Introduction: What is it about an American Road Trip?
My first time in the USA... it was a family holiday to Manhattan, in July 2005. A gimmick thrown in from the travel agent was an airport transfer in a stretch limousine. Taking us from JFK airport to the Hotel Edison, just off Times Square, the radio station playing in said limo was 'Highway 16', which was a station dedicated to playing contemporary Country music. That was the point in time when, aged sixteen, I fell in love with the idea of the American road trip.
Other stints in North America followed. Three years later, in 2008, I spent an exchange semester in Halifax, Nova Scotia (Canada), where I studied at Dalhousie University for four months. During that time, I took the opportunity to take a bus ride to Liverpool, Nova Scotia. It was the November; my 20th birthday getaway treat, in four foot of snow.
April 2013, and I was back in New York City for Eric Clapton's Crossroads Guitar Festival, held at Madison Square Garden. Cue three bus rides, cutting across New England states to Boston, Washington D.C., and Niagara Falls.
September 2015, and I had found the courage to drive myself. This time through the Deep South states, covering Tennessee and Mississippi, with short crossings into Alabama and Arkansas.
One of the best parts of an American Road Trip (or any 'big' holiday) is the preamble. Ten years ago, upon booking my fly-drive exploration, I decided to pick up the harmonica and learn a few notes, taking video lessons from the master of the blues harp, Jerry Portnoy. And another exciting moment in 2015 was getting my name onto BBC Radio 2, with Steve Wright kindly playing my Non-Stop Oldies for a full thirty minutes in the afternoon. At that time, I would leave work at 3pm, and the Non-Stop Oldies would be playing during my drive home. Every so often, I would hear Steve Wright say 'Badge on its way,' and - being a Clapton fan - I thought the song Badge was about to come up. What he actually meant was the 'I chose the Non Stop Oldies' badge - I received mine in the post a couple of days before the broadcast, if my memory serves me correctly. (Still got the badge.) I can still remember the exhilaration of my return motorway commute that day, as my oldies went out live!
As I drove around in 2015 I punched some rough notes into my phone, with the intention of writing up a sort of travelogue.. Said notes are STILL on my phone, ten years later. Therefore, even though my memory has inevitably decayed in the ten years that have passed, my intention is to write up a belated dairy entry here, with the help of photographs and my newly-found interest in blogging.
I am writing in January 2026. In the just over ten years since I undertook the drive of the Deep South, everything has changed, but nothing has changed. Covid, buying a house, and many curious wanderings have filled the gap in my life between then and now. Lost a few friends, gained a couple. This year, I embark on what will probably be my biggest USA feat to date: Route 66. The Mother Road. The most famous and iconic road trip on the planet. And this time I will have company, in the form of my brother Adam. We made a pact to do this, and now we are doing it. The plan to do it on our 30th and 21st respective birthdays fell through; but here we go, seven years later.
The Route 66 holiday is booked for May 2026 and, as I write, we are in the 'preamble' stage. What's on the agenda? Firstly there's the plethroa TV programmes: I plan to re-watch Billy Connolly's Route 66 (an old favourite), which will refresh me on all the musical points-of-interest that I want to see. Just watched The Hairy Bikers' Route 66, which has given me a culinary perspective of the route, and borrowed from Widnes library Henry Cole's book about Route 66 (he's done it three times), which has presented me with a more vehicular vantage.
It is absolutely brilliant timing that BBC Radio 3 is putting on a series of programmes actually called 'American Roadtrip'. Only a few months ago I found enjoyment in starting a classical music blog, following the 2025 BBC Proms. This is wonderful and timely opportunity to extend said blogging, with a nice 'follow up' relationship with BBC Radio, which, as mentioned above re Steve Wright, was very central in the preamble of my 2015 trip.
2026: the Centenary of Route 66, and the 250th year of the United States of America.
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