EC DRONE CLUB!
Edmonson County Public Library and the EC 4-H have partnered to bring you this special monthly program for ages 9-14 years old! A few things to note:
Sign up through this link: https://forms.gle/Jkm7gujGAEPUCAVJ6
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ECPL would like to ask our patrons and community to take a few minutes to complete our 2024 Patron Survey which will close Friday, January 26th. This survey helps us see where we can improve and what new services are needed or desired by our community. Each individual that submits a survey to us will be entered to win a $25 Gift Card. Stay tuned toward the end of this month for announcements concerning our gift card winners, new programming announcements, new services, and new materials. We thank you for your love, patience and continued support, and as always, we are excited to better serve you in 2024! Our survey can be accessed on our Facebook, Instagram, or website. You can also simply click or copy this link: https://forms.gle/KuJhF233W6sKh6fJ6 paid advertisement
Pig Diner is under new ownership and they are featuring buffets on Saturday and Sunday.
This Saturday's buffet features all you can eat wings, pasta, and pizza. Click the ad below to visit their Facebook Page. On December 23rd, at our home in Pig, the fuse box caught fire. We had smoke detectors in every room so we caught it fast, and we all made it out okay with damage being electrical and smoke. I would like to thank the community for the outpouring of support. The Chalybeate Fire Department for arriving so fast and staying as long as they did. The Edmonson County Family Resource Center and Santa's Helping Hands for their help, South Edmonson Elementary with the large box of food, and The American Red Cross for the hotel rooms. Thank you too all who donated to our go fund me account. The outpouring of help warmed our hearts and we are so grateful. Again thank you! Jami Kidd-Holman, Isabella Holman, Annabel Holman Video: Music Still Important Part of Life: Inside Look at Edmonson Voice Founder's Recording Studio1/4/2024 Darren Doyle, story and photos: I was hesitant to write this article because some might perceive it as boastful, but several friends have asked me about doing this for several years. And the fact is, if I came across someone else in Edmonson County with the same experience and opportunities, I would definitely want to do an article on them. So, reluctantly, I'm writing this for human interest sake. Coming from a musical family tree, making, sharing, and enjoying music has always been a very central part of my life. Both my Dad and my Mom's sides of the family were (and still are) filled with talented people that passed that enjoyment down to me. My baby brother, Dustin, is the most well known musician in our family, as he sings lead for one of southern gospel's top male quartets, Ernie Haase and Signature Sound. His travels have taken him all over the world. I showed a gift for music at an early age, growing up with a Dad that played guitar, just like his Dad did. My parents sang together and both sides of the family shared music with others, whether it was in church, in the living room, or around the family piano. My office is not your typical one. In the back corner of my recording and production studio sits my desk along all the other items my lovely wife Debbie, won't allow in the house. Most offices are decorated with accolades, framed photos of acclaimed people, or boring framed prints from Home Interior. Not here. The first thing you'll see is a portion of my guitar collection that I've worked on throughout my entire life. Several of them have been passed down from the aforementioned family; most at average value but all with special places in my life. I've got a few framed photos, mostly of my wife and kids, along with a few work related things, but it's mostly an eclectic collection of things only nerds have. There are many folks that I work with through the Edmonson Voice that don't know about my musical background. I was certainly never a celebrity, but music gave me opportunities that most people don't get. Right out of high school, I began singing with a regional gospel quartet called The Crossmen, from Morgantown, KY. This of course, came after I sang with my parents and family in different combinations in church throughout my childhood years. The Crossmen was a crucial point in my life that set the tone going forward. While in the group, in addition to making some of my greatest friends, I was blessed to perform 13 different times on the Grand Ol' Opry in Nashville, TN, where I met some of the greatest artists in country music history. We shared the stage with Porter Waggoner, Grandpa Jones, and Hank Snow, just to name a few. When folks come to visit me for a meeting at my office for the first time, they normally take a second look at the wall of guitars and then they ask me the dumbest question in the world: "Do you play guitar?" I always answer with, "No, I just collect them but I'm thinking about taking lessons," and then I never mention it again. And somehow, people believe that answer every. single. time. After The Crossmen was my first professional gig where I traveled with the late Jeff Stice, another Edmonson County native, in Perfect Heart. Even though this southern gospel quartet peaked before my arrival, it allowed me to travel the rest of the country while earning a paycheck doing so. The hectic touring schedule of 250 concerts per year was enough to prove to me that I needed to stay closer to home, so after a few years I changed gears again and started an alternative country/americana band with some local buddies, called Dry Land Fish. It was fun while it lasted, but as a naive kid from Edmonson County, I quickly learned that lifestyle wasn't for me so I stopped touring altogether and began focusing on recording music. I did that for several years until the industry changed with YouTube and social media. Those platforms allowed artists to be discovered without the need for studio-produced demos and albums, and the