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General Overview of
Muscle Shoals: Low Rhythm Rising
Open November 14, the Museum’s latest exhibition, Muscle Shoals: Low Rhythm Rising, explores how an Alabama community developed a distinctive sound, became a global recording epicenter in the 1960s and 1970s, and continues to inspire music today. The exhibit tells the story of Black and white musicians who found a way to work together at a time when segregation prevailed. Producer Rick Hall and his FAME Recording Studio and the session aces at Muscle Shoals Sound Studio built a home-made approach to cutting music that mattered. As a result, hitmakers from R&B, rock, pop, and country music flocked to this quiet backwater to record, and a new rhythm arose. Exhibit supported by OneLouder.
Partner Social Copy
The @CountryMusicHOF’s latest exhibition, “Muscle Shoals: Low Rhythm Rising,” is now open. The exhibit explores how an Alabama community developed a distinctive sound, became a global recording epicenter in the 1960s and 1970s, and continues to create inspiring music today.
The exhibit also tells the story of Black and white musicians who found a way to work together at a time when segregation prevailed. Producer Rick Hall and his FAME Recording Studio and the session aces at Muscle Shoals Sound Studio built a home-made approach to cutting music that mattered. As a result, hitmakers from R&B, rock, pop, and country music flocked to this quiet backwater to record, and a new rhythm arose. Exhibit supported by OneLouder.
Click the link in @CountryMusicHOF’s bio to reserve tickets.
The @CountryMusicHOF’s latest exhibition, “Muscle Shoals: Low Rhythm Rising,” is now open. The exhibit explores how an Alabama community developed a distinctive sound, became a global recording epicenter in the 1960s and 1970s, and continues to create inspiring music today.
The exhibit also tells the story of Black and white musicians who found a way to work together at a time when segregation prevailed. Producer Rick Hall and his FAME Recording Studio and the session aces at Muscle Shoals Sound Studio built a homemade approach to cutting music that mattered. As a result, hitmakers from R&B, rock, pop, and country music flocked to this quiet backwater to record, and a new rhythm arose. Exhibit supported by OneLouder.
Reserve tickets: https://www.countrymusichalloffame.org/calendar/muscle-shoals-low-rhythm-rising
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The @CountryMusicHOF’s latest exhibition, “Muscle Shoals: Low Rhythm Rising,” is now open. The exhibit explores how an Alabama community developed a distinctive sound, became a global recording epicenter in the 1960s and 1970s, and continues to create inspiring music today.
Reserve tickets: https://www.countrymusichalloffame.org/calendar/muscle-shoals-low-rhythm-rising
Social Cheat Sheet
Official Name: Muscle Shoals: Low Rhythm Rising
Instagram: @CountryMusicHOF
Twitter/X: @CountryMusicHOF
Facebook: Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum https://www.facebook.com/countrymusichof
TikTok: @CountryMusicHOF
Hashtags:
#muscleshoals #countrymusichalloffame #musicmuseum #nashvilletennessee #downtownnashville #visitmusiccity #visitnashville #countrymusicfan #countrymusicfans
ABOUT THE COUNTRY MUSIC HALL OF FAME AND MUSEUM
- The Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum in Nashville, Tennessee, is among the most-visited history museums in the United States.
- Through world-class exhibitions, publications, and educational programs, the Museum teaches diverse audiences about the enduring beauty and cultural importance of country music.
- As a non-profit organization, the Museum relies upon the support of individuals, corporations, foundations, government agencies, and other partners to sustain its mission-driven work and to preserve our uniquely American musical heritage now and into the future.


