Press Photos
Muscle Shoals: Low Rhythm Rising
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Downloadable Artifact Photos
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Aretha Franklin piano
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Aretha Franklin played this Apollo baby grand piano when she recorded her breakout pop and R&B hit, “I Never Loved a Man (The Way I Love You),” at FAME Studios in 1967. The instrument was in use at the studio from 1961 to 1970.
Photo by Bob Delevante for the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum
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Duane Allman electric guitar
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Built in 1964, this was one of two sunburst-finish Fender Stratocasters used by Duane Allman when he was a session musician at FAME Studios and Muscle Shoals Sound Studios, from 1968 to 1969. He traded this guitar to another Muscle Shoals musician, Mickey Buckins, who used it at sessions and performances.
Courtesy of the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum
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Pete Carr guitar
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This 1957 Fender Telecaster belonged to Muscle Shoals session guitarist, producer, and recording engineer Pete Carr. The instrument was also used by Duane Allman when he and Carr were members of Hour Glass, the Los Angeles–based R&B band that included Gregg Allman, prior to the formation of the Allman Brothers Band.
Photo by Bob Delevante for the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum
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Mac McAnally acoustic guitar
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Musician, songwriter and recording artist Mac McAnally used this 1967 Martin D-28 when he was a session musician in Muscle Shoals.
Photo by Bob Delevante for the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum
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Mac Davis song manuscript
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An early draft of handwritten lyrics by Mac Davis to “Baby Don’t Get Hooked on Me.” Recorded at FAME Studios and produced by Rick Hall, the song was a #1 pop hit for Davis in 1972. He wrote it in response to Hall telling Davis that none of his new songs had a hook.
Photo by Bob Delevante for the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum
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Pops Staples guitar
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This 1970 Fender Rosewood Telecaster was owned by Pops Staples of the Staple Singers. Most famously, he played it when the group performed “The Weight” with the Band in “The Last Waltz,” the 1978 concert film directed by Martin Scorsese.
Photo by Bob Delevante for the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum
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Dan Penn jacket
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Dan Penn wore this floral brocade jacket in the early 1960s, when he was the lead singer with the Mark V, an R&B band from Florence, Alabama. Other members of the group included pioneering Muscle Shoals session musicians David Briggs, Jerry Carrigan, and Norbert Putnam.
Courtesy of the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum
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Wilson Pickett stage wear
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Wilson Pickett wore this jumpsuit on the cover of his 1971 LP, The Best of Wilson Pickett, Vol. II. The album included Pickett’s 1969 hit version of the Beatles’ “Hey Jude,” recorded at FAME Studios with backing by guitarist Duane Allman and the Swampers.
Photo by Bob Delevante for the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum
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Candi Staton outfit
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Candi Staton wore this custom-made buckskin jacket and pants, embellished with feathers and leather fringe, in the 1970s.
Photo by Bob Delevante for the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum
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Roger Hawkins drum
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Muscle Shoals session musician Roger Hawkins, the drummer in the Swampers, used this Slingerland snare drum with his first band, Spooner & the Spoons. The group, which included Spooner Oldham, Dan Penn and Junior Lowe, recorded at FAME Studios, c. 1965.
Photo by Bob Delevante for the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum
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Rick Hall fiddle
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This fiddle belonged to FAME Studios owner, producer and songwriter Rick Hall, who played at country square dances when he was a teenager.
Photo by Bob Delevante for the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum
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Patterson Hood acoustic guitar
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Patterson Hood of the Drive-By Truckers used this Seagull S6 acoustic guitar to write songs for the band from 1995 to 2003.
Photo by Bob Delevante for the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum
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Rick Hall
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Rick Hall sits at the recording console at FAME, c. 1970.
Photo by Dan Glen, courtesy of FAME Recording Studios
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Wilson Pickett with the Swampers
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Wilson Pickett with the Swampers at FAME Recording Studios, c. 1966.
Photo by Rick Hall, courtesy of FAME Recording Studios
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Bobbie Gentry
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Bobbie Gentry at FAME Recording Studios, 1969.
Photo by Dan Glen, courtesy of FAME Recording Studios
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Candi Staton
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Session musicians Clayton Ivey and Bob Wray accompany Candi Staton at FAME, c. 1970
Photo by Dan Glen, courtesy of FAME Recording Studios.
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Aretha Franklin
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Aretha Franklin at the piano in Atlantic Studios, New York, January 1969.
Photo courtesy of Mark Beckett.
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Arthur Alexander
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Arthur Alexander performing at the Flamingo Club during a three-week tour of England, 1966.
Photo by Bill Millar, courtesy of Richard Younger
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FAME
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FAME Recording Studios on Avalon Avenue in Muscle Shoals.
Photo by Dan Glen, courtesy of FAME Recording Studios
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Jerry Wexler and Willie Nelson
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Jerry Wexler, in a top hat, and Willie Nelson outside Muscle Shoals Sound Studio, 1973.
Photo by Dick Cooper
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Muscle Shoals Sign
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Photo by René Wu, courtesy of FAME Recording Studios
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Muscle Shoals: Low Rhythm Rising Exhibition Graphic
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Courtesy of The Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum