AP Photo
Visitors watch a fireworks show set to Queen's "Bohemian Rhapsody" at the new Hard Rock Park in Myrtle Beach, S.C.
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Published: May 6, 2008
MYRTLE BEACH, S.C. - The Led Zeppelin classic "Whole Lotta Love" throbs from the 1,200-watt sound system as the slick silver and white roller coaster nears the top of its serpentine track.
Lead singer Robert Plant shrieks, "Woman. You need. Loooooooove ..." And as he does, riders scream as the car falls from a height of 155 feet, reaching speeds of 65 mph.
Welcome to Hard Rock Park, America's newest theme park. Here the theme is not movies, fairy tales or water. It's that American invention, rock 'n' roll.
The $400 million park in the heart of South Carolina's $16 billion tourism industry had a soft opening in April that it called a "sound check." The grand opening is slated for June 2 and 3, with concerts by the Eagles and The Moody Blues.
As has Led Zeppelin, both groups have lent their names to key attractions at the 55-acre park built around a lake dominated by 70-foot replica of a Les Paul guitar.
The Eagles' "Life in the Fast Lane" roller coaster spins through what appears to be an abandoned saw mill as the hit song plays. "Nights in White Satin, The Trip" winds through the dark amid psychedelic lights and images set to the 1960s Moody Blues hit.
Nearby looms a reproduction of the Statue of Liberty with sunglasses, holding not a torch, but a Zippo cigarette lighter. Engraved on the pedestal is a quote from Neil Young: "Keep On Rockin' in the Free World." The park also hosts nightly fireworks shows choreographed to "Bohemian Rhapsody," and one of its eateries is called Alice's Restaurant, after the Arlo Guthrie song.
The park is the first foray by Hard Rock, which is owned by the Seminole Tribe of Florida.
"We realized everybody had done movie parks," said Steven Goodwin, the park's chief executive officer. "Why do something everyone else has done in Orlando and Paramount parks around the country? We just thought rock 'n' roll was a natural."
Building a theme park around music guarantees an audience, from children to seniors.
"Music is one of those things that connects emotionally with us," he said. "You hear a song and you immediately have a memory or a related emotional experience. That's what we're trying to create here."
Jon Binkowski, the park's chief creative officer, said "What younger kids have been exposed to is very eclectic because of the Internet and the iPod.
"Younger kids have been exposed to The Beatles and the Rolling Stones and things like that."
The park is divided into areas such as British Invasion, which features the bus The Beatles used in the film "Magical Mystery Tour."
Among the other areas are Cool Country, Born in the USA and Rock and Roll Heaven, where the names of 350 musicians playing in that big concert hall in the sky are memorialized in engraved bricks and stone.
Visitors can see swimmers and divers perform in a show called "Malibu Beach Party," play arcade games such as Whack-A-Boys-Band - similar to Whack-A-Mole - and catch live musical performances. All the while, rock music from different eras plays seamlessly through the park's elaborate sound system.
"You can layer rock 'n' roll over a theme park. It's just a natural," Binkowski said. "Music makes a connection that a movie doesn't. Movies continually have to tap back into music to get their flavor and their soul."
Hard Rock is the first new park built in the nation in a decade, according to the International Association of Amusement Parks and Attractions. There are about 400 amusement parks in the United States. Hard Rock hopes to attract 30,000 visitors a day and about 3 million a year.
But industry consultant Dennis Speigel wonders whether Hard Rock can make those numbers in a troubled economy and when the industry is saturated with attractions.
"It's a very hefty price at $400 million, and the projections they have published are very ambitious," he said. "Very few theme parks, with the exception of a handful, and primarily the Disney and the Universal parks, have ever opened exceeding 2 million people in the first year."
There's a theme park within a 21/2-hour drive of most major metropolitan areas, Speigel said. For Chad Frisbie of Rumford, Maine, Hard Rock was the reason for flying to Myrtle Beach.
"We looked online and saw this was a new theme park and that's what we based the vacation on," he said as he got off the Led Zeppelin coaster. "This was the one thing I wanted to check out, and I'm glad I did."
Goodwin said he Hard Rock may be more attractive to visitors than continuing south to Florida theme parks.
"We're 500 miles closer to the major population centers of the Northeast," he said. "At $3.50 a gallon, that's a big amount of money when you add it up. Plus there are a lot more affordable motels in Myrtle Beach."
IF YOU GO
HARD ROCK PARK: 211 George Bishop Parkway, Myrtle Beach, S.C.; www.hardrockpark.com; (843) 236-7625
HOURS: Beginning Friday, open daily 10 a.m. to 1 a.m.
COST: $50 per person (free for children younger than 3). Annual pass, $150. For the grand opening June 3, the park will close at 6 p.m. and reopen at 7 p.m. for a 9 p.m. Eagles concert, for which separate tickets must be purchased at $284.88.
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