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  • Car crash on highway 10 on 28th February 2020 in Rayne, Louisianna, United States.
    _E6A6113.jpg
  • Uber electric bike on painted pavement, 11th March 2020 in French Quarter, New Orleans, Louisianna, United States.
    _E6A2906.jpg
  • Locked and chained doorway in the French Quarter on 19th Febuary 2020 in New Orleans, Louisianna, United States.
    _E6A2879.jpg
  • Closed down buisiness on 11th March 2020 in French Quarter, New Orleans, Louisianna, United States.
    _E6A2884.jpg
  • New house construction using timber framing on 28th February 2020 in Breaux Bridge, Louisianna, United States.
    _E6A6095.jpg
  • Madonna in front of house on 11th March 2020 in Lower Ninth Ward, New Orleans, Louisianna, United States. Pre-Katrina, the Lower Ninth once registered the citys highest rate of African-American homeownership. Today, its pre-storm population of 18,000 has been reduced to 1,800.
    _E6A5968.jpg
  • Bin of used white childrens shoes in secondhand store on 28th February 2020 in Breaux Bridge, Louisianna, United States.
    _E6A6099.jpg
  • American flags marking millitary graves in Mount Calvary Cemetery on 28th February 2020 in Eunice, Louisianna, United States. Beginning in August the American flags have multiplied at Mount Calvary Cemetery on U.S. 190 east of Eunice. The flags are the result of a project began by Dale Sittig, who prepared placements for the flag poles. Robert Feutch, cemetery owner, said there are 158 flags at the grave sites of veterans at the cemetery.
    _E6A6121.jpg
  • American flags marking millitary graves in Mount Calvary Cemetery on 28th February 2020 in Eunice, Louisianna, United States. Beginning in August the American flags have multiplied at Mount Calvary Cemetery on U.S. 190 east of Eunice. The flags are the result of a project began by Dale Sittig, who prepared placements for the flag poles. Robert Feutch, cemetery owner, said there are 158 flags at the grave sites of veterans at the cemetery.
    _E6A6140.jpg
  • Discount tobacco drive-in store on 28th February 2020 in Morgan City, Louisianna, United States. Back when it was launched in 1991, this Southern Louisiana business founded by Fred Hoyt consisted of one store known as Cheap-O-Depot—the second tobacco store in the whole state of Louisiana. By 2000, there were seven stores in the chain. Next, in 2003, a totally new concept was introduced when Hoyt’s son, Richard, joined the business and initiated a drive-thru era and a new name, Smoke ’N Go. (photo by Barry Lewis/In<br />
Pictures via Getty Images)
    _E6A6076.jpg
  • Free library in gothic bookcase on 11th March 2020 in New Orleans, Louisianna, United States. “To promote literacy and the love of reading by building free book exchanges worldwide and to build a sense of community as we share skills, creativity and wisdom across generations.” -LittleFreeLibrary.org
    _E6A6026.jpg
  • Drive-in car valeting service on 11th March 2020 in New Orleans, Louisiana, United States.
    _E6A8079.jpg
  • Trump supporter, Cajun Palms RV Resort on 28th February 2020 in Breaux Bridge, Louisiana, United States.
    _E6A6375.jpg
  • Casino on converted steamer, Vicksburg, Mississippi at dusk. This elegant historic town with its pillar fronted houses and cotton legacy  is transformed as the remains of a storm at sunset  turn the sky iridescent. There are perhaps defining moments on all big trips. Arriving in Vicksburg, Mississippi at dusk just as a  huge thunderstorm was beginning to break was one of them . <br />
<br />
<br />
“It had been raining so hard, that an alligator had mistook the<br />
four-lane Interstate for the swollen Mississippi beside it and tragically met its death there. But as we drew into elegant Vicksburg, with its pillar-fronted houses on hilly streets, something astonishing happened.<br />
The sky, the result of a hot, setting sun, and the remains of a storm, was suddenly alive with an iridescent glow, so otherworldly, it looked like a space ship had landed.  A rainbow stretched between two red brick towers, and you could just hear hear a steamer's horn, as it edged its way down the mighty Mississippi
    PADDELSTEAMER_1.jpg
  • Blues singer outside the Ground Zero Blues Club, Clarksdale, Mississippi. Muddy Waters, Robert Johnson, Bessie Smith, and ZZ Top are some of the many musicians who have put Clarksdale on the map: with its own blues museum on Blues Alleyit is no surprise to hear that  Clarksdale it is famous for being ‘the birth place of the Blues’.
