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Page 1: Rare

Rare

In deed

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Page 2: Rare

{EvaMag interior page samples}

back to school susan and tim lee chocolate fall fashion

Knoxville’s First Magazine for Women

August 2007

Gay Bryant ...aNative Classic

{EvaMag cover samples}

EvaMag specs:15,000 circ. / monthly/48 pp/tabloidstore display & distribution

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Homes&living Specs:25,000 circ./ monthly/100 pp/ gloss enamel 9x12 perfefect boundstore display & distribution

KnoxvilleHomes+LivingSamples

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Sample ads for all local venues

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DeepWestf a r r a g u t | c o n c o r d | c h o t o | f t . l o u d o n

Tennis Anyone ?

Summer 2006 Living

f a r r a g u t | c o n c o r d | c h o t o | t e l l i c o

LivingDEEP WEST

The Myers’ Home

DeepWestf a r r a g u t | c o n c o r d | c h o t o | t e l l i c o

PREMIEREISSUE!

Living

f a r r a g u t | c o n c o r d | c h o t o | t e l l i c o

PremiereIssueCatching the Breeze at the Concord Yacht Club

a magazine for your community

Loudon Sculptor Leslie Evans

Farrugut High Class of‘06 Highlights

The Myers Brothers at Home in Vista

livingDeepWest

summer 2006Livingf a r r a g u t | c o n c o r d | c h o t o | l o u d o n

DeepWest| d e e p w e s t l i v i n gi s s u e o n e v o l u m e o n e

f a r r a g u t | c o n c o r d | c h o t o | t e l l i c olivingDeepWest

a magazine for your communityfall 2006

mmd e e p w e s t l i v i n g | i s s u e o n e v o l u m e o n e | d e e p w e s t l i v i n gi s s u e o n e v o l u m e o n emm

8 DEEP WEST “TO DO”What’s there to do in the West this summer? Find out here.

17 DEEP WEST LIFESpring 2006 --- in pictures

19 HISTORYConcord Yacht Club … For the love of sailingCurious about your hometown’s history? The Farragut Folklife Museum is a good place to start

26 FINE ARTWhat’s artistic about an old water heater? A rusty bolt?Plenty, says steel sculptor Leslie Evans … In Her Own Words

31 DEEP WEST DINING Savoring the Seasons … at Farragut’s newest bistroSeasons Cafe

62 SOCIETY“Hats on!” to Jayne Sharp who hosts a Kentucky Derby shindig –Fox Den style.Little girls treated to “A Night to Remember” at The Shamrock BallFarragut West Knox Chamber members create their own “Broadway in West Knoxville”

54 SUCCESS STORIES Admirals baseball team is unstoppable at state.Farragut High School alum hired to “ Join Arnold”

56 DEEP WEST GIVINGCountry crooner Jo Dee Messina sings for ScienceFox Den friends, Rotary ralliesVolunteer Spotlight – Marianne McGill

59 PROFILE Softball mom Judy BriodyThe Deep West region is full of extraordinary citizens. We introduce you to one of them.

4

FROM THE EDITOR

fallDEEP WEST LIVING | V O L U M E O N E I S S U E T W O 2 0 0 6livingDeepWest

v o l u m e o n e ~ i s s u e o n e

m

Then followed that beautiful season ... Summer ...Filled was the air with a dreamy and magical light; and the landLay as if new created in all the freshness of childhood.~Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, American poet, 1807-1892Then followed

that beautiful season ... Summer ...Filled was the air with a dreamy and magical light; and the landLay as if new created in all the freshness of childhood.~Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, American poet, 1807-1892Then followed that beautiful season ... Summer ...Filled was the air with a dreamy and magical light; and the landLay as if new created in all the freshness of childhood.~Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, American poet, 1807-1892Then followed that beautiful season ... Summer ...Filled was the air with a dreamy and magical light; and the landLay as if new created in all the freshness of childhood.~Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, American poet, 1807-1892

