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The entertainment district is generally filled with a mix of tourists and locals
-- all out for a hand-clapping good time. Some people still milled around the area Tuesday. "They like the vibe they get here," said Jimmy (The Governor) Hill, who works for a downtown bar and a restaurant. "The bands start playing at 10 in the morning; you don't have things like that in every town." Mayor Karl Dean also was undeterred. "We will go on being a center of tourism and drawing people to our city," he said. Some entertainment venues weren't damaged, including the former home of the Grand Ole Opry, the 118-year-old Ryman Auditorium. A Barenaked Ladies concert there next Monday is still scheduled. On the other side of the river, LP Field, the home of the Tennessee Titans, was drying out: The Titans' logo could once again be seen from the air. A four-day country music festival will be at the stadium in five weeks. The production of country music in the city also seems have survived unscathed from the more than 13.5 inches of rainfall that fell Saturday and Sunday. "Music Row"
-- an approximately four-square block area that houses recording studios, record labels, song publishing companies and others on the business side of the music industry
-- is a mile from the river and wasn't flooded. The water swelled most of the area's lakes, minor rivers, creeks, streams and drainage systems far beyond capacity. Much of that water then drained into the Cumberland, which snakes through Nashville. The weekend's storms that spawned tornadoes along with flash flooding also killed six people in Mississippi and four in Kentucky. One person was killed by a tornado in western Tennessee.
[Associated
Press;
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