Music Row includes historic sites such as
RCA's famed
Studio B and
Studio A, where hundreds of notable and famous musicians have recorded.
Country music entertainers
Roy Acuff and
Chet Atkins have streets named in their honor within the area. The
Country Music Association (CMA) opened its $750,000 headquarters in Music Row in 1967. The
modernist building included CMA's executive offices and the
Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum. The first
Country Music Hall of Fame sat at the corner of Music Square East and Division Street from April 1967 to December 2000, but the building has since been torn down and the museum moved to a state-of-the-art building 11 blocks away in
Downtown Nashville in May 2001. One area of Music Row, along
Demonbreun Street, was once littered with down-market tourist attractions and vanity "museums" of various country music stars. These began to disappear in the late 1990s with the announced move of the Country Music Hall of Fame. The strip sat largely vacant for a few years but has been recently redeveloped with a number of upscale restaurants and bars serving the Downtown and Music Row areas. At the confluence of Demonbreun Street, Division Street, 16th Avenue South, and Music Square East is the "Music Row
Roundabout," a
circular intersection designed to accommodate a continuous flow of traffic. Flanking the intersection to the west is Owen Bradley Park, a very small park dedicated to notable
songwriter, performer, and publisher
Owen Bradley. Within the park is a life-size bronze statue of Bradley behind a piano. Inside the roundabout is a large statue called the "
Musica". At the other end of Music Row, across Wedgewood Avenue sits the
Belmont University campus, and
Vanderbilt University is also adjacent to the area. Belmont is of particular note because of its
Mike Curb College of Entertainment & Music Business (CEMB), part of
Belmont University and a major program in its commercial music performance division. ==See also==