Itโs easy nowadays to get access to the newest tracks and your favourite singles from the comfort of your living room โ thousands of songs and albums are uploaded and downloaded online everyday, it only takes one click of your finger before youโre tapping your toes. But if youโve got true, music love, why not travel?
Pack up your guitar in its battered case, swap out your Nirvana drumsticks for some travel money and hop on a plane. Itโs time to pay tribute to the genius of your hero โ make like a rock band and go on tour to the top 5 most significant pop and rock pilgrimage sites in the world:
1. Graceland
Elvis bought this huge, be-pillared mansion when he was only 22 โ and it is where he died, at the age of 49. Since it was turned into a museum in 1982 hundreds of thousands of people have come every year to pay tribute to the Kingโs genius (and to marvel at his ritzy dรฉcor).
Pay for a guided tour and youโll get to see his iconic Vegas jumpsuits, his two jetliners and more โ though a few rooms, including the toilet in which he died, arenโt open to the public. You can also spend time in the Meditation Garden where Elvis is buried โ fans often have a moment of quiet reflection here and leave tributes. Over the years, teddy bears, candles, American flags and frog toys have all been gifted at the graveside.
2. Pรจre Lachaise Cemetery, Paris
While weโre talking graves, one of the most popular posthumous rock โnโ roll destinations is the final resting place of Jim Morrison: poet, musician and lead singer of the Doors. It used to feature a bust of Morrison but that was stolen in 1988; after years of fans vandalizing and chipping bits off it, the siteโs now regularly patrolled by cemetery guards. Itโs a shady place to be at night, with drugs, drink and sleazy tributes to the musician, so pack a bottle of whisky and some travel insurance.
While youโre at Pรจre Lachaise, pop over and see the graves of Chopin and Edith Piafโ then follow tradition by planting a lipstick kiss on the grave of the rock โnโ roll bad boy of Victorian theatre, Oscar Wilde.
3. The Cavern Club, Liverpool
Take a โmagical mystery tourโ of the Fab Fourโs old hunting ground. After seeing the plaque at Paulโs house and visiting Penny Lane, you can take a trip to perhaps the most famous music venue in Britain and the place where the Beatles performed almost 300 times before making it big nationally: the Cavern Club.
The Club that exists today is a replica of the one the Beatles performed in from 1961-1963 โ that was demolished to make way for a car park. Still, the new Cavern is made on about 75% of the original site and is constructed from many of the bricks โ and, thereโs still live music almost every night. Grab a drink, enjoy the music and soak up the atmosphere.
4. Cafรฉ Wha?, New York
This swinginโ club has regular live acts and some of the most talented house bands in the whole U.S. Itโs also where several extremely famous musicians were discovered in the โ60s. Drink and dance in the aisles of the place where Bob Dylan, Jimi Hendrix and Bruce Springsteen were discovered, along with the funky talents of Peter, Paul & Mary, and Kool and the Gang.
5. The Motown Museum, Detroit
The old โHitsvilleโ house, where the founder of Motown Records Berry Gordy lived and where many hugely influential tracks were cut by the likes of โLittle Stevieโ Wonder, The Supremes, Aretha Franklin and the Jackson 5. Now a museum, check out Michael Jacksonโs famous fedora and glove and the sofa where Marvin Gaye took a kip; in the sound booth, you can even see marks on the wooden floor from where dozens of famous feet have tapped to the beat over the yearsโฆ