    MUSICIAN CLARKSDALE_1.jpg
  • Johnny Ville pictured here inside the world famous Tootsies bar on  Broadway has come to Nashville to develop his musical career. Nashville  is the Hollywood of Country Music and wannabe stars from all over the world flock there to make their fortune.  Johnny is a natural performer and self promoter "Elvis was my daddy” he claims and promises to buy us a Cadillac when he is famous),  Johnny doesn’t have a permanent address and seems to rove around trying to make a few bucks with his guitar. It seems the romantic spirit of Nashville is alive and well. Today There is still some great music to be found in Nashville  but one has to navigate some typical US commercialism in the search as  the town cashes in on its reputation.
    elvis wanabe_1.jpg
  • Photographed in the neighbourhood of Robbinsville  these children are all looked after by their grandmother over the summer holidays: with a little help from a satellite dish and  125 channels of television.
    SATELITEKIDS_1.jpg
  • The Hard Rock Café, Nashville. Nashville  is the capital of Tennessee  and the self styled  home of country music. Today There is still some great music to be found but one has to navigate some typical US commercialism  in the search as  the town cashes in on its reputation.
    HARD ROCK_1.jpg
  • Drive-in car valeting service on 11th March 2020 in New Orleans, Louisiana, United States.
    _E6A8080.jpg
  • Man dancing on a street corner in the French Quarter on 11th March 2020 in New Orleans, Louisiana, United States.
    _E6A8003.jpg
  • Sex and Hospitality workers demonstration on 8th March 2020 in French Quarter, New Orleans, Louisiana, United States. As the novel coronavirus COVID-19 pandemic has brought New Orleans hospitality and service industries to a chaotic halt, a new coalition of local unions, worker advocates and cultural support organizations is calling for relief support  the Ernest N. Morial Exhibition Hall Authority, the convention centers governing body, and New Orleans & Company, the private tourism nonprofit formerly known as the Convention and Visitors Bureau. These rainy day reserves, the coalitions letter says, were amassed through the booming success of the hospitality industry — an industry that only succeeds and exists because of the work of tens of thousands of New Orleanians and southeastern Louisianans.
    _E6A7917.jpg
  • Sex and Hospitality workers demonstration on 8th March 2020 in French Quarter, New Orleans, Louisiana, United States. As the novel coronavirus COVID-19 pandemic has brought New Orleans hospitality and service industries to a chaotic halt, a new coalition of local unions, worker advocates and cultural support organizations is calling for relief support  the Ernest N. Morial Exhibition Hall Authority, the convention centers governing body, and New Orleans & Company, the private tourism nonprofit formerly known as the Convention and Visitors Bureau. These rainy day reserves, the coalitions letter says, were amassed through the booming success of the hospitality industry — an industry that only succeeds and exists because of the work of tens of thousands of New Orleanians and southeastern Louisianans.
    _E6A7895.jpg
  • Sex and Hospitality workers demonstration on 8th March 2020 in French Quarter, New Orleans, Louisiana, United States. As the novel coronavirus COVID-19 pandemic has brought New Orleans hospitality and service industries to a chaotic halt, a new coalition of local unions, worker advocates and cultural support organizations is calling for relief support  the Ernest N. Morial Exhibition Hall Authority, the convention centers governing body, and New Orleans & Company, the private tourism nonprofit formerly known as the Convention and Visitors Bureau. These rainy day reserves, the coalitions letter says, were amassed through the booming success of the hospitality industry — an industry that only succeeds and exists because of the work of tens of thousands of New Orleanians and southeastern Louisianans.
