Music -- Texas
Found in 13423 Collections and/or Records:
The Charlie Daniels Band. Austin Opry House. Poster by [Danny] Garrett [2 copies; slightly different colors], June 30-July 1, 1978
Posters are divided into Willie Nelson and non-Willie Nelson subseries. The Nelson posters include ones for the sixth annual Fourth of July picnic; Honeysuckle Rose, and two advertising concerts. The bulk of the non-Willie Nelson posters are for concerts at the Austin Opry House by performers such as The Charlie Daniels Band, Kinky Friedman, Dave Loggins, The Lost Gonzo Band, and Taj Mahal.
The Charlie Daniels Band. Saddle Tramp
Memorabilia includes a wide array of music ephemera including ticket stubs, backstage passes, badves, bumper stickers, pins and buttons, belt buckles, matchbooks, guitar picks, audio cassettes, and more.
The Commands, 2017, undated
The Connectors, 1989
“The Conqueroo Powell St. John Joe Brown Kiki Ed Guen [sic] and some girl Berkley, Cal”; One (1) B/W 35mm negative strip, August 1969
The Cowboy and the Cat – notes, correspondence, drafts
The Cowboy Detective (a.k.a. Cowboy Dick), 1992-1993, undated
The Crazy Water Golf Club – notes, draft fragments, research
“The Cross I’ll Have to Bear”/ “Take It Off and Come to Me” by Bubba Littreel, Joey 45 RPM, undated
The Cruzers - Albums, 1995
The Cruzers - Clipping, 1996
The Cruzers - Photographs, undated
“The Cute Little Records”/ “Please Bring a Bottle” by Stoney Edwards, Capitol Records 45 RPM , undated
“The Day of Texas in Prague” Prague, The Czech Republic. Foreign investment program booklet outlining the economic and legislative environment and business opportunities in the Czech Republic, October 11-17, 1994
Ray Benson's archive contains materials documenting his entire career, featuring records, photographs, instruments, wardrobe, awards and other memorabilia dating from 1951-2018.
The Dead Crickets
This series of subject files and artist files, made up of newspaper clippings, notes, interviews, photographs and ephemera, illustrates Patoski's many areas of interest and his research methods. Patoski wrote about and published pieces relating to many of the topics and people in the subject and artist files. Of particular note is the large amount on material on Joe "King" Carrasco and his band, who Patoski managed in the 1980s.