Motor City Benediction

Detroit, MI — the city that built the American century on a ribbon of chrome and a Motown groove, then filed for bankruptcy at $18–20 billion on July 18, 2013. A first-person Motown soul-funk shadow anthem: Assembly line hymn, Packard plant cathedral, Aretha and Joe Louis and the '68 Tigers — and still standing.

Motor City Benediction
0:003:30
Detroit has always known two things at once: that it made the modern world, and that the modern world did not return the favor.
This is a song sung in the city's own voice — first-person singular, proud and bruised and still upright. It opens in the era when the assembly line was a kind of miracle and Motown Records was broadcasting joy from a house on West Grand Boulevard outward to the whole country. Aretha Franklin, Joe Louis, the '68 Tigers winning the Series in the middle of a city still raw from the riots — Detroit claimed the American century and the American century claimed it back. The groove here is deep and punchy: brass section locked into a four-on-the-floor pocket, Wurlitzer riding the changes, tambourine keeping the clock honest. The rhythm doesn't apologize. Neither does the city.
Then the second verse names what happened after. The Brewster-Douglass housing projects — twelve towers that once housed 10,000 people — gutted and eventually demolished. Devil's Night, the arson tradition that turned October 31st into something cities elsewhere didn't have a word for. A population that peaked at 1.8 million and fell to roughly 640,000, each departed resident a name the census recorded and the streets forgot. And on July 18, 2013, Detroit became the largest American city ever to file for bankruptcy — $18 to $20 billion in debt, a number so large it nearly became abstract. The song refuses to let it stay abstract.
The bridge reaches back to the '68 Tigers and forward to the question the whole song is really asking: what is the difference between a number and a grave? Ruins tourists fly in to photograph the Packard plant — that mile-long abandoned automobile palace on East Grand Boulevard — and photograph Brewster-Douglass's ghost-footprint and photograph whatever beautiful decay they can find. Detroit has been watching this for decades. The final verse answers from Woodward Avenue, from the Ambassador Bridge, from the river that still runs east toward Canada as it always has. The song doesn't resolve the wound. It just insists the city is still in the room.

[Verse 1] I laced up the century with a ribbon of chrome Strapped wings to a nation and sent it on home Motown rose from my riverbanks, sweet as Detroit And Aretha called down heaven from the east side of joy Joe Louis hit so hard the whole country stood tall I trained every fist that ever answered the call The assembly line hummed like a hymn in my chest I built what you drove while you drove to the rest
[Pre-Chorus] But the line slowed down And the plant went cold And the men filed out to a street gone old
[Chorus] I'm the city that built the car that left me behind I'm the factory floor where the future resigned Three times bankrupt — July, two-thousand-and-thirteen — The largest debt a city has ever seen But I'm still standing on the Packard plant floor Every brick says: I've been down here before Motor City, Motor City I don't quit
[Verse 2] Brewster-Douglass towers fell floor by floor Steel and concrete turned to argument and sore Devil's Night — October thirty-one — the fires Lit by grief and rage and everything that expires Six-hundred-forty-thousand where eighteen once lived I am every name the census couldn't give Ruins tourists come to photograph my bones But, honey, I was born in these very same stones
[Pre-Chorus] So let them come With their camera eyes I'll be the thing that never fully dies
[Chorus] I'm the city that built the car that left me behind I'm the factory floor where the future resigned Three times bankrupt — July, two-thousand-and-thirteen — The largest debt a city has ever seen But I'm still standing on the Packard plant floor Every brick says: I've been down here before Motor City, Motor City I don't quit
[Bridge] The '68 Tigers took the series in the smoke When the whole east side was half a city-block of oak Aretha sang Respect and I already knew what it meant I never asked permission, I just paid the rent Eighteen billion dollars is a number, not a grave You can count the cost of falling You cannot count the brave
[Verse 3] My Woodward Avenue still carries the parade Every Saturday cruiser, every chrome decade The river still runs east to the Ambassador You can leave me on the map or you can leave me on the floor I am the wound that sings I am the ruin that rings I am the Motor City And I am still everything
[Chorus] I'm the city that built the car that left me behind I'm the factory floor where the future resigned Three times bankrupt — July, two-thousand-and-thirteen — The largest debt a city has ever seen But I'm still standing on the Packard plant floor Every brick says: I've been down here before Motor City, Motor City I don't quit
[Outro] Motor City — I don't quit Motor City — I don't quit Motor City…

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