    _E6A7909.jpg
  • Vicksburg, Mississippi at dusk. This multi story carpark  is transformed as the remains of a storm at sunset  turn the sky iridescent. There are perhaps defining moments on all big trips. Arriving in Vicksburg, Mississippi at dusk just as a  huge thunderstorm was beginning to break was one of them. It had been raining so hard, that an alligator had mistook the four-lane Interstate for the swollen Mississippi beside it and tragically met its death there. But as we drew into elegant Vicksburg, with its pillar-fronted houses on hilly streets, something astonishing happened. The sky, the result of a hot, setting sun, and the remains of a storm, was suddenly alive with an iridescent glow, so otherworldly, it looked like a space ship had landed.  A rainbow stretched between two red brick towers, and you could just hear hear a steamer's horn, as it edged its way down the mighty Mississippi
    sunsettruck_1.jpg
  • Vicksburg, Mississippi at dusk. This elegant historic town with its pillar fronted houses and cotton legacy  is transformed as the remains of a storm at sunset  turn the sky iridescent. There are perhaps defining moments on all big trips. Arriving in Vicksburg, Mississippi at dusk just as a  huge thunderstorm was beginning to break was one of them. It had been raining so hard, that an alligator had mistook the four-lane Interstate for the swollen Mississippi beside it and tragically met its death there. But as we drew into elegant Vicksburg, with its pillar-fronted houses on hilly streets, something astonishing happened. The sky, the result of a hot, setting sun, and the remains of a storm, was suddenly alive with an iridescent glow, so otherworldly, it looked like a space ship had landed. A rainbow stretched between two red brick towers, and you could just hear hear a steamer's horn, as it edged its way down the mighty Mississippi.
    SUNSETBOAT_1.jpg
  • Elvis presley's grave is a shrine and place of Pilgrimage to the thousands of Elvis fans  who worship his music decades after his death on August 16 1977. It would be easy to expect  Graceland to be an over-rated tourist attraction. But as it is,  you could go in there Elvis indifferent, and come out a fan. The house has been left exactly as it was when Elvis died in 1977. It’s not huge, in terms of superstars mansions now and although it is done in showy taste - all shag pile walls, heart shaped beds and white  leather sofas, the design has been left exactly as Elvis created it.<br />
Graceland is located at 3734 Elvis Presley Blvd, Memphis, TN 38116
    PRESLEY GRAVE_1.jpg
  • Mail-box on the road leading into Robbinsville, North Carolina. Although this picture is typical of the road side view one gets when driving through the US. The US flag depicted in this context reflects the increased visibility of the stars and stripes post 9/11 and evokes a more sinister interpretation of this picture.
    MAILBOX_1.jpg
  • trail of car headlights photographed at  at night in Vicksberg, Mississippi.
    LIGHTSTREAM_1.jpg
  • Jounalist, Katy Regan, 4 months pregnant, posing outside a refurbished cotton planters shack at the Shack Up Inn whilst on a road trip of the American southern states. If you want to explore Clarksdale and the Blues country in true retro fashion the best place to do so is by staying at the Shack Up Inn.
    KATY_1.jpg
  • A typical steamy night gets under way in a downtown Beal street Bar in Memphis. Today There is still some great music to be found here  but, like its famous sister Nashville, one has to navigate some typical  US commercialism  in the search as  the town cashes in on its reputation. Most of the residents of this bar seem to be tourists but the music is outstanding and  and the tips jar is simply a  reflection of the harsh realties for many musicians in these crowded  music towns.
    jazz musician_1.jpg
  • Dusk falls on a typical Mississippi veranda in a Hopper-esque fashion. Between Nesbit and Sardis just off route 55, Mississippi. When Driving through the Bible belt its great to get off the main highways and just cruise around:  that’s when you get to meet the real America.
    HOPPERSHACK_1.jpg
  • Elvis‘ collection of best selling records hangs in a corridor at Graceland his home when he was alive and now a museum dedicated to all things Elvis.It would be easy to expect  Graceland to be an over-rated tourist attraction. But as it is  you could go in there Elvis indifferent and come out a fan. The house has been left exactly as it was when Elvis died in 1977. It’s not huge, in terms of superstars mansions now and although it is done in showy taste - all shag pile walls, heart shaped beds and white  leather sofas, the design has been left exactly as Elvis created it.<br />
Graceland is located at 3734 Elvis Presley Blvd, Memphis, TN 38116
    ELVISRECORD_1.jpg
  • Dunk'n doughnuts restaurant  opposite the legendary  crossroads of Highways 49 and 61. In the juke joints around Clarksdale, Mississippi, Robert Johnson was known as the kid who could barely play the guitar he often carried. Stories are told of musicians inviting Johnson to join them on stage, knowing that, before he got very far, the audience would be laughing. He disappeared for a while. When he returned, no one who heard him could believe he was the same man. He blew everyone away, playing the songs that would make him famous, among them "Cross Road Blues" and "Me And The Devil Blues."<br />
Rumours started and a myth was born :Johnson did a deal with the devil here at the crossroads of Highways 49 and 61 and sold his soul in return for his musical abilities. Whatever  the truth fans on the way to  the historic Blues town of Clarksdale and its  Delta Blues Museum will often stop at Abe's Bar B Q  or  the Dunk'n doughnuts restaurant on the intersection and pay homage.
