Your Tour Guide

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YOUR TOUR GUIDE: For more than 33 years, Dr. Galusha has been hosting the nationally recognized, 'Pacific St. Blues & Americana' radio program in the Omaha market. The program has been aired in England and received the Keeping the Blues Alive award from the national Blues Foundation in 2010. Since 1978 Galusha has been honing his looks for radio. As Chuck Berry might have quipped, "This little country boy can make the radio sing..."

Friday, September 30, 2016

Down Highway 61 into the Mississippi delta (May 2017)



From Memphis to Mississippi - where the blues was born...

We'll leave Memphis early in the morning - cause to see all these sites, well, it's gonna be a long day. While our time in Mississippi will be curtailed to the delta region, as your knowledge of the blues might suggest, the number of musicians from this area is staggering. Simply put, we will not be stopping at every location discussed in this travelogue. Simply because time will not allow, in the majority of cases, we will drive-by the approximate location. If you want to stop for a photograph, you will want to notify us. Here is an interactive map which provides detailed information about the areas where we will be visiting.









Driving south out of Tennessee we'll quickly enter the delta area of northwestern Mississippi. Our first drive-by will be the Robinsonville area where the Rev. Son House lived and made his first and last recording in Mississippi.











We'll continue down Highway 61 towards Clarksdale and the crossroads made famous in Robert Johnson's song, 'Crossroads Blues.' Covered in the 1960's by rock's first supergroup Cream - which featured Eric Clapton, Ginger Baker and Jack Bruce.








The Crossroads are immortalized by Robert Johnson but Bob Dylan also sang of Highway 61. Watch a youthful Johnny Winter tear-up a cover Dylan's song from 1977.








Before we reach Clarksdale and the Delta Blues Museum, we'll pass through the Clayton/Tunica area where "Superharp" James Cotton was born and lived before moving north to Chicago where he eventually replaced Little Walter in Muddy Waters band.








About 90 minutes after leaving Memphis we'll arrive in Clarksdale, Mississippi and the home of the Delta Blues Museum. This will be our first stop. In addition to being the home of Ike Turner (Tina is from just outside of Memphis), Clarksdale is the home of Sam Cooke. Cooke's song, 'A Change is Gonna Come' was written after Cooke heard Bob Dylan's, 'Blowing in the Wind.' The singer felt he needed to contribute to the civil rights movement of the 1960's. Watch it here.




While in Clarksdale, in addition to spending time in the Delta Blues Museum, where we can see the original cabin that Muddy Waters a/k/a McKinely Morganfield was born in, we will pay a roadside visit to the Riverside Hotel where one of the blues' first superstars, Bessie Smith (who heavily influenced Billie Holiday) died.



Other blues luminaries from the Clarksdale area include: Elmore James, Fenton Robinson, Luther 'Guitar Jr. Johnson and Hound Dog Taylor. When Bruce Iglauer started the Chicago based Alligator Records in 1971, the first artist on his recording label was Hound Dog Taylor. Iglauer tells the tale of selling Taylor's 45 rpm records from out of the back of the trunk of his car.



Which is somewhat poetic considering the great Alan Lomax's field recordings were captured for the Smithsonian Institute's archieves by a very large and tape recorder which was so cumbersome that it had to be carried in the trunk in Lomax's car. In other words, the blues recording industry began by going into the trunk and proliferated by coming out of the trunk.

Just outside of Clarksdale is the Hopson Planting Company where, during World War II, Pinetop Perkins would be employed as a tractor driver in support of the war effort. Like so many African-Americans of the era, eventually Perkins would find himself in Chicago and playing piano in Muddy Waters now famous band, The Headhunters.

Well outside of Clarksdale, along the Mississippi River, is the city Rosedale - which Robert Johnson references in his song, 'Traveling Riverside Blues.'Watch Led Zeppelin cover Johnson's song here. Zeppelin would also use Johnson's lyrics in the track, 'The Lemon Song' from their second album.

Traveling Riverside Blues
   by Robert Johnson
Recording of 5th of 5 sessions, June 20 1937, Dallas, Texas

If your man get personal, want you to have your fun
If your man get personal, want you to have your fun
Best come on back to Friars Point1, mama, and barrelhouse all night long

I got women's in Vicksburg, clean on into Tennessee
I got women's in Vicksburg, clean on into Tennessee
But my Friars Point1 rider, now, hops all over me

I ain't gon' to state no color but her, front teeth crowned with gold
I ain't gon' to state no color but her, front teeth is crowned with gold
She got a mortgage on my body, now, and a lien2 on my soul

Lord, I'm goin' to Rosedale3, gon' take my rider by my side
Lord, I'm goin' to Rosedale3, gon' take my rider by my side
can still barrelhouse baby, on the riverside

Now you can squeeze my lemon 'til the juice run down my leg... 
    (spoken: 'til the juice rune down my leg, baby, you know what I'm talkin' about)
You can squeeze my lemon 'til the juice run down my leg
    (spoken: That's what I'm talkin' 'bout, now)
But I'm goin' back to Friars Point1, if I be rockin' to my head
__________
Note 1: Friars Town is a small town in a bend of the Levee river, Mississippi
Note 2: a lien is a charge upon real or personal property for the satisfaction of some debt
Note 3: Rosedale is further south, some twenty miles west of Cleveland, Mississippi


