Music -- Texas
Found in 13423 Collections and/or Records:
The Quarter Notes, 2005-2006, undated
The Ramones cover, September 1981
The Rhapsody Band, undated
The Rhythm Kings, 2015, undated
The Rhythmaires, undated
“The Right Teardrop”/ “Sorta Sudden Like” by Dusty Brothers, BAN-TX Records 45 RPM, undated
“The Road Back Home” editorial cover (2), September, 1998
This series contains a near-complete run of the newspaper from 1975-2019.
The Rosells, 2015
The Rounders - "Good Love 'n' Kisses," "Little O' You"
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.
The Roxx, undated
The Royal Jesters (2), undated
The Royal Knights, undated
The San Antonio [Rose] [State of Texas]
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 Scientist by Willie Nelson, Coldplay, Chipotle Cultivate Foundation, 2011
Materials date from 1964-2018 and consist of CDs, CD-Rs DVDs, 45 rpm records, 33 rpm LPs, 16 mm B/W film, video reel and a 30 ips tape master. All recordings are either written by or featuring Willie Nelson as guest artist or performer.
The Silhouettes, undated
The Smith Brothers , 1986-1993, undated
“The Soldier’s Letter”/ “Ballad of Manuel Esparza” by Red River Dave, Desert Storm Records 45 RPM , undated
The Soul Stick Q, undated
The Sound of Deep Ellum
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.