    DOUGHNUT_1.jpg
  • Daisy, waitressing at a waffle house on 10 Highway, Baton Rouge. One of the joys of a road trip is sampling the many original 'dinner' restaurants built in the fifties and still with all the original fittings and  fixtures “happy days” style.
    DINNER GIRL_1.jpg
  • The legendary crossroads of Highways 49 and 61 outside Clarksdake, Mississippi. In the juke joints around Clarksdale, Mississippi, Robert Johnson was known as the kid who could barely play the guitar he often carried. Stories are told of musicians inviting Johnson to join them on stage, knowing that, before he got very far, the audience would be laughing. He disappeared for a while. When he returned, no one who heard him could believe he was the same man. He blew everyone away, playing the songs that would make him famous, among them "Cross Road Blues" and "Me And The Devil Blues." Rumours started and a myth was born :Johnson did a deal with the devil here at the crossroads of Highways 49 and 61 and sold his soul in return for his musical abilities. Whatever  the truth fans on the way to  the historic Blues town of Clarksdale and and its  Delta Blues Museum will often stop at Abe's Bar B Q on the intersection and pay homage.
    CROSSROADS_1.jpg
  • Nathan Walton In his back yard swimming pool, Lower Brownsville Rd. Jackson, Tennessee  with his father Matt, mother and friend in back ground. When Driving through Tennessee its great to get off the main highways and just cruise around:  that’s when you get to meet the real America. I saw this guys amazing, souped up car  outside what was pretty much a shack and thought wow! Every penny that guy gets goes on his car.
    boy in pool_1.jpg
  • Tourists relaxing by  a motel swimming pool that just happens to over look the four lane highway route 55, Senatobia, MS. In America the car and lifestyle are so inseparable that this juxtaposition of leisure activity  and  motorways seems perfectly normal and is a common sight in the US .
    38_1.jpg
  • Ruins of the 58 metre Hard Rock Hotel which collapsed during construction and remained untouched for months on 11th March 2020 in New Orleans, Louisiana, United States. On October 12, 2019, the under-construction building partially collapsed, killing three workers and injuring dozens of others. As of 2020, the building site remains in its partially collapsed state, including with the bodies of two deceased workers. Government officials are debating the projects future and potential culpability of various people and organizations involved.
    _E6A8115.jpg
  • Sex and Hospitality workers demonstration on 8th March 2020 in French Quarter, New Orleans, Louisiana, United States. As the novel coronavirus COVID-19 pandemic has brought New Orleans hospitality and service industries to a chaotic halt, a new coalition of local unions, worker advocates and cultural support organizations is calling for relief support  the Ernest N. Morial Exhibition Hall Authority, the convention centers governing body, and New Orleans & Company, the private tourism nonprofit formerly known as the Convention and Visitors Bureau. These rainy day reserves, the coalitions letter says, were amassed through the booming success of the hospitality industry — an industry that only succeeds and exists because of the work of tens of thousands of New Orleanians and southeastern Louisianans.
    _E6A7932.jpg
  • Sex and Hospitality workers demonstration on 8th March 2020 in French Quarter, New Orleans, Louisiana, United States. As the novel coronavirus COVID-19 pandemic has brought New Orleans hospitality and service industries to a chaotic halt, a new coalition of local unions, worker advocates and cultural support organizations is calling for relief support  the Ernest N. Morial Exhibition Hall Authority, the convention centers governing body, and New Orleans & Company, the private tourism nonprofit formerly known as the Convention and Visitors Bureau. These rainy day reserves, the coalitions letter says, were amassed through the booming success of the hospitality industry — an industry that only succeeds and exists because of the work of tens of thousands of New Orleanians and southeastern Louisianans.
