Category Archives: *- Features

Incumbents the only ones to run for Van Alstyne elections

Mary Jane Farmer, Scene In Town

The May city and school board elections will be cancelled for both government agencies, as only incumbents filed for election, or re-election, in this most current time frame.

For the Van Alstyne City Council, open seats were Places 1, 2, and 3, currently held by Ryan Neal, Marla Butler and Robert Jaska. All three signed up to continue their volunteer work for the city.

The two Van Alstyne ISD Board of Trustees incumbents whose seats came available also filed to continue their duties, which is also unpaid, voluntary work. Those were Places 3 and 4, which will continue to be filled by Randall Morgan and Debbie Nance,as reported by the District’s Lawana Merriman.

City Clerk Jennifer Gould told the council, via email, that “Since all places are unopposed, I will have an item on the March 3, 2020, agenda to cancel the election.”

Cost of these elections would have been, roughly $7,500 for both government groups, paying for personnel for early voting and election day voting, and other expenses. Voting will still be in place for Grayson County and other government races. Voting in Van Alstyne is at the Grayson College South Campus, on Van Alstyne Parkway east of U.S. Highway 75. Information on those issues and campaigns will probably be in the Herald-Democrat.

Van Alstyne Feed & Hardware now under construction

The new Van Alstyne Feed & Hardware Store, in the infancy of construction.

By Mary Jane Farmer — This is the full-length article, the shortened-for-space-available version is in the January 17 issue of the Van Alstyne Leader.

It’s a family project.

Gerald and Jahron Strother, their daughter, Amanda, and her husband Gerald Rutledge are opening the True Value Feed & Hardware Store. Gerald Rutledge said that, after retirement, he walked into the Community Development Corporation office about what possibilities for retail could be available. He considered, he said, renting out the building on East Marshall Street that formerly housed the Van Alstyne Hardware Store. That was about two years ago, he said. CDC Executive Director Rodney Williams asked him, Rutledge continued, if he could consider selling hardware. That sounded like a winning idea, and besides, he said, “I’d like to have a little feed store, too.”

Van Alstyne also once held a feed store on Marshall street, and that closed down a decade or so ago. And for the Strother and Rutledge families, that part of the project is a little down the road.

An important factor for these new entreprenauers is that they build somewhere in or near the historic downtown area. They located several acres on North Main Drive, parallel to the railroad tracks. “We bought 3.1 acres, and donated 1.5 of that to the city,” Gerald Rutledge said. That was important because, as others who purchased property along Main Street discovered, the land for the street had never been deeded to the city. Now, with the donation, the city does own Main Street.

That was one of several kinks that had to be straightened out. Another was that the utility hookups were across the street and needed to be expanded to accommodate the hardware store. The property is not in the designated Central Business District. The city provides parking spaces inside the CBD, but not in this location, so the family got busy designing adequate parking space for its customers.

After all that, “it became pretty smooth sailing,” said Gerald Strother.

That is, until Amanda Rutledge was diagnosed with cancer, and the family put it all on hold to take care of that. Now, she is cancer free, she said.

Choosing True Value over the other options was based on True Value’s policy of allowing their stores to decide what they need to stock.

The building will take up 5,400 square feet, or half an acre, and leaves about 1.5 acres available for parking and for the feed store. Ultimately, they hope to have a separate farm and ranch section, “About 50 percent farm and ranch and 50 percent hardware,” but in the beginning the building will be used for both, according to Gerald Rutledge.

The building will have an overhead door to make it easier for contractors to load their bigger trucks. The ladies plan also to have a section dedicated to crafts and goods, such as the pickles and cherries they can.

“We can this to be like an old-time general store, with rocking chairs out front,” said Jahron Strother. Both Gerald Strother and Gerald Rutledge said they have already been approved about employment, and plan to hire part-time help and to use both students and retired people. They will get the word out when they are ready to begin hiring. They are using local labor in the construction.

If the weather begins to cooperate, they said, the construction could be complete anywhere between mid-April and mid-May. Once up and running, the family will also make it a point to be available in such emergencies as broken pipes in the middle of the night. And keep it a safe area for children to ride their bikes.

