For music fans that love to travel, these cool road trips to take are full of musician birthplaces, fantastic museums and hotels where rock stars proved their mettle for destruction. After our look at the best music road trips in New York, we wanted to expand our reach. While the five boroughs, upstate New York and New Jersey are top spots to seek out rock ānā roll landmarks, there are numerous locations made iconic by music around the nation. Our ultimate guide includes childhood homes of rock ānā roll icons, sites made famous due to their inclusion on album covers, museums and famed musical venues. If you like music and music history, youāll love these road trips.
Cool road trips to take: Music-themed road trips around the U.S.
Graceland, Elvis Presleyās Childhood Home and Sun Studio
One of rock ānā rollās most popular spots in the United States, the 13.8-acre Graceland estate in Memphis was once Elvis and Priscilla Presleyās home and now serves as a living monument to the artist. The Elvis Presley Birthplace in Tupelo, Mississippi was the singerās childhood home and Sun Studio, which was established in 1950 in Memphis, hosted iconic early sessions by Elvis, Johnny Cash and Jerry Lee Lewis.
Our nationās most highly visited shrine to rock ānā roll music, located on the shores of Lake Erie in Cleveland, this museum features exhibits on numerous artists who have changed the face of music, from The Beatles to Little Richard, The Doors and Nirvana. And, every year, the hall of fame inducts several new bands or performers. Any music fans looking for cool road trips to take have to keep Cleveland top mind for a stop.
This site in Macon, Georgia ā also known as The Allman Brothers Band Museum ā was home to the groupās original members and their families from 1970 to 1973. It was renovated and opened as an interactive museum in 2009. The site contains the worldās largest collection of Allman Brothers memorabilia.
Located in Nashville, this red-brick museum includes displays and memorabilia from the life of the singer, songwriter and actor. And the singerās gravesite in Henderson, Tennessee ā located 18 miles from Nashville ā is open to the public.
Known as āMusic City,ā Nashville is the nationās top spot for country and western music. Although part of the full experience involves in taking in some live music, other spots youāll certainly want to see include the aforementioned Johnny Cash Museum, Grand Ole Opry House and Ryman Auditorium, which is known as the āMother Church of Country Music,ā acted as the original Grand Ole Opry site and hosted everyone from Emmylou Harris and Patsy Cline to Coldplay and Neil Young.
Stax Museum of American Soul Music
The Memphis-based museum, which is operated by Soulsville USA, contains more than 2,000 videos, films, photographs, instruments, stage costumes, exhibits and memorabilia pertaining to Stax Records, the legendary label that produced Isaac Hayes, Booker T. and the MGs and Otis Redding, although the museum also includes vintage footage of Aretha Franklin, Al Green, Stevie Wonder, Marvin Gaye and other classic soul artists.
Frequently ranked as one of the nationās best rock ānā roll clubs, the Troubadour is located on Santa Monica Boulevard near the Beverly Hills border. In the 1960s and 1970s, performers included Jackson Browne, the Eagles and Van Morrison, but it became synonymous with hair metal in the 1980s, hosting Motley Crue, Poison and Guns Nā Roses. In the modern era, it is known for presenting UK artists such as Radiohead and Arctic Monkeys. Whisky a Go Go, located in West Hollywood, is another world famous Los Angeles club that has been named an historic landmark and hosted groups such as The Doors and Led Zeppelin and became a top spot for emerging grunge artists in the 1990s. Also, if you find yourself at the Whisky, walk a few doors down to 1114 N. Clark, which is the location of the apartment where Guns Nā Roses got its start. No doubt, when looking for cool road trips to take in Southern California, these clubs have to be on your list.
Chateau Marmont and Hyatt House
Designed to evoke a French chateau, the Sunset Boulevard-based Marmont was a popular stomping ground for musicians and actors (John Belushi died of an overdose at the hotel). Itās also known for some of the wild behavior exhibited by its inhabitants, such as Jim Morrisonās attempt to swing into his room from the roof on a drainpipe. The Andaz West Hollywood ā originally, the Gene Autry Hotel and, then, the Continental Hyatt House ā is a hotel where many rock legends āincluding Led Zeppelin and The Who ā stayed during visits to L.A. due to its proximity to the Whiskey a Go Go. Also known as the āRiot House,ā the hotel was where Robert Plant is alleged to have said āI am a golden god,ā a phrase later shouted by a fictional character in Cameron Croweās āAlmost Famous.ā
The store, which opened at the turn of the 20th century in Los Angeles, was once frequented by musicians in the Laurel Canyon scene, including Joni Mitchell and Carole King. Jim Morrison lived opposite the market and described it in āLove Streetā as the āstore where the creatures meet.ā The site still operates as a retro cafĆ© and grocery store.
