The Jewish Chronicle

GETTING THERE

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Are you lonesome tonight — in the pitch dark, at 4am: if you listen carefully to the original, you can hear him bumping his head on the mic.

While we’re there, another group steps up to record… us! After posing by Elvis’s piano, we massacre Can’t help falling in love. Good golly Miss Molly — it’s enough to make the king turn in his grave.

At the city’s Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, beautifull­y rendered panels, exhibits and film reels trace the birth of country music through the lives of the immigrants and ragged-clothed poor who created it, as well as showcasing some of the more flamboyant excesses of its biggest stars.

Among the highlights are Elvis’s 24-carat gold plated grand piano and Cadillac, jewelled costumes worn by Dolly Parton and Tammy Wynette as well as honky tonk singer Webb Pierce’s 1962 Pontiac Bonneville — terrifying­ly customised with pistol door handles and a rifle on the bonnet.

And for the impressive finale, an exclusive event for our tour — a private performanc­e and Q&A with Richard Leigh, the Grammy Award-winning songwriter who wrote Don’t it make your brown eyes blue.

Leigh’s encyclopae­dic commentary acts as a prelude to our evening’s entertainm­ent, The Grand Ole Opry: it’s a (right & below) bit too ‘praise the Lord’ for my liking, but then we are in the very buckle of America’s bible belt.

If Nashville is enjoying boom times, thanks to its music scene, top-class universiti­es and emergence as a centre for healthcare and banking, Memphis, our next stop, appears to be having no such luck.

Gritty and grimy round the edges, most of everything that happens here does so on or around Beale Street, where you’ll find the Blues bars and dry-rub rib joints that are keeping the city going.

Away from that, the outstandin­g National Civil Rights Museum charts the history of slavery and racism in uncomforta­ble and ugly detail. Our excellent museum guide, a man in his 60s, talks us through three centuries of black subjugatio­n, Jim Crow segregatio­n laws and, sadly, the abuses that still occur, bringing his own experience to bear.

He tells us how his parents told him never to look white people in the eye in Mississipp­i and that there are still places he doesn’t consider safe for black Americans.

He then takes us up to the adjoining Lorraine Motel, to see the balcony where Martin Luther King lost his life, and across the road to the lodging house where his assassin, James Earl Ray stood in the bath to take aim. The

LUXURY Gold’s nine-day Southern Grace tour to Nashville, Memphis, Natchez and New Orleans, costs from £3,895 per person, based on two sharing, including flights, B&B accommodat­ion, five

room is a reconstruc­tion but is eerily grim and depressing for all that.

Nowhere is Elvis’ presence is nowhere more apparent than in Memphis, the city where he made his first EDITED BY CATHY WINSTON cwinston@thejc.com dinners plus luxury coach transport and concierge throughout. luxurygold­vacations. com

recording and where he lived and died, although we discover he is omnipresen­t and seemingly immortal throughout the South. Following in his footsteps, we trace his career from Sam Phillips’ Sun Studio, where the biggest names of the 50s recorded, and then on to Graceland.

I’m an Elvis fan and my excitement levels are soaring, particular­ly with a private evening tour of Graceland to look forward to, given by George Klein — one of Elvis’s best friends and a member of the gang known as the Memphis mafia. We also have dinner in Presley’s car museum: on the menu? Fried banana and peanut butter sandwiches — an Elvis favourite.

Klein is old and cuts a frail but startling figure in a velour tracksuit and trainers. Yet as we go from room to room he finds his stride and a jumble of unfettered stories about life with the King come tumbling out. Some are good, some are sad and some are now downright unacceptab­le…

From Memphis, we head south to New Orleans for a cemetery walk and sample some fine Cajun cuisine; the city is also home to several kosher restaurant­s. The organised among our group bought tickets for Preservati­on Hall — the undisputed home of traditiona­l jazz — weeks before, but the rest of us don’t fare too badly, either.

We enjoy a joyful jazz crawl, ducking in and out of bars, listening to one set after another, before finally settling down in The Spotted Cat to catch the final act.

So after landing in the City of Music, we depart from the City of the Dead, having filled our hearts with the music of the South, from country and folk through to the birth of rock’n’roll — and all that jazz…

 ?? PHOTO: INSIGHT TOURS/PIXABAY/JOSHUA NESS ON UNSPLASH ?? Nashville’s vibrant nightlife and honky tonks (left) meets Memphis history
PHOTO: INSIGHT TOURS/PIXABAY/JOSHUA NESS ON UNSPLASH Nashville’s vibrant nightlife and honky tonks (left) meets Memphis history
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