    _E6A7894.jpg
  • VW van parked opposite redundant farm buildings near Clarksdale. If you want to explore Clarksdale and the Blues country in true retro fashion the best place to do so is by staying at the Shack Up Inn. In The Promised Land: The Great Black Migration and How It Changed America, author Nicholas Lemman describes how, on Oct. 2, 1944, a crowd of 3,000 people quietly watched the first public demonstration of the mechanical cotton picker at Hopson's plantation in Clarksdale. At best, wrote Lemman, a skilled field hand could pick 20 pounds of cotton in an hour; the mechanical picker picked 1,000 pounds. Hopson calculated that a bale of cotton (500 pounds) cost $39.41 to pick by hand and $5.26 by machine. It wasn't too hard to foresee the future. Hopson was the first plantation to convert completely to the mechanical cotton pickers. Soon afterward, the sharecropper shacks where the plantation's workers had lived were abandoned and then torn down. But now they're back at the Shack Up Inn, Mississippi's oldest B&B -- and that's bed and beer, y'all. "We don't fool around with any fixing of breakfasts," said Bill Talbot, part owner of the inn.
    vw_1.jpg
  • Western playing in the breakfast room of a motel in Senatobia  just off route 55.TN. Part of the attraction of a road trip is just hitting the tarmac and seeing where you will end up. When the budget doesn’t run to a  fabulous hotel you can always plump for rough and ready and possibly film noir  at the thousands of bargain priced motels around the states. One can normally get clean sheets and a comfortable bed for the night but if not it all adds to the classic road trip experience.
    TV COWBOY_1.jpg
  • The famous Blue Ridge Parkway, a breathtaking highway through the Appalacian Mountains. This was shot in The Great Smoky Mountain Park near Robbinsville NC, taken as part of a 2700 mile two week road trip from Atlanta Georgia through Tennessee and Mississippi to New Orleans. There is great feeling of  freedom when you know you have  two weeks away from work  and responsibility and nothing but open road before you.
    ROAD_1.jpg
  • Razor Blade (real name Josh Stuart) as he calls himself has been playing blues since the sixties with his band the Deep Cuts “they kinda know me around these parts.” It helps to work 15 hours in the cotton fields to really sing the blues he explains. Something these white wannabe blues singers don’t really understand. With the cotton pickers migration north after the introduction of mechanization it is no surprise that something of the blues soul has left with them. The blues museum (0pposite in Blues Alley) is now as important an institution as any of the remaining blues joints.
    razor_1.jpg
  • Church in North Carolina . You can’t drive through the southern states, 'Bible Belt' of  America without passing lots of churches. This really is a God fearing part of the world with religion everywhere: in the gospel music, sermons on the radio and lots of vast signs on the road advertising directly for your soul. Pictured here is a is sign opposite a typical wooden built chapel. Other signs near by read: “The Church is a rest home for sinners not a hospital for saints” or simply “alcohol is a sin”.
    HEAVANANDHELL_1.jpg
  • Original 'Blues brother' style Dodge Monaco police car at the Shack Up Inn, Clarksdale. If you want to explore Clarksdale and the Blues country in true retro fashion the best place to do so is by staying at the Shack Up Inn. In The Promised Land: The Great Black Migration and How It Changed America, author Nicholas Lemman describes how, on Oct. 2, 1944, a crowd of 3,000 people quietly watched the first public demonstration of the mechanical cotton picker at Hopson's plantation in Clarksdale. At best, wrote Lemman, a skilled field hand could pick 20 pounds of cotton in an hour; the mechanical picker picked 1,000 pounds. Hopson calculated that a bale of cotton (500 pounds) cost $39.41 to pick by hand and $5.26 by machine. It wasn't too hard to foresee the future.
    dodge_1.jpg
  • Handyman Matt Walton with his son, Nathan and partner outside their home, Lower Brownsville Rd, Jackson, Tennessee. When Driving through Tennessee its great to get off the main highways and just cruise around:  that’s when you get to meet the real America. I saw this guys amazing, souped up car  outside what was pretty much a shack and thought wow! Every penny that guy gets goes on his car.
    car family_1.jpg
  • Lindsey Maples and friend Robert Montgomery hanging out as the sun begins to set in Arkabutla, Tennessee. The trick of the road trip experience  in Southern USA is to get off the main highways as often as possible: it’s the best  way to meet the real America. Despite the stereotype of red neck America that is portrayed you are more likely to meet a friendly and hospitable folk interested in you as you are in them.
