----- Original Message -----
From: "Asemeh Fendereski" <asemeh_f@xxxxxxxxx>
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
salam, gharareh doreh aaly avaz bezarim, mr ali jahandar
Okeh...does ANYBODY know (1) wotinell the above IS (or means)...AND...
HOW/WHY it showed up on ARSCLIST...?!?!
IS there a "Mr. Fendereski"...and what is his connection to "ali jahandar"
(of
the bi-cultural appelation?!)...or is this the work of some bored
"computer
punk" with a LOT of time on his hands...and NO noticeable good sense...who
gets his strange "jollies" posting gibberish to serious e-mail lists he
could NEVER
understand!
IF this party is formally subscribed to ARSCLIST...(1) find him; (2)
remove him
from the list...and (3) KILL the #$#@$^$#^&!!!
--- On Wed, 3/6/09, Peoples, Curtis <curtis.peoples@xxxxxxx> wrote:
From: Peoples, Curtis <curtis.peoples@xxxxxxx>
Subject: [ARSCLIST] Lubbock Texas Quartet Recording
To: ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Date: Wednesday, 3 June, 2009, 10:35 PM
I am conducting research about music and recording in Lubbock, Texas. The
earliest known recording of Lubbock music I have found, which I have a
copy of, is the following:
Lubbock Texas Quartet (Columbia)
Vocal Quartet: acc. Unknown, g. Friday, December 6, 1929
Dallas, Texas
149554-1 Turn Away Co 15510-D
149555-2 O Mother How we Miss You Co 15510-D
Cited from: Russell, Tony, et al. Country Music Records: A Discography,
1921-1942. Oxford University Press US, 2004, 515.
Does anyone know where I can obtain more information about these
recordings, or the Columbia country/gospel series from the 20s that these
recordings were a part of?
Curtis Peoples
Archivist
Crossroads of Music Archive
http://www.crossroadsofmusic.ttu.edu/
Southwest Collection, Texas Tech University
806-742-3749 *265
Box 41040
Lubbock, Texas 79409-1041