Clarksdale, Mississippi

Everything Clarksdale is known for

29 songs mention this city 14 artists from here

Clarksdale, Mississippi, located in the Mississippi Delta region, is widely recognized as a significant location in the history of blues music. Many African American musicians developed the blues here, a genre that would later influence other forms of American music.

The city has been home to influential artists such as Sam Cooke, known for rhythm and blues, and blues legends like John Lee Hooker and Ike Turner. Clarksdale is also mentioned in classic songs, including Robert Johnson's "Cross Road Blues" and Muddy Waters' "Mannish Boy".

Music in Clarksdale

Songs About Clarksdale

Cross Road Blues (Take 1)
Robert Johnson
93%
"I went to the crossroad, fell down on my knees"
Cross Road Blues
Robert Johnson
85%
Mannish Boy
Muddy Waters
70%
Hellhound On My Trail
Robert Johnson
60%
"There's a hellhound on my trail, hellhound on my trail"
I Lied to You
Miles Caton
58%
"(Sinners, 2025 -- the juke-joint centerpiece)"
Travelin'
Buddy Guy
52%
"(Sinners, 2025 -- Buddy Guy's version, the 1992 thread)"
Sinners
Rod Wave
50%
"(Sinners, 2025 -- title song / lead single)"
Wang Dang Doodle
Cedric Burnside
50%
"(Sinners, 2025 -- Willie Dixon blues standard)"
Juke
Bobby Rush
50%
"(Sinners, 2025 -- Little Walter blues instrumental, voiced)"
Pick Poor Robin Clean
Geeshie Wiley
48%
"(Sinners, 2025 -- foundational 1930s Delta-blues recording)"
Dangerous
Hailee Steinfeld
44%
"(Sinners, 2025 -- original)"
Flames of Fortune
Don Toliver
43%
"(Sinners, 2025 -- original, with Ludwig Goransson)"
Pale, Pale Moon
Brittany Howard
43%
"(Sinners, 2025 -- original by Brittany Howard & Ludwig Goransson)"
Séance
James Blake
42%
"(Sinners, 2025 -- original, with Ludwig Goransson)"
In Moonlight
Jerry Cantrell
42%
"(Sinners, 2025 -- original, with Ludwig Goransson)"
Last Time (I Seen the Sun)
Alice Smith
42%
"(Sinners, 2025 -- original)"
Willie Brown Blues
Ry Cooder
30%
"Call me Willie, the one and only Willie Brown"
high cotton
blue water highway
20%
Hoochie Coochie Man
Muddy Waters
19%
Playing With Fire
Shannon Curfman
16%
"Down at the crossroads"

Showing top 20 of 29 songs

Rivers & Roads in Song near Clarksdale

Songs written about the waterways and highways that run near Clarksdale.

Musical Heritage

The Crossroads, Highways 61 & 49 RoadyGoat

1930

This is the Crossroads, the intersection of U.S. Highway 61 and Highway 49 in Clarksdale, Mississippi, marked by a monument of three giant blue guitars near 599 North State Street. Legend says bluesman Robert Johnson met the Devil here at midnight and traded his soul for guitar genius. Honesty check: the tale is folklore, and the exact 'true' crossroads is disputed (rival claims point to spots near Rosedale or Dockery), but Clarksdale, hailed as a birthplace of the blues, has long staked the claim and put up the sign. Johnson did record only 29 songs before dying mysteriously in 1938 at age 27, and his myth shaped rock and blues for generations. The blue guitars went up in 1999.

History of Clarksdale

Elaine, AR RoadyGoat

Elaine, Arkansas, sits low in the Delta, a place where the land stretches flat and fertile toward the horizon.

17.7 mi away

Elaine, AR RoadyGoat

Elaine, Arkansas, sits squarely in the heart of the Arkansas Delta, a landscape defined by its flat, fertile fields. Agriculture, particularly cotton and soybeans, remains the lifeblood of this community. Cotton put Elaine on the map originally; the exceptionally flat land, barely more than 170 feet above sea level, proved ideal for its cultivation. The rich soil, built up over millennia by the Mississippi River's meandering path, yielded bounteous harvests, attracting farmers and laborers alike. Even the town's name—Elaine—owes its existence to the railroads that transported the cotton to market, named for the daughter of a railroad executive. The connection to the land runs deep here, shaping the local culture. While the echoes of the tragic 1919 Elaine Massacre and the devastation of the 1927 flood linger, the rhythm of planting and harvest continues. You see it in the weathered faces of the farmers, the hum of tractors in the distance, and the ever-present reminder of the land's bounty. And come autumn, the town rallies behind the Arkansas Razorbacks, a shared passion providing a welcome distraction after long days in the fields, a common thread in a community still tied to the land.

17.7 mi away

Delta Blues Museum

1979

Museum in the old Clarksdale freight depot dedicated to preserving the history and legacy of Delta blues music.

Ground Zero Blues Club

2001

Blues club in a former cotton warehouse in Clarksdale, co-owned by actor Morgan Freeman, considered ground zero for Delta blues.

Mississippi State Penitentiary - Parchman Farm

1901

The notorious Mississippi State Penitentiary that operated as a plantation using convict labor, and where many blues musicians were recorded by folklorists.

18.9 mi away

Things to Do in Clarksdale

Everything Near Clarksdale

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

Explore Clarksdale on the Map