small mom and pop recording studios began to fade away, along with mine. However, during that time period, I learned that if I didn't have to hire a bunch of musicians to play on recordings, and do those jobs myself, I didn't have to pay all that labor, and keep it for myself. Those years are when I really concentrated on becoming a better musician and learning how to produce and play on recording sessions. It was common for me to produce entire albums with me playing all the live instruments, including guitars, keyboards, bass, drums, and a few other odds and ends. After a completed album, folks would always ask me, "how do you play all the instruments on a recording?" And I would always reply, "one at a time." If I could play them all at once I probably wouldn't be in the news business, but it's actually very simple. I just chart out everything on paper so I can see where everything is supposed to go, and then I simply record one instrument at a time. Of course, I make plenty of mistakes and have to do multiple takes, but technology has come so far in making music and it's very easy to correct those mistakes. I stopped recording music full time in 2014, just before I started the Edmonson Voice. While that keeps me very busy these days, I still love and appreciate all kinds of good music. A few years ago, I reunited with some of my old Crossmen buddies and formed a new gospel quartet, just to scratch an itch every now and again. You can find United Quartet here and there, but we stay pretty close to home and only sing a few times a year, and that's plenty for a bunch of old guys with jobs, families, and other responsibilities. So, in case you're wondering how one guy can produce an entire song by himself, it's still a fairly simple process; it's one thing at a time. The YouTube video above shows you just how I do it from start to finish. The song is called "One Man Band," and it's a simple instrumental tune where I play all the instruments. I'm not interested in making money off of music and I've certainly grown past the phase of wanting to be a famous musician. I still get to record for all the Edmonson Voice production work, specifically when it comes to creating soundtracks to commercials and video production for WildcatsLive. Honestly, I just love picking up an instrument and making a few decent sounds or humming a tune. It's a great way to relieve some stress or just to take a little break in between phone calls or publishing content. Hopefully, this will shed a little light on all the stuff you'll see as you walk through the studio to my office, but when folks ask me "do you play guitar?" I'm still going to reply with "no, I just collect them, but I'm thinking about taking some lessons." Darren Doyle, story and photos: If you haven't already noticed, one of Brownsville's most notable buildings is undergoing a facelift with a brand new mural, thanks to a couple of local organizations. The Edmonson County Arts Guild and the Edmonson County Tourism Commission have teamed up to contract a well known regional artist, Casey Page, from Cardinal House Studios, for the mural that features Edmonson County highlights. The location is the law office of Gary Logsdon, formerly the old Western Auto building, which has been a staple of the Brownsville Square for decades. According to Vanessa Ulm, Tourism Commission Director, the local Arts Guild reached out to Tourism with the idea of some sort of mural. After several discussions and brainstorming sessions, the decision was made to hire Mr. Page for the project. "The two groups collaborated on locations and potential ideas, but then the Art Guild mentioned that they would like to bring in Casey Page, a local muralist, who has done tons of murals of varying degrees in surrounding cities and counties," Ulm said. "Tourism invited the Arts Guild to a tourism meeting, along with Casey Page, to discuss ideas and cost. At that point, we knew that we would like to split the mural cost amongst the two groups." And the cost isn't just spare change. The project total is $10,000. The Tourism Commission posted a rendering of the mural back to the Facebook Page in November, which was met with mixed reactions. Most everyone was in favor of a mural but the color scheme didn't go over with many social media users. Many comments suggested more blues and greens to reflect the river/lake scenario, instead of the reds and yellows, which many claimed looked more like the southwest and not Edmonson County. "The design materialized by Casey Page after initial discussions with both the Art Guild and Tourism Commission on what encompasses our county," Ulm said. "We did not want to do a specific scene, but rather celebrate our county’s natural landscape and highlight the a few of our key offerings--paddling the Green and Nolin Rivers Blueway, KY’s first and only National Water Trail, horseback riding, etc.-- We wanted to do a classic vintage postcard aesthetic like you see on the vintage national park postcards. A few minor changes were recently made late in the process to accommodate some of the suggestions made by the public." Mrs. Phyllis Miller, member of the Edmonson County Arts Guild and retired arts teacher at ECHS, said the Guild is currently raising money for their portion of the cost through fundraising and donations. "We are pleased with what we raised in December but we need about $2,000 for what we owe," she said. "Any donations would be greatly appreciated, as we are still planning events to raise money." Other murals from Casey Page: Ulm said those minor changes were adding more blues and greens as well as featuring Dismal Rock. She said they were fortunate that Page was able to accommodate the changes since he hadn't progressed too far at the time of the change requests.
You can donate to the Edmonson County Arts Guild through Venmo @ecartsguild by clicking here. The mural is expected to be complete by the end of this week, weather permitting. Rain and temperatures at freezing or below would obviously hinder that. |
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