Newark, New Jersey

Everything Newark is known for

56 songs mention this city 515 artists from here

Newark, New Jersey, known as the "Gateway City," has a rich musical identity. It is home to 515 artists and is mentioned in 56 songs in our collection. The city has a strong connection to jazz, with a history that includes artists like Melody Gardot. Newark is also recognized as the birthplace of Jersey Club music, a genre that emerged in the early 2000s.

Many notable musicians have roots in Newark, including Whitney Houston, known for her R&B contributions, and Paul Simon, a prominent figure in folk music. The city's musical influence is also heard in songs like "Jersey" by Queen Latifah, which mentions Newark.

Music in Newark

Songs About Newark

Manifest/Outro
Fugees
55%
"I learned that shit growing up in Newark, man, the Brick City"
Jersey
Queen Latifah
52%
"Irvington, Newark and so on, when I'm all swoll"
’03 Bonnie & Clyde
Jay-Z
22%
"the new Bobby and Whitney"
8%
"This that Whitney Houston on her last track"
Quarter Milli
Offset
8%
"R.I.P to Whitney (Brown)"
God Forgive Us
Master P
8%
"Ice-T in them bricks, I been fuckin' with CoCo"
Spell
Patti Smith
8%
"holy Allen"
Evil Twin
Eminem
8%
"Peace to Whitney, jeez, just hit me"
Ooh, Aah, Nah-Nah-Nah
Big Daddy Kane
8%
"The ladies like Salt-N-Pepa to Latifah"
Just Bars
G Herbo
8%
"Desert Eagle, same one as Queen Latifah"
5 Boroughs
KRS-One
8%
"Brick City"
Scenario 2000
Eve
8%
"And I deal with more bricks than that city do in jersey"
Family Matters
Drake
7%
"I wanna know what Whitney need"
Sixteen
Rick Ross
7%
"Whitney died night before the Grammys – damn, what a memory"
Insomniak
Mac Miller
7%
"Take your bitch, Joe Pesci, don't test me"
Cocoa Butter Kisses
Chance the Rapper
7%
"Rap Bill Bellamy, they said I shoulda never made it"
Rich Spirit
Kendrick Lamar
7%
"Ask Whitney, she okay"
Till I Collapse
Eminem
7%
"It goes: Reggie, JAY-Z, 2Pac and Biggie / like Bobby and Whitney"
Dreams
The Game
7%
"Whitney Houston told me that"
Whack Rappers
Afroman
7%
"Like Queen Latifah she must be gay"

Showing top 20 of 56 songs

Rivers & Roads in Song near Newark

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

Musical Heritage

Holsten's — The Sopranos' Cut-to-Black Diner RoadyGoat

1939

Holsten's Brookdale Confectionery sits at 1063 Broad Street in Bloomfield, an old-fashioned ice cream parlor and candy shop that has been making its own chocolate and ice cream since 1939 (and is still open). It earned a permanent place in TV history on June 10, 2007, when 'Made in America,' the series finale of HBO's 'The Sopranos,' filmed its last scene in one of Holsten's vinyl booths. Tony Soprano, played by James Gandolfini, ordered onion rings and punched up Journey's 'Don't Stop Believin'' on the jukebox before the screen abruptly cut to black for roughly ten seconds — an ending so sudden many viewers thought their cable had failed. The original booth became a fan shrine, but it was actually sold at auction in March 2024 for about 82,600 dollars; the shop welcomes fans to sit in its place today.

4.3 mi away

CBGB — Birthplace of American Punk RoadyGoat

1973

The narrow storefront at 315 Bowery was CBGB, the grimy club where American punk and new wave were essentially born. Hilly Kristal opened it in December 1973, and the name is one of music's great ironies: CBGB & OMFUG stood for 'Country, BlueGrass, Blues, and Other Music For Uplifting Gourmandizers' (Kristal meant a 'voracious eater' — of music). Almost no country or bluegrass ever played there. Instead the Ramones, Blondie, Talking Heads, Patti Smith and Television cut their teeth on its tiny stage through the 1970s. CBGB closed on October 15, 2006 over a lease dispute, and Kristal died of lung cancer the following year. The space later became a John Varvatos clothing boutique (opened April 2008), which kept some of the club's graffiti and posters; 'CBGB 73' is still etched in the cement at the entrance.

9.5 mi away

History of Newark

Ellis Island - The Border Runs Through the Building RoadyGoat

1892

For over a century, everyone assumed Ellis Island was in New York. It appeared on New York maps, New York politicians claimed it, and twelve million immigrants who passed through between 1892 and 1954 were told they had arrived in New York. But the original Ellis Island was just three acres of mud and oyster shells. An 1834 compact between the two states placed this tiny island under New York's jurisdiction, even though it sits clearly on New Jersey's side of the harbor. Here is the twist. Between 1891 and 1934, the federal government massively expanded the island with landfill, growing it to over twenty-seven acres. All that new land was built in waters that the 1834 compact had explicitly granted to New Jersey. In 1997, New Jersey sued. The Supreme Court ruled six to three in 1998 that the original island remains New York territory, but all the landfill belongs to New Jersey. The border between the two states now runs through the middle of buildings on Ellis Island, following the ghost of the original shoreline. Roughly eighty-three percent of Ellis Island is in New Jersey. The main building where millions of immigrants were processed sits mostly in New Jersey. The gift shop where you buy the Statue of Liberty magnet that says New York is in New Jersey.

7.4 mi away

Lombardi's Pizza RoadyGoat

Gennaro Lombardi opened America's first licensed pizzeria on Spring Street in Manhattan in 1905. The coal-fired oven produces a charred, blistered crust that set the template for New York-style pizza. Every pizza dynasty in New York — Patsy's, John's, Totonno's — traces its lineage back to Lombardi's. The original location closed in 1984 but reopened around the corner in 1994, and the coal oven has been burning ever since.

9.3 mi away

McSorley's Old Ale House RoadyGoat

McSorley's has been pouring in the East Village since 1854, making it New York City's oldest bar. Abraham Lincoln drank here. Woody Guthrie drank here. The menu is light ale or dark ale — that's it. Sawdust covers the floor. Wishbones hang from the gas lamp, left by soldiers heading to World War I who never came back. Women weren't allowed until a 1970 court order.

9.6 mi away

Thomas Edison National Historical Park

1887

Thomas Edison's West Orange laboratory complex was the world's first industrial research facility, producing over half of his 1,093 patents.

4.9 mi away

Newark's Ironbound District

1836

Newark's Ironbound district, named for the railroad tracks that bound it, has been a gateway neighborhood for immigrant communities since the 1830s.

Ellis Island Immigration Station

1892

From 1892 to 1954, over twelve million immigrants entered the United States through Ellis Island in New York Harbor.

7.4 mi away

World Trade Center / Ground Zero

2001

Site of the September 11, 2001 attacks that destroyed the Twin Towers and killed 2,977 people.

8.5 mi away

Frank Sinatra's Birthplace, Hoboken

1915

Frank Sinatra was born at 415 Monroe Street in Hoboken on December 12, 1915, in a cold-water tenement in the Italian immigrant neighborhood.

7.4 mi away

Ellis Island (New Jersey Side)

1892

In 1998, the Supreme Court ruled that most of Ellis Island's landmass belongs to New Jersey, not New York.

7.4 mi away

Things to Do in Newark

Everything Near Newark

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

Explore Newark on the Map