“If it hadn’t been for Rodney (Williams), this may not have been happening, we might have pulled the plug a long time ago,” said Gerald Rutledge. “He’s the mortar that held this thing together.”

And as excited as they are all to get the store up and running, they are all just as excited about the location, around the Farmers Market, Fall der All, the new park, car shows and pumpkins.

 

 

Rascal Flatts 20th Year Punctuated With Final Tour

Rascal Flatts [Courtesy photo]

Press release from The Green Room
Nashville, Tennessee — An unforgettable chapter in country music history will be celebrated this year, as Rascal Flatts – the most awarded group of the genre’s last decade – is hitting the road for the RASCAL FLATTS FAREWELL: LIFE IS A HIGHWAY TOUR. With countless milestones behind them and their legacy firmly established as some of country’s brightest ambassadors, Gary LeVox, Jay DeMarcus and Joe Don Rooney visited CBS This Morning Tuesday (1/8/20) to exclusively announce that they will mark their 20th anniversary this year with a triumphant farewell tour.
“When we started out 20 years ago, we could not imagine all of the people, places and gifts we would encounter,” said Gary LeVox. “The greatest feeling ever, is being told that our music has been the soundtrack to their lives. What greater gift can an artist receive than to be told ‘I got married to “Bless The Broken Road,”’ or ‘We played “My Wish” at my graduation,’ that ‘“What Hurts The Most” is the song that made me love country music for the first time,’ or ‘“I’m Movin’ On” helped me get sober or even that ‘“Changed” made me call my family again after not talking to them for years.’ That’s why we create music and the reason we can’t wait to celebrate this incredible 20-year journey all year, with our fans who we love dearly. I don’t know what God has in store for the future, but I am excited to see what He has planned!”
“We’re really looking forward to getting to spend this entire year loving on our fans, and thanking them for allowing us to have the most amazing career over the last 20 years,” shared Jay DeMarcus. “While it is of course bittersweet, it is so important to us to celebrate what our music has meant to their lives, as well as what the fans have meant to us. There is no sadness here, just new chapters, new journeys, and new beginnings. Rascal Flatts’ music will live on forever, because of our fans, and this year is all about them!”
“Dreams do come true…and we are three walking examples of this truth,” said Joe Don Rooney. “I’m most proud of the fact that we’ve pursued our dreams together and with courage, hard-work and dedication we’ve been able to cultivate our dreams into reality; it’s simply incredible! There’s no doubt we have been blessed way beyond belief and we can’t wait to spend the rest of 2020 expressing our love and appreciation to all of our devoted fans, music industry friends and our families for believing in us and playing a major role in our path to here. And, I personally can’t wait to shine a light on my brothers Jay and Gary this year, and make another mountain of new memories with them.”
Kicking off on June 11 in Indianapolis, the tour will take Rascal Flatts from coast to coast, culminating in a bittersweet send off.  Along the way, the trio and their fans will reflect on a beloved catalogue of hits including “Bless The Broken Road,” “My Wish,” “What Hurts The Most” – always soulful, engaging and delivered with a positive, universal message – as well as a string of success that places Rascal Flatts among the modern musical elite.
Tickets will be available first as part of the Live Nation Country Megaticket and more information will become available at rascalflatts.com in the coming weeks. Live Nation is the official tour promoter.
RASCAL FLATTS will be at:
May 2 — Winstar Casino, Thackerville, Oklahoma
July 7 — Dos Equis Pavilion, 33839 S Fitzhugh Avenue, Dallas, Texas

Sundance Head, Trey Rose at Heritage Hall, 11.15.19

Sundance Head

First printed in The Paris News, 11.24.19

Story and photos . by Mary Jane Farmer, Scene In Town

Friday night’s concert at Heritage Hall (Paris, Texas) left concert-goers completely satisfied, and eager for both Sundance Head and Trey Rose to return for a repeat performance. (November 15, 2019)

It was actually a repeat concert for Sundance Head, who appeared with his trio last year. Head, who won Season 11 of The Voice, didn’t have a chance to show off his guitar skills on the reality television show, since it centers around contestants’ singing voices. But his talent on his Fender electric equals that winning singing voice. He travels and plays with a bass player and a drummer, and together they bring the best out-of-the-box music, varying between country, rockabilly, rock and roll, and a bit of blues.

