Music -- Texas
Found in 12936 Collections and/or Records:
Puro Party Band, undated
Pushmonkey. Maize (CD) [Willie Nelson guest vocalist], 1994
Pushmonkey. Maize - Remastered (CD) [Willie Nelson guest vocalist], 2002
Q-Zone Records, 2001, undated
Series III: Record Labels, 1950-2016,undated
Boxes 165-171
Arranged alphabetically by record label, this series contains promotional material, business documents, and catalogs from prominent Tejano record labels. Hacienda Records is particularly well-represented. Also,of note is correspondence from Carmen Marroquin (of the sister musical act Carmen and Laura) whose husband Armando Marroquin founded Ideal Records.
QR
The promotional material series is predominately made up of photographic and printed material sent to Patoski from music, television and film production companies, record companies, and talent agencies. Other promotional materials in this series include catalogs, newsletters, festival advertisements, press releases and ephemera all relating to the music industry.
¡Que Onda!, 1995
Qué Pasa San Antonio, 2004-2005
Que Rico, undated
Que Te Pasa, Rudy Alvarez 7 the Esquires, music CD, undated
Quemado, undated
Quilting Adventure, 2009 and 2010
Variety of material including CDs, LPs, t-shirt and caps, posters, magazines, newspapers and newspaper clippings, drafts and manuscripts of work, photos, correspondence, music announcements and musician press kits, notes and notebooks, maps, brochures and other artifacts. Majority of material was not in files or labeled; file titles are in quotation marks when present.
Quintanilla, Abraham, Jr.
This series contains research on various people and places (arranged in alphabetical order), in the form of typewritten notes, photographs, scholarly papers, Tejano Press kits, Abraham’s military records, a Selena Boutique catalog and information on Texas radio stations. Yolanda Saldivar’s folder within this series contains her signed murder confession with the Corpus Christi police. In addition, there is extensive information collected on Tejano music and Tejano stars.
Quintanilla, Abraham Jr.; Quintanilla, Abraham III; and Davila, Manuel
Quintanilla, Abraham Jr.; Quintanilla, Abraham III; Quintanilla Arriaga, Suzette and Perez, Chris
Quintanilla, Selena
This series contains research on various people and places (arranged in alphabetical order), in the form of typewritten notes, photographs, scholarly papers, Tejano Press kits, Abraham’s military records, a Selena Boutique catalog and information on Texas radio stations. Yolanda Saldivar’s folder within this series contains her signed murder confession with the Corpus Christi police. In addition, there is extensive information collected on Tejano music and Tejano stars.
Quintanilla, Selena - Interviewed by Mas Magazine’s Joseph Harmes
Quintanilla, Selena - Interviewed by unidentified interviewer(s)
Quotes
R. J. Verette - "No Comprendo Goodbye," "Don't Let it Go to Your Heart"
The majority of phonographs in this series are from Patoski's personal collection, but some were sent to him as promotional material. The audio cassettes are mostly non-professional recordings of music, and a few are of interviews with musicians. A relatively large portion of the audio cassettes are of the band Joe "King" Carrasco, which Patoski managed during the 1980s.
R15 DAT tape: “Where’s Johnny” and “I’m Not From Here” (James McMurtry, Safety Copy) , undated
Box contains DATs for “Saint Mary of the Woods,” CD safety mixes for “Live in Aught-Three,” CD mixes for “Childish Things,” and audio reel from 1987 “Homeless Project” (“James’ first paid recording project), blank audio reels, 2 floppy discs, a CD of “The Old Part of Town,” and 1 DAT containing “Where’s Johnny” and “I’m Not From Here”