had to fix the sewage off the cliffs he supervised. Someone else went over the cliffs. He said that he found old bottles dating back to the 1800s. He gave one to him and said I am going back to collect the rest.

Upon entering the Municipal building you will see a Chandler four or five archways leading to and inside the museum area. 

Inside the Museum we saw Welcome to “Pathways…A Walk through the History of Muscle Shoals.”

Explore these exhibits and learn about a city that is rich in history.

See original artifacts from the real estate boom when Henry Ford said he would “employ one million workers and build a city 75 miles wide” to the times when Muscle Shoals was known as “The Hit Hit Recording Capital of the World.”

Muscle Shoals has now become one of the most progressive cities in Alabama and a city thousands call home.


Ava and Hubby at  Muscles Shoals Municipal Court Building



History of FAME Recording Studios and its owner Rick Hall. 

A light pole with street signs of Wilson Dam Highway and Sheridan AVE. 

Cases full of the History of Muscle Shoals, the first Mayor of Muscle Shoals George Lewis McBride, and his wife Susie. 

Pictures of President Roosevelt and his wife Elenor hang on the walls.  

Lots of information about the building of the TVA Wilson Dam. We walked outside and the Crape Myrtles were covered in Cicadas. 

Ava in the Little Red Caboose 


After we left Muscle Shoals we went to Tuscumbia Train Depot 

Paid five dollars each to go inside 

The curator told us the history of the depot.

They had the original carriage that Helen Keller rode in as a child 

We walked around outside looking at all the train cars. 

Next, we rode to Spring Park 

The water was turned off going to the waterfall

So there was no fresh water entering the spring 

There were a few ducks and geese in the water 

It was lunchtime so we rode back to Florence and ate lunch at Crackers Barrel.


Ava ordered Confetti pancakes with bacon

Ava ordered confetti pancakes with bacon and a doctor pepper to drink 

I ordered grilled chicken fingers with pinto beans, a slice of onion, cornbread, chow chow, and iced tea 

Hubby ordered steak, eggs, and hash browns with biscuits and iced tea to drink

Hubby bought two large chocolate chunk candy bars 


2024 May 29, Wednesday McFarland Park took AVA 

Today we rode to McFarland Park to let Ava play on the playground 

I listen to bird sounds 

We got our B12 shots and paid the utilities 

We rode to Sheffield to pick up our monthly check

We rode to Champy’s for lunch

Hubby and I split a Catfish meal

Of 4 pieces of Catfish fries hush puppies and coleslaw 

Ava ordered a 2 piece of chicken finger meal with fries 

We rode to Aldies for a few groceries 

Then we headed home 


Catfish, fries, slaw, onion and Hushpuppy

Ava at Champy's 


Wednesday, June 29, 2016

2016 June 19, Sunday, Singing River Statue of Muscle Shoals 🎶🎶🎶🎶

Legend of the Singing River
The Yuchi and other early inhabitants living along the banks of the mighty Tennessee River held the legend of a Spirit Woman who lived in the river. She protected and sang to them. When the river was angry, she sang loudly. When the river was peaceful, she sang softly and sweetly, sometimes humming a comforting lullaby. Some say that all they heard was the high waters' mighty rush and roar over the mussel shoals, or at other times, the calm low waters babbling through the river rocks. Others say she is real and can still be seen in the early morning mist, hovering over the waters, just as she did those many years ago. In her honor, they called it the Singing River and in her honor, we named these sculptures the Singing River Sculptures.
Singing River Statue of Muscle Shoals
Singing River Statue of Muscle Shoals 
The World-changing Muscle Shoals Music
From throughout the 20th century to the present, Muscle Shoals area artists, musicians, songwriters, and music-industry professionals have helped shape the world’s expansive music heritage. Few styles of music were untouched by Muscle Shoals, and local contributions have been made in all other areas of the complex industry: producers, recording engineers, songwriters, music publishers, and other positions in the music business.

Many of the world’s greatest performers began their ascent to stardom in Muscle Shoals, and artists, such as Percy Sledge, Aretha Franklin, the Staple Singers, and Bob Seger, along with many others, quickly created a legacy that earned the area the title, “Hit Recording Capitol of the World.”

The area grew as a music center by drawing together people of all races and religions. In the 1960s, despite the segregation of the races enforced outside the studios, great soul classics were being created in the studios with each musician contributing his innate musical talent. The collaborations created some of the most widely loved music of the 20th century, including Steal Away, Mustang Sally, Tell Mama, Patches, Respect Yourself, and many others.

The warning issued in Arthur Alexander’s You Better Move On got the attention of the Rolling Stones. The Beatles heard Alexander’s song, Anna and each band acknowledged their respect for Alexander and his writing by recording their version of his songs on their first albums.

