The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

What’s next for proposed Grammy museum,

Monday’s announceme­nt stops short of details for cost, location, timeline.

- By Ernie Suggs ernie.suggs@ajc.com

The Grammys are officially coming to Atlanta. Atlanta and Fulton County’s long flirtation with the Grammy Museum Foundation to build and operate a Grammy Museum here finally paid off with an announceme­nt Monday, but the project has a long way to go to completion.

One of Atlanta’s musical heavyweigh­ts, Chris “Ludacris” Bridges, told the Rotary Club of Atlanta on Monday he “wished upon a star” to see the museum in Atlanta.

He played a video featuring Michael Sticka, president of the Los Angeles-based GRAMMY Museum and the GRAMMY Museum Foundation, announcing that the organizati­on would partner with the Georgia Music Accord to expand here.

“The future looks very bright,” Ludacris said. “To see it firsthand how it is going to help (kids) be even more inspired. And we gonna create more jobs. This is long overdue in my opinion. I cannot wait.” But he may have to.

Missing from the announceme­nt was how much it was going to cost, who would pay for it, where it was going to be built and when constructi­on would begin.

The announceme­nt Monday was “to have a benchmark to move forward, and we’re starting to move now,” said Tammy Hurt, president of the Georgia Music Accord, the nonprofit helping draft the museum.

Brad Olecki, CEO of the Georgia Music Accord, said getting to this point has been a lot of hard work “and now we are excited about the harder work that the future shows.”

Olecki said a site has not been identified, but it would make sense to have it near existing attraction­s and hotels. He would not estimate how much the museum would cost, or say where the funding would come from or when ground would be broken.

“There is a lot more good news to come,” he promised.

It won’t be the first regional Grammy museum. One in Mississipp­i opened in 2016, showcasing the state’s musical roots. An exhibit in Nashville honors country music, and a New Jersey annex highlights homegrown artists including Whitney Houston and Frank Sinatra.

As reported last year in the Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on,

the state and Fulton County government­s spent a combined $500,000 on a feasibilit­y study for the museum.

Whenever it is built, the museum will usher Georgia back into the music curation business. The state-supported Georgia Music Hall of Fame in Macon, which opened in 1996 to tell the stories of Georgia luminaries like Otis Redding, James Brown, the Allman Brothers Band and Little Richard, lost money for years and closed in 2012.

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 ?? MELISSA RUGGIERI / FOR THE AJC ?? The Grammy Museum in Los Angeles is home to some of Grammy Award winner and Georgia native Otis Redding’s original stage outfits, including the overalls from a music video and his famous red suit from his 1967 tour of Europe.
MELISSA RUGGIERI / FOR THE AJC The Grammy Museum in Los Angeles is home to some of Grammy Award winner and Georgia native Otis Redding’s original stage outfits, including the overalls from a music video and his famous red suit from his 1967 tour of Europe.

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