Knoxville Marathon 2013

Knoxville Marathon Start, April 2013

Knoxville Marathon Start, April 2013

It’s hard to know at the end of this week whether I should continue recounting last weekend or move the focus to the upcoming weekend. I’ll go with last weekend, but I must mention that this weekend is likely the biggest of the Dogwood Arts Festival, with the Arts and Crafts Festival on Market Square and throughout Krutch Park. The artisan works are phenomenal and the food tent, in which chefs prepare dishes with wine pairings, is one of my favorite single events of the year.

Mayor Rogero, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

Mayor Rogero, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

American Flag on Clinch Avenue, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

American Flag on Clinch Avenue, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

Arm Cyclists, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

Arm Cyclists, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

Still, I must give a nod to last weekend’s Knoxville Marathon which drew several thousand people. The race has grown to include a 5K, Half-Marathon, Marathon and Marathon Relay. Urban Son-in-Law backed off to the half-marathon this year and many Urban Friends ran various other races. I think one reason for the massive crowds last weekend was the marathon, as a number of people came in from out of town or simply stayed downtown to enjoy the other events going on.

Health and Fitness Expo, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

Health and Fitness Expo, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

Health and Fitness Expo, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

Health and Fitness Expo, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

Arm Cyclists2, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

Arm Cyclists, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

Arm Cyclists3, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

Arm Cyclists, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

I love the fact that a fitness-based event has become so big in the city. It also works beautifully to have so many great activities downtown to greet any out-of-town visitors. There is no way someone visited the city last weekend, encountered the beautiful weather, pianos on the square, Chalk Walk, First Friday, Rhythm and Blooms and came away with anything other than a very positive impression of what is happening here. They also spent time and money in the Health and Fitness Expo on Saturday.

Knoxville Marathon Start, April 2013

Knoxville Marathon Start, April 2013

Knoxville Marathon Start, April 2013

Knoxville Marathon Start, April 2013

Knoxville Marathon Runner, April 2013

Knoxville Marathon Runner, April 2013

Knoxville Marathon Start, April 2013

Knoxville Marathon Start, April 2013

The starting line and staging area always attract me. Nerves jangle about at every turn, runners giddy with excitement warm up maybe a bit too much. Proud families wish their loved ones well. The mayor spoke at this year’s opening and the national anthem makes any sporting fan’s blood reach a quick boil of anticipation. Some are there to win, others to have fun and others simply to finish. Music pounds from a PA system as it will throughout the race as live bands play for the runners.

Entertainment on Market Square, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

Entertainment on Market Square, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

John D. Cable and the Empty Bottle Band, Clinch and Locust, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

John D. Cable and the Empty Bottle Band, Clinch and Locust, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

I photographed eventual winner Wojciech Kopec (2:22:15) as he left the start line (red jersey above, number 2), but missed him at the twenty-five mile mark. I did catch Edward Tabut passing the UT Conference Center, heading into the final stretch. He was about three minutes behind first place. He also nearly left the course by not turning onto Locust, but a policeman yelled, pointed and Edward corrected his course.

Second Place Runner (No. 4), Mile Tweny-five, Knoxville Marathon 2013

Second Place Runner (No. 4), Edward Tabut, Mile Tweny-five, Knoxville Marathon 2013

Third Place Runner, Mile Twenty-four, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

Third Place Runner, Bryan Morseman, Mile Twenty-four, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

Fourth Place Runner, Mile Twenty-Three, Knoxville Marathon 2013

Fourth Place Runner, Stewart Ellington, Mile Twenty-Three, Knoxville Marathon 2013

Fifth Place Runner, Mile Twenty-four, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

Fifth Place Runner, Abraham Kogo, Mile Twenty-four, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

About four minutes behind him was Bryan Moresman in third and I really felt for the next two guys as I photographed them leaving Market Square. They ran within steps of each other around the twenty-four mile mark and clearly, they would battle to the finish line. In the end, while Stewart Ellington (No. 6) lead by a few yards at that point, Abraham Kogo (No. 3) would pass him in the end to win fourth place. Two seconds separated them at the finish line. You can find complete results here.

Half-Marathon Medal, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

Half-Marathon Medal, Knoxville Marathon, April 2013

Others would pass through downtown on into the afternoon. In fact, Urban Son-in-Law spotted a couple going through around 4:00, well after the official times have stopped. It reminds me of Cake’s awesome song, “The Distance.” All that matters at that point is finishing. And whether anyone else knows or acknowledges the fact, you know. It has to feel good. I never made it to the complete marathon and I admire those who do.