    41_1.jpg
  • Sex and Hospitality workers demonstration on 8th March 2020 in French Quarter, New Orleans, Louisiana, United States. As the novel coronavirus COVID-19 pandemic has brought New Orleans hospitality and service industries to a chaotic halt, a new coalition of local unions, worker advocates and cultural support organizations is calling for relief support  the Ernest N. Morial Exhibition Hall Authority, the convention centers governing body, and New Orleans & Company, the private tourism nonprofit formerly known as the Convention and Visitors Bureau. These rainy day reserves, the coalitions letter says, were amassed through the booming success of the hospitality industry — an industry that only succeeds and exists because of the work of tens of thousands of New Orleanians and southeastern Louisianans.
    _E6A7942.jpg
  • Sex and Hospitality workers demonstration on 8th March 2020 in French Quarter, New Orleans, Louisiana, United States. As the novel coronavirus COVID-19 pandemic has brought New Orleans hospitality and service industries to a chaotic halt, a new coalition of local unions, worker advocates and cultural support organizations is calling for relief support  the Ernest N. Morial Exhibition Hall Authority, the convention centers governing body, and New Orleans & Company, the private tourism nonprofit formerly known as the Convention and Visitors Bureau. These rainy day reserves, the coalitions letter says, were amassed through the booming success of the hospitality industry — an industry that only succeeds and exists because of the work of tens of thousands of New Orleanians and southeastern Louisianans.
    _E6A7928.jpg
  • Studio Be, home to local artist, Brandan Bmike Odums on 28th February 2020 in New Orleans, Louisiana, United States. Studio Be is the first project by BMike to have started up legally, and despite the changing neighborhood around it, has continued to be open to the public since 2016. Inside a formerly abandoned warehouse, BMike has taken over the walls with his solo show Ephemeral Eternal,at 35,000 square feet, it may be one of the grandest, and longest running, solo art shows in the country.
    _E6A6054.jpg
  • Lonely tree in Clarksdale seems to echo the loneliness of the blues heritage in the town. Muddy Waters, Robert Johnson, Bessie Smith and ZZ Top are some of the many musicians who have put Clarksdale on the map: with its own blues museum on Blues Alley it is no surprise to hear that  Clarksdale it is famous for being ‘the birth place of the Blues’. However the cotton pickers migration north after the introduction of mechanization  took  something of the blues soul with them with the blues museum as important an institution as any of the remaining blues joints .
    tree_1.jpg
  • Vicksburg, Mississippi at dusk. This elegant historic town with its pillar fronted houses and cotton legacy  is transformed as the remains of a storm at sunset  turn the sky iridescent. There are perhaps defining moments on all big trips. Arriving in Vicksburg, Mississippi at dusk just as a  huge thunderstorm was beginning to break was one of them. It had been raining so hard, that an alligator had mistook the four-lane Interstate for the swollen Mississippi beside it and tragically met its death there. But as we drew into elegant Vicksburg, with its pillar-fronted houses on hilly streets, something astonishing happened. The sky, the result of a hot, setting sun, and the remains of a storm, was suddenly alive with an iridescent glow, so otherworldly, it looked like a space ship had landed.  A rainbow stretched between two red brick towers, and you could just hear hear a steamer's horn, as it edged its way down the mighty Mississippi.
    SUNSETCAR_1.jpg
  • A pilot relaxes after a hards work crop dusting infront of his plane, Clarksdale; Mississippi.
    pilot_1.jpg
  • Motel shot at night on the outskirts of Vicksburg, Mississippi. Part of the attraction of a road trip is just hitting the tarmac and seeing where you will end up. When the budget doesn’t run to a fabulous hotel you can always plump for rough and ready and possibly film noir at the thousands of bargain priced motels around the states. One can normally get clean sheets and a comfortable bed for the night but if not it all adds to the classic road trip experience.
