Big Muddy Magazine

City Guides

Eighteen cities. Five states. From Memphis to Branson, from the Delta to the Ozarks — the places where American music was born, died, and refuses to stop being reborn.

18City Guides

Memphis to New Orleans

The core route — five cities along Highway 61, the Blues Highway. This is where the whole journey begins and ends.

5guides
Memphis
Memphis

Memphis After Midnight: The River City That Invented the Sound

The heat comes off the asphalt on Union Avenue like something you can hold in your hand. Memphis doesn't whisper. It hums — low and constant, a frequency that gets into your blood the moment you cross the bridge over the Mississippi.

Clarksdale
Clarksdale

Clarksdale at Midnight: Where the Blues Were Born

The Delta is flat. So flat that the sky becomes the landscape and the land just holds it up. Clarksdale rises out of the cotton fields like a dream somebody forgot to finish — and on a Saturday night, the juke joints light up and the music spills out into the humid Delta air.

Vicksburg
Vicksburg

Vicksburg: Bluffs, Battlefields, and the Blues Between

Vicksburg sits on bluffs above the Mississippi like a city that refused to let the river have the last word. Civil War cannons still point toward the river. The blues floats up from somewhere below.

Natchez
Natchez

Natchez: The Oldest Song on the River

Natchez is the oldest settlement on the Mississippi River, and it wears its age like a velvet coat — a little threadbare at the elbows, impossibly beautiful in the right light. The light in Natchez is golden. Not metaphorically — actually golden.

New Orleans
New Orleans

New Orleans: The Eternal Spur, the Inevitable City

New Orleans is not on the Big Muddy Loop. It's a spur off Baton Rouge — an hour southeast, a world apart. But you cannot drive through Louisiana and not go to New Orleans. That would be like visiting Rome and skipping the Vatican.

River Road to the Red River

Eight cities across Louisiana — plantation country, Cajun heartland, the oldest town in the territory, and the city where Elvis was launched.

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St Francisville
St Francisville

St. Francisville: Ghosts, Gardens, and the River Road

You cross into Louisiana and the world changes. St. Francisville appears like something out of a Walker Percy novel — a two-street town of antebellum homes and live oaks so old they've forgotten what century it is.

Baton Rouge
Baton Rouge

Baton Rouge: Capital City Blues and Bayou Smoke

Underneath the politics and the Purple and Gold, Baton Rouge is a blues town. A juke joint town. A city where the music lives in the neighborhoods, not the tourist districts, and where you have to know where to look.

Lafayette
Lafayette

Lafayette: The Heartbeat of Cajun Country

Lafayette hits you like a two-step. The moment you cross the city limits, accordion and fiddle replace guitar and harmonica, the rhythms shift from 12-bar blues to Cajun waltz, and the food gets richer, spicier, more unapologetically itself.

Alexandria
Alexandria

Alexandria: The Crossroads Nobody Expected

Alexandria sits in the geographic center of Louisiana, which means most people drive through it on their way to somewhere else. That's a mistake. A Gilded Age hotel that once hosted World War II generals, bayou cottages hidden in pecan orchards.

Natchitoches
Natchitoches

Natchitoches: The Oldest Town and the Longest Memory

Say it: NAK-uh-tish. Now you belong here. Natchitoches is the oldest permanent settlement in the Louisiana Purchase territory, founded in 1714. The brick streets are still here, the Cane River still curves through downtown like a ribbon.

Shreveport
Shreveport

Shreveport: Neon, Hayrides, and the Ghost of Elvis

Before there was Nashville, there was Shreveport. The Louisiana Hayride — the radio show that launched Elvis Presley, Hank Williams, Johnny Cash — broadcast from the Municipal Auditorium. Shreveport was the second city of country music, the place where rockabilly was born.

Monroe
Monroe

Monroe: Ouachita Gothic and the Forgotten River Sound

Monroe sits on the Ouachita River's western bank like a city that knows something the rest of Louisiana hasn't gotten around to admitting — that the real music, the raw and complicated kind, didn't only come from the Delta. Some of it came from right here.

Ruston
Ruston

Ruston: Pine Hills, College Town, and the Sound of Something Almost Lost

Ruston sits in Lincoln Parish like a rumor about what the South used to be. This is the town that produced Jeff Mangum of Neutral Milk Hotel — that somewhere in this quiet, gospel-scented college town, a musician figured out something transcendent about longing.

Delta to the Ozarks

Five cities from South Arkansas through the Ozark hills to Missouri — oil boom towns, college cities, world-class art museums, and the most honest city in America.

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El Dorado
El Dorado

El Dorado: Oil Boom Echoes and Arkansas Soul

Oil burst from the ground in 1921 and turned this quiet South Arkansas town into a boomtown overnight. The boom faded, as booms do, but the architecture stayed, the pride stayed, and the Murphy Arts District has given El Dorado a second act.

Little Rock
Little Rock

Little Rock: The Capital City That Kept Its Wound Open

Central High School sits in the middle of a residential neighborhood and you can stand across the street and feel 1957 pressing against your chest. But Little Rock is more than its famous wound. The Dreamland Ballroom alone is worth the detour.

Fayetteville
Fayetteville

Fayetteville: The Ozark Hills and the Oldest Bar in Arkansas

Fayetteville is the kind of college town that sneaks up on you. You come expecting stadium banners and leave having drunk too many Arkansas craft beers in a bar that's been open since 1927. George's Majestic Lounge is a sacred site on the expanded Big Muddy map.

Bentonville
Bentonville

Bentonville: Crystal, Trails, and the Ozark Whisper Beneath the Wealth

There's a joke in Arkansas that Bentonville is what happens when you give a small Ozark town more money than God. The Walton family dropped a world-class contemporary art museum into the middle of a town that was selling fishing tackle a generation ago.

Branson
Branson

Branson: Sequins, Fog, and the Old Religion of the Ozarks

The fog comes down off the Ozark hills on autumn mornings while Highway 76 blinks to life with marquee lights advertising seventeen country shows. Branson is the city that confounds people who haven't been there and confirms everything they expected once they have.