This is Why I Live in the City

Actually, this won’t be a manifesto listing all the reasons, complications and negotiations involved in a decision that big, but I just had the kind of night that can’t be had outside a city. Maybe specifically a small city. If I lived, as I used to, in the suburbs, I would have stayed home tonight. Maybe I would have caught a little television, fallen asleep in the chair.

View of the 2nd Floor, Preservation Pub, from the bar, Knoxville

But I do live in the city, write a blog and have great readers (some of them brothers-in-law) who give me tips about amazing music, good people and a life outside my small walls. Today I got a tip from said brother-in-law who is a very good song writer in his own right about two song writers in town and playing at the Preservation Pub in what has apparently been christened the “speakeasy room,” AKA “upstairs.”

Preservation Pub, View from the Stage toward the bar

The room has been advertised as “smoke free,” and I find this a stretch. No one smokes in the room, which is great, but, of course many people are smoking just below the floor and smoke doing what it will regardless of policy, arrives upstairs. Still, I appreciate the effort. It is more bearable for a longer period of time than the first floor for someone not used to inhaling the hazy carcinogens. The second floor is also beautiful. The ceiling is covered with gorgeous stamped-metal tiles, the floor is new hardwood and the tables and bar were made with wood from the floor joists. The stage is roomy and the entire room is built more for listening to music than the bottom floor ever imagined, though plenty of great music has happened over the years downstairs.

Jon Byrd with Amelia White, Preservation Pub, Knoxville, March 2011

Amelia White with Jon Byrd, Preservation Pub, Knoxville, March 2011

The entertainment for the night, playing a mercifully early shift (6:30 – 9:30) for aging working people like myself, was Jon Byrd and Amelia White currently of Nashville. Jon lived his early years in a place called Frisco City which sounds poetic and conjures up images of San Francisco, but which is, in actuality, a bend in the road in the deep woods of south Alabama.

Amelia White with guitar and harmonica rack, Preservation Pub, Knoxville

Amelia White, Preservation Pub, Knoxville, March 2011
Taking turns and sometimes singing together, the duo displayed their craft and their art to a small, but attentive audience that included Tim and Susan Lee (who I wrote about here). Amelia, who’s played the Blueplate Special and the Time Warp Tea Room, opened with a set playing on her 1979 Martin guitar, which she got when she was twelve. She later brought out a hollow body electric Guild guitar which she used to great advantage to attain a more ominous sound.
Amelia White, Preservation Pub, Knoxville, March 2011
Blessed with a delicate angel’s voice which she pairs with barbed-wire lyrics, her music evokes comparisons to other great songwriters such as Shawn Colvin, Mary Gautier and Marshall Chapman. The fact that the one cover song she performed was by Lucinda Williams is no accident. Her live sound is more folk than Jon’s (and that isn’t a bad thing for me, though Jon doesn’t want to be called a folk singer), but the most recent recording, her 2009 album Motorcycle Dream has a lot more bite than the work “folk” generally conjures. I particularly enjoy “Morning Song” from that CD and the edgy video for the title track is included below.
Jon Byrd, Preservation Pub, Knoxville, March 2011

Jon, who also has performed on the Blueplate, took the stage after Amelia and performed a range of songs which, as I mentioned, he politely requested not be called “folk.” I wouldn’t have, anyway. He has about as pure of a classic country sound as you’ll get on stage these days. Sometimes favoring Willie Nelson in vocals, the style reminded me more of Ray Price.

Jon Byrd, Preservation Pub, Knoxville, March 2011

Some of the highlights for me included “In a Perfect World” and “One Final Round” from his album “Byrd’s Auto Parts.” His soon-to-be-released CD will be titled “Down at the Well of Wishes” and includes favorite tracks “A Fond Farewell” and “Easy to be Free,” both of which he performed tonight. Amelia joined him for the new song “When It Starts to Rain,” adding a haunting harmony vocal to the chorus. I’ve included a video below that includes, of all things, a great cover of the Beatles’ “Don’t Let Me Down” followed by his song “Reputation.”

Jon Byrd and Amelia White at the Preservation Pub

So, it’s Tuesday night, I have to go to work on Wednesday morning and I’m out listening to great live music. I could be watching American Idol, manicuring my lawn in the suburbs or going to bed early. Instead, this early spring Tuesday night contains the essence of why I live in the city.