Wadsworth Longfellow, American poet, 1807-1892Then followed that beautiful season ... Summer ...Filled was the air with a dreamy and magical

Magazine development

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tomorrowOP ENHOU S E

The Episcopal School Knoxvilleof

950 EPISCOPAL SCHOOL WAY : : KNOXVILLE, TN 37932 : : 865.777.9032 : : ESKNOXVILLE.ORG

Sunday January 11 2009 2-4 p.m.

changingtomorrowtoday

todaychangingtomorrow

open housewednesday | november 12 2008 | 8:30 to 11:00 a.m.

sunday | november 16 2008 | 2:00 to 4:00 p.m.

The Episcopal School Knoxvilleof

a n i n d e p e n d e n t k- 8 day s c h o o l

Branddevelopment

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MARCH 4-7@THE SQUARE ROOM 4 MARKET SQUARE

D o n a l d B r ow n Fre d d y Co l e D o n B y r o nJ e r r y C o k e r S l i d e H a m p t o n + o t h e r sJAZZ

FESTIVAL09

KNOXVILLE

knox

jazz

fest

.org

Coming UpA Tribute to Jerry Coker with special guest Slide HamptonSunday, February 22, 7:00 p.m., East Tennessee History Center, 601 S. Gay Street (across from the Tennessee Theatre)

Knoxville Jazz Youth OrchestraWednesday, March 4 7:30 p.m., The Square Room at 4 Market Square

An Evening with Freddy ColeThursday, March 5, The Square Room at 4 Market Square 7:00 p.m., Keith Brown and The Nu-Jazz Fourtet, Freddy Cole Quartet

After Hours @ the Library: Emily Mathis with Jack Rentfro Friday, March 6, 6:00 p.m., Lawson McGhee Library, 500 Church Avenue

Don Byron and Donald BrownSaturday, March 7, 8:00 p.m., The Square Room at 4 Market Square

Tickets available on knoxjazzfest.org and thesquareroom.com or by calling 1-866-468-7630

Sponsored by...

...and presented in partnership withTENNESSEE ARTS COMMISSION

Harold & Evelyn R. Davis

Memorial Foundation

09

JAZZ FESTIVAL

09KNOXVILLE

MARCH 4-74 MARKET SQUARE@THE SQUARE ROOM

KNOXVILLE

JAZZ FESTIVAL

knoxjazzfest.org

D o n a l d B r ow n

Fre d d y Co l e

D o n B y r o n

J e r r y Co ke r

S l i d e H a m p to n

+ o t h e r s

“Calling Don Byron a jazz musician is like calling the Paci�c wet—it just doesn’t begin to describe it...”

–TIME Magazine

donald brown was raised in Memphis during the heyday of Stax Records and his music bears the imprint of his years spent playing with stars like Rufus Thomas, Isaac Hayes, and Al Green. He studied at Memphis State University and became one of The Memphis Three with Mulgrew Miller and James Williams, a trio of exceptional keyboard players that passed through Memphis State University in the 1970s. Brown arrived on the national jazz scene in the summer of 1981 when he became the pianist for Art Blakey and the Jazz Messen-gers. He quickly made a name for himself as a pianist, arranger, and composer. He played in the bands of Freddie Hubbard,

Donald Byrd, Art Farmer, and Milt Jackson. He left the Messengers to teach at the Berklee School of

Music in Boston but he missed Tennessee and when he received an o�er to teach in UT’s Jazz Program in 1988, he came home. Here in Knoxville, he teaches, performs, tours, and composes the beautifully lyric yet harmonically complex music for which he is

renowned.

