Detroit, Michigan

Everything Detroit is known for

1097 songs mention this city 1251 artists from here

Detroit, Michigan, often called the "Motor City," is widely recognized for its automotive industry, but it also boasts a rich and diverse musical identity. The city has been a significant center for music creation and performance for over a century, contributing to genres like jazz, R&B, rock, pop, hip-hop, and techno. Our collection features 1099 songs that mention Detroit and 1251 artists who call it home, including the hip-hop artist Eminem and the rock band The White Stripes. Songs like "Welcome 2 Detroit" by Trick Trick and "Hotel Yorba" by The White Stripes directly reference the city.

Music in Detroit

Songs About Detroit

Welcome 2 Detroit
Trick Trick
100%
"Welcome to motherfuckin' Detroit, goddamn it"
Starved - Live from Detroit
Zach Bryan
100%
"Starved - Live from Detroit"
Ultra Black
Nas
97%
"Motown Museum, Detroit, I'm ultra black"
Evil Twin
Eminem
97%
"Ever since 19946 Dresden"
Hotel Yorba
The White Stripes
97%
"Take the elevator at the Hotel Yorba"
Mockingbird
Eminem
96%
"Mama moved back onto Chalmers in the flat, one-bedroom apartment"
Unaccommodating
Eminem
95%
"What up, Marshall? I'm a martian, I'm in Wayne mode (Facts)"
Go Rest Easy
Ian Noe
94%
"Hunkered by the shed of Detroit General & Company"
Greatest
Eminem
94%
"take it back to The Shelter"
Under the Influence
Eminem
93%
"flyin' down Fenkell and Meyers"
detroit
KISS
90%
Poor Boy Workin’ Blues
Doc Dailey & Magnolia Devil
85%
"Found me a job up north in Detroit"
Lose Yourself
Eminem
85%
"Look if you had one shot"
Son of Detroit
Kid Rock
83%
"Son of Detroit"
Detroit City
Pam Tillis
83%
"Last night I went to sleep in Detroit City"
Welcome 2 Detroit
Trick‐Trick
82%
"Welcome to motherfuckin' Detroit, goddamn it"
Detroit Detroit
Erik Koskinen
82%
Detroit Train
Paul Benjaman Band
81%
Detroit, Michigan
Kid Rock
81%
"Detroit, Michigan"

Showing top 20 of 1097 songs

Musical Heritage

Hitsville U.S.A. — Motown's Studio A RoadyGoat

1959

Behind a modest house at 2648 West Grand Boulevard, with 'Hitsville U.S.A.' painted across the front, sits the small room where a stunning share of American pop was made. Berry Gordy bought the place in 1959, moved his family upstairs, turned the garage into Studio A, and ran Motown Records out of the rest. Musicians nicknamed the cramped studio the 'Snake Pit.' Between roughly 1961 and 1971, the house band — the Funk Brothers — backed the Supremes, Temptations, Four Tops, Marvin Gaye, Stevie Wonder, Smokey Robinson and Martha and the Vandellas on more than one hundred Top-10 hits. Motown moved to Los Angeles in 1972; Esther Gordy Edwards opened the museum here in 1985, leaving Studio A's original gear in place.

3.1 mi away

History of Detroit

The Henry Ford & Greenfield Village RoadyGoat

1929

At 20900 Oakwood Boulevard in Dearborn sprawls The Henry Ford, the indoor-outdoor history complex Henry Ford built to preserve the everyday American past. Its open-air half, Greenfield Village, is a town of real historic buildings Ford bought and physically hauled in. Reconstruction of Thomas Edison's Menlo Park laboratory began in 1928, rebuilt from the original New Jersey foundations; the Wright brothers' bicycle shop and home were moved here from Dayton, Ohio, in 1937. Inside the adjacent Henry Ford Museum (not the open-air village itself) is the rocking chair Abraham Lincoln sat in at Ford's Theatre the night he was shot — along with the limousine in which President Kennedy was killed. The site opened in 1929, was named a National Historic Landmark in 1981, and remains one of the country's largest history museums.

9.7 mi away

Allen Park, MI RoadyGoat

Allen Park, Michigan, is more than just a quiet suburb south of Detroit. It's a place where the roar of the assembly line once echoed in the dreams of its residents, a town whose fate was intrinsically linked to the rise and fall of the American auto industry. It’s a community built on hard work, family values, and a deep sense of local pride, the kind that buries a time capsule – a tangible link to the past – destined to be unearthed a century after its entombment, a bicentennial promise to the future. While Allen Park might not boast the skyscrapers of Detroit or the bustling nightlife of other nearby cities, it holds a different kind of significance. The land itself sits at a higher elevation than Detroit's riverfront, a subtle reminder of its elevated position within the region. The name, a respectful nod to Congressman John B. Allen, speaks to the community's early aspirations.

10.1 mi away

Motown Museum / Hitsville U.S.A.

1959

Berry Gordy founded Motown Records in this house on West Grand Boulevard in 1959, launching one of the most influential record labels in history.

3.1 mi away

Detroit International Riverwalk

1840

The Detroit River was the final crossing point to freedom in Canada for thousands of enslaved people fleeing via the Underground Railroad.

Michigan Central Station

1913

Opened in 1913 as one of the world's grandest train stations, abandoned in 1988, and restored by Ford Motor Company beginning in 2018.

1967 Detroit Rebellion Site - 12th Street

1967

The 1967 Detroit Rebellion began on 12th Street after a police raid on an unlicensed bar, lasting five days and reshaping the city.

3.8 mi away

Fox Theatre - Detroit

1928

The Fox Theatre, opened in 1928, is the largest surviving movie palace of the 1920s and anchored Detroit's theater district revival.

Detroit Institute of Arts

1927

The DIA houses Diego Rivera's Detroit Industry Murals, a 27-panel fresco cycle depicting life in the Ford Rouge Plant, completed in 1933.

Things to Do in Detroit

Everything Near Detroit

102 stories, landmarks & places within ~20 miles — the same local lore RoadyGoat plays as you drive through.

Explore Detroit on the Map