East Tennessee’s premier community concert band is returning to Farragut for the first time since 2016. Tennessee Wind Symphony will present a free concert at 6 p.m., Sunday, March 1, in Farragut High School’s Vicki B. Wells’ auditorium while also supporting the FISH Hospitality Pantries. “We’re excited [to hold the concert],” said Christopher Best, TWS communications and publicity coordinator. “We have a long history with Farragut, rehearsing at the middle school for about 20 years. “In our real early days in the ’90s, we would have concerts in the (FHS) auditorium, and a lot of our members live in Farragut and make music in their churches in Farragut,” he said. “There’s a quintet, the Concord Brass, that is made up of members in our group. “We have a lot of roots in Farragut but haven’t been able to perform there in 10 years,” Best said. “We have become artists in residence at the Cathedral of the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus in Bearden since about 2021-22.”
Read MoreKnoxville sports media lost an icon last Thursday, as well-known Tennessee sports reporter Wes Rucker died in a car accident near the Cedar Bluff exit on Interstate 40. He was 43. A graduate of Knoxville Catholic High School and the University of Tennessee, Rucker “turned his passion for journalism, sports, and history into a two-decade career covering Tennessee athletics across print, radio, digital and television media,” his obituary read. Rucker was a fixture on social media, sharing his thoughts on the Vols and his family to more than 140,000 followers on X, formerly known as Twitter. His columns were must-reads for many fans, and he was known among UT media members as the last to leave the press box following any game at Neyland Stadium — or, in his vocabulary, “General Neyland’s Big Ol’ Damn House of Football.” Beyond his excellent coverage, Rucker was a devoted husband and father, leaving behind a wife, Lauren, and a son, Hank, with a daughter to be born in May.
Read More