Trey Rose

Trey Rose undeniably delivers musical food for the soul and for the mind. This songwriter was also on The Voice, having made it into Season 15’s knockoff round. He presented an equally varied song list Friday night, and it was when he and his trio played a country song that the dancers got up and made the floor shine.

Rose, who had moved to the Houston area, has now relocated around his native Hugo/Paris area, as has his guitar picker, Steven Pina. For this show, they added local drummer Jason Pruett, and the trio slayed the audience with its upbeat, energetic splash of smooth southern vocals and instrumentals blasting out Americana, rock, pop, and that bit of country.

Trey Rose can’t be destined for anything but success in this, his chosen field, and grows nearer to that achievement with every performance.

For this event, Heritage Hall owner JoKyle Varner brought in a food truck to provide non-alcoholic beverages and a variety of foods for patrons. And his bar was open as well.

Next up, concert-wise, for Heritage Hall, is November 29, when Texas rising magical musicians Kolby Cooper and Chris Colston take the stage with their respective bands. This show will also have the dance floor available to any boot-scooters who want to take advantage of it. Music starts at 8 p.m. and more details can be found Online at HeritageHallParisTx.com.

CD Review: Kinky Friedman “Resurrection”

First appeared in The Paris News, Nov. 10, 2019, edition

“Resurrection,” Kinky Friedman, Echo Hill Records

Listening to the Kinky Friedman of today is like getting an in-depth look at his soul, and that easily transfers to in-depth looks inside oneself as well. Long gone, it seems, is the Kinky of his youth, when his music was fun and comic, yet quirky and cheeky. Now, he writes of emotion and caring, his own and of others across the globe.

In this new CD, Resurrection, recently released on Echo Hill Records, the Kinkster penned 11 new songs, and not a loser in the bunch.

“Blind Kinky Friedman” is perhaps the most poignant look at how we so often forget our blessings, the love and bounty so freely given to us. Written, it seems, while he was on his pity pot—or maybe right after he’d just gotten off it and the emotions were still running rampant in his head. “And blind Kinky Friedman is feeling sorry for himself and for every soul only God can see… sometimes he still remembers that he’s me…wakes up in a gutter filled with sorrow… with a newspaper blanket, resting on a pillow made of smoke… Oh, Blind Kinky, that old boy can really sing the blues.”

The opening track, “Mandela’s Blues,” is absorbing, and it could be because Kinky manages to put himself in Nelson Mandela’s shoes, both while the South African giant was in prison and before and after those dreadful 27 years of incarceration. “Twenty years of rags and prison shoes, He paid a whole nation’s dues. He lost everything that a man could lose, everything but Mandela’s blues… It’s a long walk to freedom… there we will always stay. He smiled at Jesus and winked at Ghandi, knowing they would understand.”

And a love song has never been written such as “Carryin’ The Torch.” True love at its finest… “If you traveled around this world, you wouldn’t find another girl, could hold a candle to the one gal you left behind… On the day you discover how many you really love her, you’ll find her love has never lost it’s glow…” Can’t say more about this song, or it could be too much and spoil the surprise of hearing the full song for the first time.

So many others with deep lyrics — such as “down that lonely road called yesterday” and “The lessons that you can’t forget are the only ones you learned.” And this writer, for one, cannot listen to “A Dog In The Sky” without wiping away a bit of moisture from the eyes.

Kinky Friedman’s words and deliveries, drawl and all, stay with you and reflect the ragged part of the heart that most other songwriters never get close to touching. This collection features the best of today’s music genres, written and delivered with rare genius and only described as the all-inclusive “Americana.”

The cigar-smoking man in black brings honor to music, to people, and to his Texas Hill Country home. Resurrection can be found on most streaming sites, isn’t yet available on the something-for-everyone Amazon.com (though most of his previous recordings are), but is available in hard copy from his own Website, KinkyFriedman.com. He is also touring nationally with the release of Resurrection and will be at Poor David’s Pub in Dallas on November 22.