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I got to the Pancake Pantry at 8:00. It was full and there was a
short line but we all fit inside for our fairly brief wait. The picture
shows the line when I left an hour later. This was my third visit to the
Pancake Pantry but the first two were ten and eleven years ago. I didn't
remember what I ate on either of those earlier occasions but there is a
record. Turns out my 2018 meal is a duplicate
of my 2007 meal with one
exception. Today the waitress brought cinnamon cream syrup (the light
brown stuff), and it was marvelous. Yeah, I also had
nuts in 2008, but they were
walnuts.
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There were no plans at all for today when I left home which left it open
for a visit to the relatively new Patsy Cline museum. That's where I
headed after parking in a space that earns more per hour than many
waitresses. But I couldn't get there. 3rd Street is currently blocked to
vehicles because of a big construction project. At this particular
instant, it was also blocked to pedestrians as a crane swung something big
overhead. I walked through an alley to Broadway.
Broadway has changed a bunch in the short time I've known it. When the
Hard Rock Cafe first appeared, it was essentially the only modern chain
operation on the street. And it was also just about the only open
recognition of rock and roll in a country music world. Now rock and
rockish music is heard virtually everywhere on the street from open
doorways and off of rooftop bars. I love rock and roll. It's what I spend
my money on. I own very little country but I own or have owned rock and
roll on vinyl 45s, 8-tracks, cassettes, CDs, and MP3s. It's my kind of
music, but it's not what I think of when I think of Nashville.
I walked to and through Tootsie's. For me, it was too crowded to enjoy a
beer. Good for them. The Stage, which I entered through the back door, was
much closer to what I was looking for. I relaxed with a brew and listened
to several songs from a rather good countryish group whose repertoire
included Fleetwood Mac.
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Apparently the crane safely deposited what ever it was that it was
swinging so that people could now walk down 3rd Street. The
Patsy Cline
museum opened about sixteen months ago. It's above the Johnny Cash museum
which I visited when
it was eighteen months old. Patsy's museum became possible when
Charlie Dick, her husband, died in 2015, and the memorabilia he held
became available. Patsy was born in Winchester, VA, and worked in local
restaurants as a teenager. A booth and other items from one of those
restaurants is displayed in the museum. Several of her stage outfits are
on display along with the sewing machine her mother used to make them.
Some of the exhibits seem to be as much about typical home life in the
early 1960s as they are about the life of a superstar. Perhaps not
everyone could afford a big screen TV and a console hi-fi, but many could.
Patsy's lifestyle was not extravagant. For some reason, I found myself
drawn to the fireplug bar lamp. The jukebox is a window into the 1960,
too. The hardwired controls and complex mechanics that brought a specific
disk into play at the push of a button were -- and to some still are --
fascinating. Read the decal: "Dime one play - 5 for a quarter". The record
on the spindle is Crazy. It's there because this is the Patsy Cline
Museum, but the odds favor it being there regardless of the location.
Patsy Cline's Crazy has been played on jukeboxes more times than
any other recording.
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A new multi-floor brick building doesn't seem like the right place for the
words "honky tonk" but there they are. Pedal bars and open top
buses roam the street with the majority of passengers being females in
their 20s. Nashville has become the bachelorette party capital of the
world.
The last two pictures were taken from the top of
Acme Feed &
Seed. It's an old building and I like it for that. It's a place where
I've eaten and enjoyed music before. But the music was decidedly
non-country and the menu includes sushi. Yeah, Broadway has changed a
bunch in the short time I've known it.
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How many guitars in a gig? This one, The Gallery of Iconic Guitars at Belmont, has about a
hundred on display and more than for times that in storage. It is close
enough to my motel that it showed up on some sort of search, or I would
not have known about it, and would have missed a real gem. There's a 1933
Martin D-28 here and a 1955 Fender Stratocaster. There's a 1952 Fender
Precision Bass that looks like the Telecaster that inspired it. The $5
admission might be the best bargain in Nashville. I guarantee that anyone
who has ever spent more that five seconds admiring a guitar or mandolin
will enjoy spending many seconds here.
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I passed this place on the way to breakfast this morning and recognized it
instantly. I once saw Santa's Pub on a list of top dive bars and think I
even plugged it into the GPS once but I never made it. I spoke briefly
with Santa when I took his picture. I told him that I'd been a little
bummed out about Nashville because of all those glossy places on Broadway
but that his place had renewed my faith. He said he was happy to do that.
It's a great bar with friendly and sincere people. And some Badass beer.
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My last two stops of the day were both places I'd been before. The first
one is a restaurant that I ate at in 2013. I was staying even closer then,
and walked to South
Street. This time I drove but I think I may have gotten the same seat
at the bar. The fettuccine I had
five years ago is no longer on
the menu the bartender steered me to some
excellent catfish. She called the things that
aren't hush puppies "tater tots" but they're not at all like
the pre-fab frozen things I'm familiar with. These are more like fried
mashed potatoes with cheese.
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In hindsight, it might have been better to walk to
Bobby's Idle
Hour from where I parked for dinner but I drove. My one visit here
was much more recent than my previous visit to South Street. Some friends
and I came to Nashville last September to see Van Morrison. We came here
after the concert to see one of the group's cousin... or niece... or
something along those lines... perform as part of an in-the-row showcase.
I caught two in-the-rows tonight.
One group was just starting their last round when I walked in and I hung
around for the first pass by the second group. The picture is of that
second group. Bobby's is the only live music venue on Nashville's Music
Row, and I understand that it and many other Music Row buildings are at
risk of demolition for development. In just two visits, I've come to
really like this place. The music is the main reason but I just naturally
have great admiration for any place that has Vienna Sausage on the menu at
"Market Price".
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