Sundown in the City 2008 Schedule Has been Released


Every spring, thousands of people pour into Market Square to hear the varied sounds of national artists at Sundown in the City, Knoxville's free concert series.

Sundown in the City began in 1997 with a concert by R.B. Morris and Scott Miller on Market Square. However, in 2000, Sundown in the City was turned into a series.

A.C. Entertainment announced today that Galactic, a New Orleans funk band, takes the stage April 17.


by spcoon

  • April 17: Galactic with Garage Deluxe
  • April 24: Susan Tedeschi with Todd Steed and the Suns of Phere
  • May 1: Umphrey's McGee
  • May 8: Josh Ritter and the Hackensaw Boys
  • May 15: North Mississippi All Stars
  • May 22: The Presidents of the United States of America with Cutthroat Shamrock
  • May 29: Robert Earl Keen with Jypsi June
  • June 5: (not yet booked)
  • June 12: Citizen Cope
  • June 19: Marc Broussard with Erick Baker
  • June 26: The Everybodyfields and Amy LaVere
  • July 3: The Wild Magnolias
Sundown in the City is always a good time.  If for no other reason than just to people watch. We will bring updates throughout the concert season this year.  Let us know your thoughts on the shows by commenting.
They Might Be Giants Sundown
by shaneandruth

Spring Brings New Life to Knoxville Tennessee: Dogwood Arts Festival

Since 1960, Knoxville has hosted the Dogwood Arts Festival each April. Today, people from all over the nation come to celebrate nature and the arts as festivities span seventeen days, over one hundred and fifty activities, and two counties! The city’s fantastic dogwoods remain the central focus with blossoms that can reach nearly four inches in length, rivaling Maryland’s famous dogwoods. While most of Knoxville’s dogwoods are white, our pink dogwoods are especially vibrant; the deep pink, almost red, color is caused by the natural acidity in our soil. Other varieties include a native pale pink dogwood and a “weeping” dogwood, similar to the weeping cherry tree.

While tours have been conducted since the Sequoyah Hills Trail opened 1955, other trails throughout the region have been added over the years; there are nine dogwood trails today spanning seventy miles and two counties. When I was a child, signs indicated the trails’ entrances and large pink or white spots were painted on the roads to lead the way. Today, self-guided motor-tourists follow pink and green lines, taking photographs, pacing themselves, often stopping for closer looks. Guided bus tours are also available and, for walkers, the historic Fourth and Gill Victorian neighborhood tour is a popular activity.

Market Square during Dogwood Arts Festival

Also part of the celebration is a three-day festival held on Market Square in downtown Knoxville. Over one hundred arts, crafts, and food vendors crowd into the newly renovated, historic space to sample East Tennessee’s cuisine, culture, and creations. Shoppers will find everything from homemade soaps to hand-blown glass, and artisan jewelry to rare books. Many of Knoxville’s restaurants and caterers participate; one can find edibles ranging from funnel cakes and famous local bar-b-que to gourmet coconut shrimp and crispy spanikopita. Adding to the festivities, musical events are scheduled each year featuring a variety of musical styles from classical to country.

Last year, the festival introduced Art in Public Spaces, a sponsored display that continued throughout the month of July. Located in Krutch Park, adjacent to Market Square, the exhibit featured the large-scale work of twelve artists. Other artwork was available for viewing at more than fifteen galleries throughout Knoxville’s downtown area. Gallery Walk, was a one-night event in which artists were available and visitors were encouraged to mingle and browse.

There’s so much more! A parade, a jazz concert, children’s activities, and literary events hosted by the Knox County Public Library – there really is something for everyone. In the tradition of the South, the Dogwood Arts Festival brings people together with food and fun, music, nature, and friendship.

Check out the 2008 Dogwood Arts calendar here.

Market Square: The Heart of Knoxville's Downtown Rejuvenation

Market Square has become the heart of downtown Knoxville - again. For 150 years the Square has hummed with the city’s most vibrant activities. In 2003, Kathy Shorr of The Boston Globe wrote: “Over its rich history, it has held, among other things, a farmers' market, cafes and restaurants, stove factories, boutiques, boarding houses, fancy apartments, saloons, nightclubs, movie theaters, a police station, and a steam-engine fire hall.” It was in Market Square that the Union’s General Burnside dumped his army’s ammunition during the Civil War, and it was in an office on the Square that Adolph Ochs, creator of the New York Times, began his journalistic career in the 1870s. Throughout all this and so much more, Market Square never lost position as Knoxville’s touchstone.

Market Square
Creative Commons photo by Pattie

Today, this pedestrian-only block is still framed with historic buildings that are populated with businesses at the street level and, in many cases, revitalized loft homes on the upper floors. Jack Neely, Knoxville’s beloved city historian, calls today’s Square “a beautiful place, beautiful in the variety of its brick architecture: two, three, and four stories tall, mostly post-Civil War Victorian with some cleaner 20th-century styles in the mix….(I)t's home to four restaurants, several comfortable residences, a good tailor, two architectural firms, two art galleries, a small luxury hotel, and a dress shop.” Along with these establishments are a few gift shops, a modern furniture store, and a couple neighborhood bars. Most believe that the next few years will bring even more businesses to the Square, and for good reason.

In the mid-2000s, city leaders sought to focus attention, once again, on Market Square development; it had, for some time, languished in disrepair. Previous leadership hadn’t taken much interest in revitalization leaving the Square and surrounding streets to those business owners willing to make little profit or live with losses. For those who stayed, it was a labor of love. Then, in 2003, a new mayor and several restless city administrators linked with city planners, developers, the Chamber and other development agencies, businesses, and park designers to engineer a new downtown Knoxville. The plan took hold and in fewer than five years the city has taken on new life. According to Jack Neely, some call it “Renaissance Knoxville” while others call it “Convention-Center-Related Development.” Whatever it’s called, central in focus is Market Square.

In the midst of the flurry of downtown development and redevelopment, the Square sits calmly at the center, like the eye of a storm. That’s not to say that there’s nothing happening; the opposite is true. Market Square offers so much that it has become the place to start the evening, the place to meet first before walking the block to Gay Street to have a drink at Sapphire or to visit the Tennessee Theater, or before walking to Volunteer Landing for a stroll along the Tennessee River. Because of the Square’s many events, its friendly design, its shops, restaurants, and business offices that have become so familiar to Knoxvillians, Market Square has become the go-to place.

A snapshot of events on the Square include: The Market Square Farmers’ Market, open every Wednesday and Saturday from May through November. A Holiday Farmers’ Market, featuring holiday-related items, is open December 8, 15, 22, and 29. Beginning on November 23, an ice skating rink will be set up on the Square for Knoxville’s Holidays on Ice. This popular event drew 16,000 visitors last year. For the past ten years Thursday nights have brought Sundown in the City to the Square. From April to June, headliner concerts are offered on the Square’s permanent outdoor stage; each show draws 8,000-10,000 people. For more information about these events and more, visit the Market Square District Association’s website.