The songwriting tradition continues as one of the strongest facets of Muscle Shoals music, with area songwriters penning songs such as I Loved Her First, I Swear, 

The heart and soul of Muscle Shoals' music have always been the players and singers. Four members of the Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section were immortalized in the Lynyrd Skynyrd song, Sweet Home Alabama. The lyric, “Muscle Shoals has got the Swampers, and they’ve been known to pick a song or two,” honors Jimmy Johnson, Barry Beckett, David Hood, and Roger Hawkins, studio musicians who produced and played on hundreds of hits recorded at area studios from the late 1960s until the mid-1980s.

Muscle Shoals and Its Contribution to this Golden Era
Muscle Shoals bestowed much more than its name on the world-famous “Muscle Shoals sound.”

The city served as the birthplace for early breakthroughs in the local music industry and later provided a home base for some of the area’s top studios. The first commercial recording to emerge from Muscle Shoals — the Bobby Denton single, A Fallen Star — was produced by James Joiner in the Second Street studios of WLAY Radio in 1957. Four years later in an old candy-and-tobacco warehouse on Wilson Dam Road, aspiring producer Rick Hall joined forces with bellhop-turned-singer Arthur Alexander to cut Muscle Shoals’ first national hit, the Southern Soul anthem, You Better Move On. In the wake of that success, Hall built FAME Recording Studios on Avalon Avenue in 1962. Artists ranging from Aretha Franklin, Wilson Pickett, and Etta James to Duane Allman, the Osmonds, and Bobby Gentry later recorded there. From 1970 to 1985, Muscle Shoals became known as “The Hit Recording Capital of the World” as FAME and Al Cartee’s Music Mill, Steve Moore’s East Avalon, and Terry Woodford and Clayton Ivey’s Wishbone Studios generated hits by Clarence Carter, Hank Williams Jr., the group Hot, George Jones, the Forester Sisters, Mac McAnally, Shenandoah, and many others. In 2011 Hall received the American Music Lifetime Achievement Award, and in 2014 he was awarded the Grammy Trustees Award for his significant contribution to the recording industry.

The City of Muscle Shoals, Alabama
David Bradford, Mayor
Audwin Pierre McGee, Sculptor
Historical commentary by Terry Pace, Dick Cooper, David Anderson, and Bill Matthews.
Rick Hall and Duane Allman
FAME Studio at 601 E. Avalon Avenue (Photo furnished by FAME)
James Joiner and Bobby Denton at WLAY Radio 
Muscle Shoals City sign proclaiming it the Hit Recording Capital of the World (Photo furnished by FAME)
Wishbone Studios (Photo furnished by Terry Woodford)
East Avalon Studios (Photo furnished by Dick Cooper)
FAME Studio at old Candy and Tobacco Warehouse (Photo furnished by FAME)




Monday, November 10, 2014

A TRAIL OF NO RETURN

We stopped at the Muscle Shoals Library to view the second of a series of sculptures that are to be placed throughout the Shoals Area over the next few years.


This sculpture depicts a studio session bass player.
Singing River Sculpture
First, we stopped at several different auto parts stores looking for a part for my husband Fireo.

We ate lunch at Peppers in Muscle Shoals before beginning our adventure.
We shared a Lifeline Turkey and Avocado Sandwich and Chips and rotel with Salsa.
Roasted turkey, arcade sun-dried tomatoes, spring greens, cucumbers, and fat-free sun-dried tomato basil vinaigrette on a toasted whole-wheat bun.
Both ordered a large tea.


We stopped at a junkyard in Russellville.
Town of Littleville

On our travels, we passed many cows grazing in the fields.
Maybe some black Angus cows
We rode to Bankhead National Forrest.

We rode through the town of Moulton on Highway 33, around many curves, up the mountain, down the mountain,  down a very long gravel road.
Grove of trees on Bankhead Highway/33 Highway

We turned off Highway 33 onto Hickory Grove Road (graveled road) which went on for several miles.

We passed an abandoned chicken barn, cows, barns, ponds, and a couple riding horses and they were holding hands.
Caspey Creek
Two lovebirds
We crossed Caspey Creek Bridge, and we stopped to take some pictures.
We came out on Highway 41 South Danville Road, we traveled to 157 University of North Alabama Highway to Highway 101, and we crossed Wheeler Dam on Highway 72.

We ordered a pineapple and ham pizza from Pizza Hut, and we took it home to eat for supper.


YUM.









2024 Saturday September 7, Train Trip from Chattanooga to Chickamauga, Ga

  Saturday, we had to be in Scottsboro by 7AM about a 2-hour drive. Loaded onto the bus. I think there were 30 of us including the driver. W...