Thursday, January 23, 2025
7.0°F

Famous country music alley gets facelift

Joe Edwards | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 13 years, 3 months AGO
by Joe Edwards
| September 25, 2011 9:00 PM

NASHVILLE, Tenn. - Country music's most famous alley - a gritty monument to the earthy sounds all around it - is getting a facelift.

The block-long alley is between the historic Ryman Auditorium and Nashville's raucous honky-tonks, where well-fortified patrons are urged to "holler and swaller."

Now it's a place often littered with gray trash cans and cardboard boxes piled atop each other. Grand Ole Opry performers used to walk out the Opry's side door, cross the alley and slip in the back door at Tootsie's Orchid Lounge, Nashville's legendary honky-tonk.

"It's the most famous 37 steps in that alley," says Jim "The Governor" Hill, Tootsie's general manager. "Tootsie's was the 'green room' for the Ryman."

The alley work, which will cost the city an estimated $300,000, is expected to take up to six months.

"The alley is a Nashville treasure," said Veronica Frazier with the Metro Public Works Department. "You can walk in the footsteps where Hank (Williams) did."

A local group has led the makeover effort, which will include work on storm and sanitary sewers, electrical conduits and refinishing the surface.

"We want to celebrate the historical, cultural feel of the alley," said Shawn Henry, an attorney who is chairman of the makeover group. "We're mindful to upgrade it but want it to stay vibrant."

The 119-year-old Ryman was home to the Opry from 1943 to 1974, when it moved to a new location east of downtown. Opry shows are still performed at the Ryman during the winter.

Today, a dozen or so other honky-tonks have joined Tootsie's on that side of the alley, continuing Nashville's music vibe with blazing fiddles, country weepers and frosty beer.

Hill said the rear of his honky-tonk is still popular because of the alley and what's nearby.

"A lot of people sit at the back patio and just look at the Ryman."

MORE IMPORTED STORIES

Nashville's music quieted by flooding
Coeur d'Alene Press | Updated 14 years, 8 months ago
Nashville Nights events features country music stars
The Western News | Updated 1 year, 4 months ago
Ryman Auditorium to get new stage
Coeur d'Alene Press | Updated 12 years, 11 months ago

ARTICLES BY JOE EDWARDS

Famous country music alley gets facelift
September 25, 2011 9 p.m.

Famous country music alley gets facelift

NASHVILLE, Tenn. - Country music's most famous alley - a gritty monument to the earthy sounds all around it - is getting a facelift.

Nashville's music quieted by flooding
May 9, 2010 9 p.m.

Nashville's music quieted by flooding

NASHVILLE, Tenn. - The blazing fiddles and screaming guitars at Nashville's famed downtown honky-tonks are a little quieter as the city recovers from flash flooding and storms blamed for at least 29 deaths in three states.