Located in New Orleansā Lower Ninth ward, the musical legendās home was damaged during Hurricane Katrina, but has since been restored. Domino had to be rescued by the Coast Guard during the devastating 2005 storm and now lives in a nearby town. However, the yellow with black trim home can still be seen along Caffin Avenue.
Austin is known for its music scene and hosts the annual South by Southwest film and music festivals. Antoneās is one of the cityās top music venues and was once a spot where the late Stevie Ray Vaughan jammed with blues legend Albert King. Performers who have taken the stage at Antoneās include Muddy Waters, Buddy Guy, Eric Clapton and Bono.
Still an operating venue for musical acts, this historic landmark gained its fame in the early days of rock ānā roll, hosting performances by Buddy Holly, Ricky Valens and the Big Bopper. Itās also frequently associated with the āDay the Music Diedā as it was the last place Holly played before he died with Valens and the Big Bopper in a plane crash in 1959.
The Chicago-based record label produced records by Muddy Waters, Howlinā Wolf, Willie Dixon, Bo Diddley and even The Rolling Stones, whose song ā2120 South Michigan Avenueā noted the labelās address. The former site of the studio now houses Willie Dixonās Blues Heaven Foundation, which holds concert series and tours.
Muddy Watersā Home
Blues legend Muddy Waters hosted jam sessions with everyone from Howlinā Wolf to Chuck Berry at this house on Lake Park Avenue, where he lived until the mid-1970s. City inspections in recent years have found the property uninhabitable, so this is a spot to view from the street.
Paying homage to the record label once known as āHitsville USA,ā this museum is dedicated to the legacy of the label founded by Berry Gordy that produced The Jackson 5, Marvin Gaye, Stevie Wonder, Temptations, Smokey Robinson and the Miracles, Four Tops and Diana Ross and the Supremes.
One of five public art works on Seattleās National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration campus, this sculpture by Doug Hollis, which debuted in 1983, includes organ pipes hung from 12 steel towers. Just one year after it opened to the public, it provided the moniker for a band seeking a name. Wanna guess which one?
Also known as the North Aberdeen Bridge, this structure in Washington covers a brief span of the Wishkah River, connecting the city of Aberdeen with North Aberdeen. It was referenced in Nirvanaās āSomething in the Way,ā which was the final track off the bandās landmark record āNevermind,ā and Kurt Cobain propagated a myth that, at one point, he had lived under the bridge, although biographers have written that he likely spent his homeless days with friends. Although the Aberdeen city council voted against renaming the bridge after Cobain, a statue of his Fender guitar can be found nearby.
The Beverly Hills Hotel is known in the world of rock ānā roll as the āHotel California.ā
But thatās obviously not all. A list of noteworthy spots pertaining to music across the U.S. could go on for days, but there are a few other sites weād like to mention. Thereās the Beverly Hills Hotel, which is slightly better known in the world of music as the āHotel California.ā Prior to the Eaglesā classic rock staple, the hotel was a hangout for the Rat Pack. And while there may be plenty of room at the hotel, the word is that after having checked in, you might never be able to leave.
Thereās also Michael Jacksonās Neverland Ranch in Los Olivos, California, which you might be able to spot, but likely wonāt be able to visit due to its having been vacant since 2003 and the property being left in a family trust. When the King of Pop lived there, it was said to have amusement park rides and a petting zoo.
In Berkeley, youāll find 924 Gilman, a non-profit alternative music foundation operated entirely by volunteers. Established in 1986, it was once the incubator for bands such as Green Day, Rancid and Bad Religion. And, in Van Nuys, youāll want to drop by Sound City Studio, which was the birthplace of more than 100 platinum and gold albums, such as Nirvanaās āNevermindā and Tom Petty and the Heartbreakersā āDamn the Torpedoes.ā
The Grateful Dead House
In San Francisco, thereās the Grateful Dead House at 710 Ashbury Street, which was located in the epicenter of the hippie movement and counterculture. The band lived at the property until early 1968, when the Dead released its first album and was also the site of the infamous Summer of Love bust.
In Minneapolis, thereās First Avenue, a spot most national touring acts donāt dare to miss. In the 1980s, the site hosted performances by Prince, The Replacements, Soul Asylum and Husker Du. And the live concert sequences from Princeās āPurple Rainā film were shot there. Speaking of The Replacements, if youāre in Minneapolis be sure to swing by 2215 Bryant Avenue and see if you recognize the rooftop, which was prominently featured on the cover of the bandās āLet It Beā record.
What are your favorite cool road trips to take for music sites and destinations? Tell us in the comments.