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4310 Curtiswood Lane, Berry Hill
Nashville, Tennessee, United States
36.0912° N · -86.8052° W
Get DirectionsIn the 1960s, country star Webb Pierce built a guitar-shaped swimming pool at his Nashville home on Curtiswood Lane — one of the most flamboyant displays of country music excess in a city that prided itself on them. Pierce was one of the biggest country stars of the 1950s, a Louisiana-born honky-tonk singer whose rhinestone-encrusted suits and Nudie-customised cars were as famous as his voice. The pool attracted bus tours of fans from across the country, a steady stream of gawkers that eventually drove Pierce's neighbours to distraction.
Pierce dominated the country charts between 1952 and 1958 with an almost unbroken run of number-one singles — "Wondering," "Back Street Affair," "There Stands the Glass," "In the Jailhouse Now" — making him one of the most commercially successful artists in the genre's history. His hard-drinking, high-living persona was the template for the country music star as outlaw celebrity, and his influence on Hank Williams Jr., Willie Nelson, and the outlaw movement was considerable even if he never received full credit for it.
Pierce sold the Curtiswood Lane property in later years and the guitar pool was ultimately removed by subsequent owners who had grown tired of the tour buses. The house remains a private residence. Pierce died on February 24, 1991, and is buried in Nashville. The guitar pool, though gone, lives on as a symbol of Nashville's golden era of country kitsch.
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