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03/28/2021
profile-icon Helen Cozart
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We get in new books all the time.  You can stop by regularly to see what is new, but we also look forward to hearing what you are looking for.  This week I want to share our new book, Ghost Notes.

 

Ghost Notes:  Pioneering Spirits of Texas Music.  Michael Corcoran and Tim Kerr.

“Ghost notes” is a musical term for sounds barely audible, a wisp lingering around the beat, yet somehow driving the groove.  The Texas musicians profiled here, ranging from 1920s gospel performers to the first psychedelic band, are generally not well known, but the impact of their early contributions on popular music is unmistakable.  This beautiful Tim Kerr-illustrated collection provides more background on the Texas from which these artists sprang, fully formed.  Readers will learn about the black gay couple from Houston who inspired the creation of rock ’n’ roll, as well as the true story of the origin of Western Swing.  They will learn about “the first family of Texas music” and the birth of boogie-woogie, the dirt-poor singers and the ballad collectors who saved folk songs during the Depression, and the accordeonista whose musical legacy was never contained on recordings but was passed on by his protégé.  The pioneers of modern times include the Dallas rapper who became the wordsmith of gangsta rap, the sheriff’s son from Dumas who produced the signature tunes of Frank Sinatra and Dean Martin, and the blind lounge singer Kenny Rogers called the greatest musician he’s ever known. 

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03/22/2021
profile-icon Helen Cozart
No Subjects

What an exciting week we have.  Games are finally back on and going strong.  We have three today alone!  Good thing they are indoors at the gym with all this rain.  Be there at 1:00, 3:00, and 6:00 to support our basketball and volleyball teams.

This year Ranger College is hosting the UIL One Act Play Contest.  It is “the largest high school play production contest or play festival in the world. More than 14,000 Texas high school students in more than 1,200 plays participate in 300 plus contests, which take place from the beginning of March through the three-day, 40-production State Meet One-Act Play Contest. The One-Act Play Contest is supported by more than 300 members of the Texas Theatre Adjudicator and Officials Organization. The League's theatre program is considered by historians to be the foundation of educational and community theatre in Texas. It continues to be a major factor motivating increasing numbers of schools to offer theatre arts as an academic subject.”

There are six possible levels of competition: Zone, District, Bi-Distrct, Area, Region, and State.  We are hosting the District meet, with plays going on all week in the new auditorium.

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