Story behind Blueberry Hill, the Duck Room and Delmar Loop | Abby Eats St. Louis podcast
Автор: KSDK News
Загружено: 2021-05-10
Просмотров: 194
Описание:
It's a museum, with collections paying tribute to the last half century of pop culture and visitors to St. Louis. It's a venue, with some of the most legendary names in music taking the stage. And it's a darn good place to get a hamburger. We sit down with Joe Edwards, whose Blueberry Hill restaurant on the Delmar Loop was just the beginning of a journey to revitalize a city and its people.
Plus, we'll get you ready for Mother's Day this weekend with some food fun events happening throughout the area!
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About the Abby Eats St. Louis podcast:
The Abby Eats St. Louis podcast tells the story of St. Louis based on what’s on the table. From the hunger for local ingredients, to the booming brunch scene and the craving for creative cocktails, Abby dives into the nitty-gritty of how St. Louis grew to become the foodie town that it is.
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STORY:
In a year where the live music scene was silenced and restaurant industry was devastated by the COVID-19 pandemic, Joe Edwards pointed to at least one positive change that happened inside St. Louis’ iconic Blueberry Hill.
The floor.
“Those first couple of months was to refinish the floors. And I know that sounds really mundane, but because we're open seven days a week every day of the year and have been all those years since 1972 until the pandemic hit, I took that opportunity to be able to really refinish the floors in the proper way,” Edwards explained on a recent episode of the Abby Eats St. Louis podcast. “That could not have happened ever before.”
That same floor has served as the welcome mat for music legends for decades. Everyone from the likes of Grandmaster Flash to Ed Sheeran and, of course, Chuck Berry. They’ve all played the intimate Duck Room at Blueberry Hill.
And it all started with Edwards. He said after he left the Army in the 1970s, he wanted to amp up one of his biggest hobbies.
“I’m going to try to use my record collection,” he said of how The Delmar Loop’s Blueberry Hill started. All songs changed every two weeks, except for the joint’s namesake tune. “Right on time, every two weeks. And that brought in tons of people.”
And tons of attention.
“That’s why the jukebox was declared the No. 1 jukebox in the world by the BBC, by Billboard Magazine, by Cashbox, by Esquire Magazine, by the Post-Dispatch. Because it really was, I immodestly must admit, it really was at the time… and there was nothing like it,” Edwards said.
But his love for records, music and his hometown of St. Louis wouldn’t be bound by the walls of Blueberry Hill.
Edwards started the St. Louis Walk of Fame, leaving his footprint – and a star-studded trail – on the sidewalks up and down The Loop. He also owns the Peacock Diner, Pin-Up Bowl, The Pageant, Delmar Hall and the Moonrise Hotel. He’s also opening a mini golf place soon.
One of the most famous spots in St. Louis, one of the most historically and culturally diverse communities in the region and one of the certified most important streets in the country – is that way because Edwards decided to make it so.
He described the changing 1970s post-war economy, blockbusting and system racism and the impact all of that had on St. Louis and still does to this day. Delmar is right in the heart of it. Edwards was one of the first people to insist on putting the heart back in to the community.
“Let's embrace diversity, make that a strength of the area. And little by little, organically, every storefront, every residential place got better and better,” Edwards said. “It's the way America should be where everybody gets along.”
He’s been at it since 1972, and still his love for St. Louis and “zest for life” as he put it, could mean the Lou hasn’t seen the last of Edwards’ artistic contributions.
“I love the Loop. I love St. Louis big time. And if I can add something that gives people a good experience, a positive experience, I'll keep doing it.”
READ MORE: https://www.ksdk.com/article/entertai...
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