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General : Hidden Nashville View All Messages
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From: dvdman  (Original Message)Sent: 1/26/2009 4:33 AM

Hidden Nashville

Get Behind the Scenes of Country Music's Hometown


By ELLEN CREAGER
DETROIT FREE PRESS

Published: Saturday, January 24, 2009 at 7:50 p.m.

"They're not teardrops, just sincere drops."

- Bill Anderson, 1966

A teenage boy grabs the microphone stand. He plants his feet at center stage. Then he grins and asks, "Can you take my picture?"

He's finally singing at the Grand Ole Opry.

At least in his dreams.

They say no one knows what goes on behind closed doors. But in Nashville, those who take backstage tours of the Opry get the inside scoop about one of the most famous stages in the world, plus a fan-friendly tour of the nooks and crannies of the famous theater, where stars from Dolly Parton to Roy Acuff have made their mark.

"While the Opry is special to artists, it's special to fans as well," says Opry spokesman Dan Rogers. "Literally, everything you see backstage has a story to go with it."

Out of 500,000 people a year who attend the Opry, about 50,000 take the backstage tour.

But that's not the only insider peek you can get in Nashville.

Take a backstage tour of Ryman Auditorium, and you'll experience the heyday of country music before country was cool.

Peek behind the imposing exterior of the Parthenon - an exact replica of the one in Greece - and your eyes will pop when you see the Jolly Green Giant-sized statue of Athena. Is this place really in Nashville? Who woulda thought?

Step into the Country Music Hall of Fame and into one of those little soundproof alcoves, and sing your heart out with the early pioneers of what once was called "hillbilly" music.

And please, keep your radio on at all times, tuned to WSM-AM (650), the original country music station.

One of the most disorienting things about Nashville is that the Grand Ole Opry, its most iconic attraction, isn't even downtown. To reach it, drive northeast for 9 miles to the gigantic yet unpleasantly sterile Opry Mills shopping mall area that the Opry has called home since 1974. As you're driving, listen to Dolly Parton circa 1975.

"My life is like unto a bargain store

And I may have just what you're lookin' for."

Home for the Opry these days is a sprawling, folksy theater where most Tuesday, Friday and Saturday nights there are performances featuring eight to 15 about-to-be-famous, currently famous and used-to-be-famous country stars.

From their perches in the mezzanine, balcony or on the main floor, patrons this night watch Pam Tillis, Jewel, the Charlie Daniels Band, Darius Rucker, Bill Anderson, Cherryholmes, Jason Michael Carroll and Lorri Morgan sing.

Afterward, those taking the backstage tour meet in the lobby. First, they stand still for a corny photo of themselves holding a guitar. Then longtime guide Eloise Russo leads the way through the dim theater that's unbelievably empty considering the concert ended just 20 minutes before. Russo takes the group backstage to a plain glass door - the performers' entrance to the building. She stops at a portrait of comedian Minnie Pearl, an early Opry member.

A small hall beyond that leads to the mailroom, where tourists get to see the stars' mailboxes.

"The story is that Alan Jackson once delivered mail to those mailboxes," Rogers says. "His first job in Nashville was for a company that delivered mail to the Opry. He used to deliver fan mail. Now he gets fan mail."

The tour moves to a soundproof studio where the country variety show "Hee Haw" was filmed in the 1970s and 1980s and where the syndicated TV show "Crook & Chase" now tapes. Then, it's on to the dressing rooms (empty) and the turquoise "green room" (also empty) where the stars hang out until their acts start.

Finally, Russo guides the group to the tour highlight - the enormous Opry stage. Standing there, you see the dimly lit theater spreading out like a three-story fan and you swear you can hear applause coming from an imaginary audience in the 4,392 seats.

On stage, everyone takes turns posing at the microphone in the center circle. The circle actually is a piece of dark oak, 6 feet in diameter, that was brought from the Ryman Auditorium, the Opry's home until 1974. It's the most famous circle in country music.

"Being able to be on stage and stand in the fabled circle of wood, fans can look over the auditorium and see the same sights as Carrie Underwood or Brad Paisley see," Rogers says. "That experience seems to resonate."

At night, stroll the entertainment district along South Broadway and Second Avenue, from honky-tonk to honky-tonk, enjoying the live, free music in each one. These are the tourist spots, but if you're a tourist, who cares? It's a ball.

Another thing people often miss in Nashville? The beautiful Tennessee State Capitol, set high on a hill overlooking the town. The 19th-century limestone building offers free tours on weekdays.

Designed in a classical Greek style (but not as obviously as the Parthenon), the Capitol was built by slaves and occupied by Union troops during the Civil War. It also has a rather strange secret.

Its architect, William Strickland, is buried deep inside its walls. It was his last request when he died in 1854 as the capitol was being erected, to be buried there. Talk about being part of your work.

Anyway, it proves my point. In Nashville, the hidden stuff is always the most interesting.