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Station 1: Galveston, TX

Station 1: Galveston, TX. Station 2: Tornadoes. Station 3: Audio Station- Buddy Holly.

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Station 1: Galveston, TX

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  1. Station 1: Galveston, TX

  2. Station 2: Tornadoes

  3. Station 3: Audio Station- Buddy Holly Buddy Holly played rock and roll for only a few short years, but the wealth of material he recorded in that time made a major and lasting impact on popular music. Holly was an innovator who wrote his own material and was among the first to exploit such advanced studio techniques as double-tracking. He was born Charles Hardin Holley (later amended to “Holly") on September 7, 1936, in Lubbock, Texas. He learned to play guitar, piano and fiddle at an early age. After high school, he formed the Western and Bop Band, a country-oriented act that performed regularly on a Lubbock radio station and opened for acts that came through town. After being noticed by a talent scout, Holly was signed to Decca in early 1956, recording demos and singles for the label in Nashville under the name Buddy Holly and the Three Tunes. Back home, Holly opened a show at the Lubbock Youth Center for Elvis Presley, an event that hastened his conversion from country and western to rock and roll. ("We owe it all to Elvis,” he later said). He pioneered and popularized the now-standard rock-band lineup of two guitars, bass and drums. In his final months, he even began experimenting with orchestration. Holly’s catalog of songs includes such standards of the rock and roll canon as “Rave On,” “Peggy Sue,” “That’ll Be the Day,” Oh Boy!”

  4. Station 4: Vegetables

  5. Station 5: Cacti (In particular the prickly pear)

  6. Station 6: Owls

  7. Station 7: Cotton Farming

  8. Station 8: Oil & Gas

  9. Station 9: Oak Trees

  10. Station 10: Alligators

  11. Station 11: Bobcats

  12. Station 12: Big Bend National Park

  13. Station 13: Wild Turkey

  14. Station 14: Indian Paintbrush

  15. Station 15: Ranching

  16. Station 16: Pecos River

  17. Station 17: Sagebrush

  18. Station 18: San Angelo, TX

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