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Baton Rouge Blues

Chris Thomas King

There are places where cultural history is so strong that you can’t really claim to have visited if you don’t immerse yourself in it. Missing it would be missing the point. The Deep South is one of those places and the Blues are as important to its shared past as is its celebrated cuisine.

Born out of hardship and misery, the Blues spawned an era of incredible music. Everything from Country to Hip Hop, and everyone from Duke Ellington to Usher, has borrowed and built upon Blues riffs and rhythms. Our goal was to experience it firsthand, close to where it all started, in a divey bar off the main strip. Phil Brady’s in Baton Rouge was as good a place as any.

I had no doubt we’d hear great music, but assumed we’d listen to an unknown local band. Not so. The best selling blues artist of the 21st century just so happened to be playing a single gig in his home city while we were in town. It’s not every day you get a chance to see a gold-record artist like Chris Thomas King jamming in a small venue, so we jumped at the opportunity.

Neither of us were familiar with King’s work before we saw him in person. And for me, that is usually an obstacle to really enjoying music. A lot of songs have to grow on me. I may think they’re O.K. the first time I hear them, but it isn’t until I learn the lyrics or the rhythm that I really get into it. This was a completely different experience. Nearly all of his songs had a beat and sound that made you want to move. Everyone else felt it too, as a number of folks got up to dance in the small space in front of the stage. So it was a surprise to learn that King originally met tremendous resistance to his style of contemporary blues. No resistance was on display that night. He brought the freaking house down.

Mo-money-bile, Alabama

Bellingrath House, Mobile, AL

Bellingrath House & Gardens, Theodore, AL

When I think of Mobile, Alabama, several things come to mind, but expensive tourist destination isn’t usually one of them. Unfortunately, that is what we found. The admission costs to main attractions in Mobile are as high as almost anywhere else we’ve been. Over the course of two days, Shannon and I spent $80 getting into just three attractions; the art museum ($10, each), the USS Alabama ($10, with coupon), and the Bellingrath House & Gardens ($20, we skipped a river boat ride that costs an additional $8.50, each). $80 for a weekend may not seem like much when you’re on vacation, but if you try to do it all the time, like we do, that amount spent every two days accumulates to almost $15,000 over the course of a year. That’s a lot of scratch for admissions. Continue Reading →

Our Trip on the Map

In the maps below you’ll find the sum total of our travels since 2010 as illustrated by red pushpins. As we make our way around the world, we’ll update and add to these maps to chronicle our progress.

Each pushpin is linked to the blog posts we’ve written for that particular destination. We haven’t written about every single stop, so not all pushpins have links. A few places will never have posts, but most are just works in progress. Things to look forward to.

Use the controls in the upper left to scroll and zoom the map.

North America

Central America

Photo of the Day: Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception, Mobile, AL

Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception, Mobile, Alabama

Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception, Mobile, Alabama

Surprising Pensacola

Pensacola Wrought Iron

Wrought Iron in front of Seville Quarter, Pensacola, Florida

We really had no expectations of Pensacola before we arrived. We didn’t go there for anything in particular. It was just a convenient stop between where we were and where we were heading. But what we found was a small city that has a lot to offer. Continue Reading →