Thursday, January 16, 2014

Hard Rock Café Detroit - A Tribute to Motown

Growing up, I had three main passions – travel, sports, and music.  For some reason or another, I visited my first Hard Rock Café in Paris while on a high school trip.  Since then, I have begun collecting t-shirts, shot glasses, and other little trinkets along the way whenever I find a Hard Rock Café along my travels.  With a couple of days to kill in Detroit before the Winter Classic, I decided to check out Hard Rock Café in Detroit.  Established on November 10, 2003, Hard Rock Café Detroit is located right in downtown Detroit just a few blocks West of Hockeytown Café.  Specifically, it is located right across from Campus Martius Park where the annual D-Drop is held.

Hard Rock Cafe Detroit
Rather than review the food, I’d prefer to highlight some of the Rock n’ Roll memorabilia that you can find at this particular location.  And let’s be honest here – it’s really the memorabilia that draws in fans like me to this restaurant, anyway.

The Detroit Rock City Stained Glass Window
Right near the main entrance is a wall mural that just sticks out like a sore thumb.  You literally cannot miss it!  At first, I noticed the members of KISS.  But, upon closer inspection, I realized this mural paid homage to Detroit’s biggest musical acts, including Stevie Wonder, Kid Rock, the Supremes, Alice Cooper, and Ted Nugent.

The Detroit Rock City Stained Glass Window
Ted Nugent’s Guitar
Ted Nugent is about as “Michigan” as you can get with his love for hunting, his passion for guitar, and his hard line Republic views.  He definitely is a reflection of the middle class that lived in Detroit in its hey-day during the 50s and 60s.  At this particular Hard Rock Café, you can see his 1963 Gibson Byrdland that he used from early in his career up until 1975.  In fact, this guitar was used as a model for the entrance design for Hard Rock Café Detroit.

Ted Nugent's 1963 Gibson Byrdland
Alice Cooper’s Black Leather Jacket
Best known for hits like “School’s Out” and “I'm Eighteen,” Detroit’s “Godfather of Shock Rock” donated his black leather jacket to his hometown Café location.  I almost wanted to bow down to this piece of Alice Cooper memorabilia and shout out “we’re not worthy,” but I don’t know how many people in the restaurant would have remembered this Wayne’s World reference!

Alice Cooper's Black Leather Jacket
Stevie Wonder’s “Hotter Than July” Braille Tour Book
You can’t mention Stevie Wonder’s name without remembering the impact that Motown Records had on local Detroit R&B acts in the 1960s.  Blind since birth, Stevie Wonder has one of the biggest pop music influences of the later 20th Century.  As a kid, I remember listening to “I Just Called to Say I Love You” all the time on the radio, thus he was literally one of the first musical influences I had in my life.  It was pretty cool, then, to see his Braille tour book from his “Hotter Than July” tour, which detailed his day-to-day itinerary.

Stevie Wonder's "Hotter Than July" Braille Tour Book
The Smokey Robinson Corner
First achieving fame with the Miracles back in the early 1960s, Smokey Robinson was one of the first musical acts signed by Motown Records.  He would eventually go on a long and prosperous career as both a writer and producer for the label, penning such hits as “My Girl” and “My Guy.”  The Hard Rock Café Detroit has several pieces of Smokey’s memorabilia, including hit records and a silk suit he once wore on a television show.

The Smokey Robinson Corner
Diana Ross’ Gold Dress
Detroit native, Diana Ross, achieved fame as lead vocalist for the Supremes in the 1960s and is one of the first Divas to achieve legendary status on a global scale.  Are you starting to notice a pattern here between the 1960s, Motown Records, and the rise of African-American musicians?  Such an epic time in pop culture!  Of course, I had to snap a picture of the gold dress she wore on the 1991 LP cover for “The Force Behind the Power.”

Diana Ross' Gold Dress
Sponge’s Autographed Guitar   
This was personally my favourite highlight of the memorabilia wall at Hard Rock Café Detroit.  A rather obscure Detroit band that had a couple of minor hits in the mid-to-late 90s with “Plowed” and “Wax Ecstatic,” Sponge was one of the few rock bands that I listened to in high school.  As my eyes laid upon this autographed guitar that they donated to the Café, a huge smile shone on my face as I reflected fondly back upon my teenage years.

Sponge's Autographed Guitar
The Madonna/Kid Rock/Eminem Corner
Rather than list each one separately, I figured I would put them all together at once.  As you exit Hard Rock Café Detroit, you will see a section dedicated to some of Detroit’s biggest musical acts in the modern era, particularly Madonna, Kid Rock, and Eminem.  Aside from some photos and records, you will have a chance to see one of Kid Rock’s guitars, Eminem’s blue running pants that he wore on the cover of Newsweek, and a dress once worn by Madonna back in the early 90s.

The Madonna/Kid Rock/Eminem Corner
Due to a lack of time, Nick and I never got the chance to visit the original Motown Records studio while we were in Detroit.  However, Hard Rock Café Detroit was a suitable alternative.  Of the 10+ Hard Rocks I have visited in the world, Detroit’s was hands down my favourite one so far simply because of the homage toward local musicians.

Hard Rock Cafe Detroit - Music for Life
To visit this café, you can find it here:

Hard Rock Café Detroit
45 Monroe Street
Detroit, MI 48226
Phone:  (313) 964-7625

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