More on Robert Johnson here. Cleveland (lunch) Shaw Holly Ridge Dunleith Indianola Greenwood Minter City/ Glendora Ruleville Dockery Drew Parchman Farms - prison Tutweiler Vance Lambert Batesville Memphis


Parchman Farm

Thursday, September 29, 2016

Thee most "fantabulous" Memphis music tour ever.... (May 2017)


Join us in Memphis for four jammed packed days of music, muSIC,MUSIC!
Memphis Blues and Rock Music Tour


Perhaps more than any other American city, Memphis is Music. As a conduit between Mississippi's delta cotton fields andNorthern industrial cities, Memphis was the midwife as the blues morphed into rock n' roll.


According to legendary bluesman Muddy Waters, "Blues had a baby and they called it rock n' roll." On this trip, we're gonna visit the maternity ward where rock n' roll was born.




Link
W.C. Handy Biography
Rich in history, Memphis celebrates music like no other town in America. From the home W.C. Handy - the founder of the blues,






To Sun Records - who launched the careers of Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash, Jerry Lee Lewis, Roy Orbison, Billy Lee Riley, Carl Perkins, Charlie Rich and Merle Haggard. Sun Records Link













To the home of Stax Records and the preeminent home of 60's southern soul music with Otis Redding, Booker T. and the MG's (Steve Cropper, Duck Dunn & , Sam & Dave, Albert King, Rufus and Carla Thomas, William Bell and 'The Black Jesus' Issac Hayes.







To the National Civil Rights Museum. formerly known as the Lorraine Motel,where Dr. Martin Luther King was tragically assassinated in 1968.










Our trip will include a visit to the home of the "King." Presley came from Mississippi but began his recording career at Sun Records in Memphis before moving to RCA Records.






Memphis is also home to the Gibson Guitar factory. Located downtown, Gibson builds guitars on site. We will tour the facility where some of the finest guitars in the world are manufactured.




The Rock n' Soul Museum is located in downtown Memphis - right around the corner from the Gibson factory and within "spitting distance" of the famous Beale Street blues area. The displays contain some of the finest memorabilia exhibits since Experience Music in Seattle or the Rock n' Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland. And no trip to Memphis without a bus tour of this remarkable city. These buses include a singing guide who leads not only the tour but also the tourists in singing many of the memorable songs associated with the sites and sounds of Memphis.



Meanwhile....


The "Blue Highway wove its way up from Mississippi along Highway 61 into Memphis. The greatest bluesmen and women in the world meandered their way including: Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf, Little Walter and Sonny Boy Williamson.



Join us as we venture from Memphis down the blues highway into the delta where the blues was born! We'll see sites tied to Jimmy Reed, and Charly Patton. We'll drive via' Leland, Mississippi where Johnny Winter's father and grandfather were the mayors (and immortalized in song by Winter. To Indianola and the homes of Albert King and B.B. King.


And on to sites for Rev. Son House, James Cotton, Sonny Boy Williamson, Sam Cooke, Ike Turner, and the Riverside Hotel where Bessie Smith died.









Our tour to Mississippi includes stopping at the reputed graves of both of the legendary 'King of the Delta Blues, Robert Johnson.



Our bus tour into the delta area includes sites associated with other blues greats including...

For more information including dates and costs, contact Audrey @ Pegasus Travel (402)390-0122. Email at audrey.hulsey@pegasusomaha.com. Dates are ednesday, May 31st through Sunday, June 4th. (Leave Wednesday, come back on Sunday). Cost is $1575 and includes airfare, hotel, breakfast, transportation and admissions to all scheduled sites. You are "on your own" for evening entertainment. We'll be close enough to walk to Beale Street for live music. 

And here's the fine print...

Pegasus travel agency, its agents, and Rick Galusha act only as agents in making arrangements for hotels, transportation, or any other services in connection with this itineraries of individual tour members, who by acceptance thereof, acknowledge that our agency, KIWR fm, Rick Galusha, RadiOmaha and.or their agents and suppliers, (hereafter referred to as the 'travel agency'),  shall not be liable for injury, damages, loss, accident, delay or irregularity, liability or expense to person providing or rendering services included in the tour.

Further, the travel agency (et al) and.or their agents accept no responsibility for any sickness, pilferage, labor disputes, machinery breakdown, government restraints, acts of war or terrorism, weather conditions, defect in any vehicle of transportation or any misadventure or casualty or any other causes beyond their control.

The agency (et al) reserves the right to cancel, change, or substitute any service and to decline to accept or retain any tour members at any time for any reason. So be nice and behave yourself. If you are at-all-fussy, we're probably not a good fit for you.

The travel agency (et al) is not responsible for any charges increased costs incurred by passengers as a result of the cancellation of services due to be provided by its agents or suppliers for any reason.

Please note, the bus tour will not stop at every site. We will do our best to highlight sites and stop as often as time allows. If you have specific needs and wants, these must be submitted at the time of initial payment and in writing. We want you to have a good time. Most people are reasonable but some are not. We want to be accommodating and reasonably flexible but we also don't want to be sued or have our time ruined.