DON BYRON’S BAND

Don Byron, clarinet,

saxophone

Uri Caine, piano

Cameron Brown, bass

Rodney Holmes, drums

JERRYY COKER’S BAND

Jerry Coker, saxophone

Slide Hampton, trombone

Donald Brown, piano

Mark Boling, guitar

Rusty Holloway, bass

Keith Brown, drums meettheartistsjerry cokerWhile pursuing a rich and varied career as a bandleader and sideman with Woody Herman and Stan Kenton, Jerry Coker took in two saxophone students who wanted to learn jazz forms and improvisation. He realized there were no books to support a formal study and proceeded to write them. The rest is history. Jerry Coker became one of the foremost jazz educators in the country, writing 17 books and developing jazz programs at several universities, including the University of Tennessee. The Knoxville Jazz Festival is pleased to honor Jerry Coker for his contributions to the music as well as to jazz education.

don byron Though rooted in jazz, Don Byron's music is stylistically eclectic. He primarily plays clarinet, but also uses bass clarinet and saxophones. He has worked in many di�erent musical genres, ranging from klezmer music and German lieder, to Raymond Scott's “cartoon jazz,” hard rock/metal, and rap. Most of Byron's albums have been concep-tual, devoted to works of a particular musician and/or style of music. Byron is one of jazz's greatest practicing historians and some of his most successful albums (such as Plays the Music of

Mickey Katz, Bug Music, and Ivey-Divey) have been recreations (in spirit) of forgotten

moments in the history of popular music. Byron was nominated for

a Grammy award for his bass clarinet solo on “I Want to Be Happy” from Ivey-Divey.

freddy cole intended to play pro football but a hand injury interrupted that dream. He began playing and singing in Chicago clubs instead, and would have gone on the road at 18 but his mother insisted he continue his musical education. He is the youngest of �ve and his three older brothers were all musicians, the eldest being Nat “King” Cole. Visitors to their home included Duke Ellington, Count Basie and Lionel Hampton. Cole moved to New York in 1951, where he studied at the Juilliard School of Music and was in�uenced by John Lewis, Oscar Peterson, and Teddy Wilson. He also credits Billy Eckstine as a major in�uence. “He was a fantastic entertainer,” Cole recalls. “I learned so much just watching and being around him.” Before launching his solo career, he went on to get the Masters degree at the New England Conservatory of Music and then spent several months on the road as a member of an Earl Bostic band that also included Johnny Coles and Benny Golson.

FREDDY COLE’S BAND

Freddy Cole, vocals

Randell Napoleon, guitar

Elias Bailey, bass

Curtis Boyd, drums

DONALD BROWN’S BAND

Donald Brown, piano

Bill Pierce, saxophone

Bill Mobley, trumpet

Kenneth Brown, drums

slide hamptonA masterly arranger and trombone player, Slide Hampton's career is among the most distinguished in jazz. At the age of 20, he was performing at Carnegie Hall with the Lionel Hampton Band. As his reputation grew, he began working with bands led by Art Blakey, Tadd Dameron, Barry Harris, Thad Jones, Mel Lewis, and Max Roach. In 1962, he formed the Slide Hampton Octet, with horn players Booker Little, Freddie Hubbard and George Coleman. In 1968, he toured with the Woody Herman orchestra, settling in Europe where he remained until 1977. Upon his return to the US, he taught at several major universities. He won a Grammy in 1998 for his arrangement of “Cotton Tail” for Dee Dee Bridgewater. In 2005, the National Endowment for the Arts honored Slide Hampton with its highest honor in jazz, the NEA Jazz Masters.

~ F R O N T ~ ~ B A C K ~

K N O X J A Z Z F E S T ‘ 0 9 T ~ S H I R T Ss u g g e s t e d c o l o r s : o f - w h i t e , g r a y, + b l a c k

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~ F R O N T ~

~ F R O N T ~ ~ B A C K ~

K N O X J A Z Z F E S T ‘ 0 9 T ~ S H I R T Ss u g g e s t e d c o l o r s : o f - w h i t e , g r a y, + b l a c k

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~ F R O N T ~

Event development

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