    MOTEL_1.jpg
  • A man trys out a guitar at Gruhn (Fourth Ave. and Broadway, Nashville) With its 3,000-square-foot showroom and massive inventory of vintage instruments it attracts both mortal and celebrity alike. Billy Gibbons from ZZ Top has purchased more than 100 guitars from Gruhn, according to owner and founder George Gruhn. "I've sold at least 50 vintage guitars to Eric Clapton," he adds. "Whenever Eric is in town, he comes and visits."
    MANGITAR_1.jpg
  • Matt Walton Posing with  his car  Lower Brownsville Rd. Jackson,Tennessee, with his family in the background. When Driving through Tennessee its great to get off the main highways and just cruise around: that’s when you get to meet the real America. Matts car looked like it was worth more than his house.
    green car owner_1.jpg
  • Johnny Ville ( possible Elvis wannabe)  showing  his moves  outside  the  world famous Tootsies  bar on  Broadway has come to Nashville to develop his musical career: a natural performer and self promoter "Elvis was my daddy”  and "I've only been down to Nashville for a week and I've already got myself a record deal" he claims,  Johnny doesn’t have a permanent address and seems to rove around trying to make a few bucks with his guitar. It seems the romantic spirit of Nashville is alive and well. Nashville is the capital of Tennessee  and the self styled  home of country  music. Today There is still some great music to be found but one has to navigate some typical  US commercialism  in the search as  the town cashes in on its reputation.
    ELVISWASMADADDY_1.jpg
  • The three musicians depicted  have ties to Clarksdale: this mural is located on the side of Carmen's Pawn shop at the corner of Sunflower and 2nd St. The city of Clarksdale is known as ”the land where the blues began”.
    ducks_1.jpg
  • Road side baptist Church in Arkabutla, Senatobia. You can’t drive through the southern states, ‘Bible belt” of America without passing lots of churches. This really is a God fearing part of the world with religion everywhere: in the gospel music, sermons on the radio and lots of vast signs on the road advertising directly for your soul. Pictured here is a is typical wooden built chapel photographed as the light begins to fade.
    churchscape_1.jpg
  • Barbecue area at Arka Butla Lake,  Senatobia, Mississippi. One of the great attractions of the US is the wonderful opportunities to sit down, break open the cool box and enjoy some wonderful countryside: getting  close to nature and dinner all at the same time.
    barbecue_1.jpg
  • This truck seems to be pulling the Corn like a load direcly from the field and is evocative of the relationship to land and transport the Americans have always had, Clarksdale, Mississippi.
    truck field_1.jpg
  • The World famous Tootsies  bar on  Broadway  Nashville.  Nashville is the capital of Tennessee and the self styled  home of country  music. Today There is still some great music to be found but one has to navigate some typical US commercialism  in the search as  the town cashes in on its reputation.
    bar wall_1.jpg
  • Masked lone traveller waiting for a plane in a deserted airport lounge on 10th March 2020 in New Orleans, United States. There has been a huge decline in people flying throughout the globe fueled by fears of the conovirus outbreak. An industry trade group said the coronavirus could wipe out between $63 billion and $113 billion in worldwide airline revenues.
    Unknown.jpg
  • House built to look like a steamboat on 11th March 2020 in New Orleans, Louisianna, United States. Two were built in 1905 and 1913 by a steamboat captain and his son. Despite being in the Lower Ninth Ward the houses survived Hurricane Katrina because the first floors are entirely ceramic inside and out.
    _E6A5950.jpg
  • Love sign nailed to telegraph pole on 11th March 2020 in Bywater, New Orleans, Louisianna, United States.
    _E6A6042.jpg
  • House built to look like a steamboat on 11th March 2020 in New Orleans, Louisianna, United States. Two were built in 1905 and 1913 by a steamboat captain and his son. Despite being in the Lower Ninth Ward the houses survived Hurricane Katrina because the first floors are entirely ceramic inside and out.
    _E6A5948.jpg
  • Love sign nailed to telegraph pole on 11th March 2020 in Bywater, New Orleans, Louisianna, United States.
    _E6A6041.jpg
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