Pro Football Championship Game (1939)
Cecil Isbell
Peyton Manning mark under review
Isbell news #2
Live Oak (Jason Isbell Cover)
Lyn Cecil - everywomanClub Voices Of Experience
POLYTOXIC with Cecil "P'Nut" Daniels - "Colours"
the mulekickers....cecil brown
EFDSS Bursary Video Diary part 2 - 14th Jan
Mudd n gears Hurt acoustic.wmv
STANKY POCKETS - "The Groove"
Whoosh
Rockin Roger
Ramona and Bill Cheatham on Violin
Pro Football Championship Game (1939)
Cecil Isbell
Peyton Manning mark under review
Isbell news #2
Live Oak (Jason Isbell Cover)
Lyn Cecil - everywomanClub Voices Of Experience
POLYTOXIC with Cecil "P'Nut" Daniels - "Colours"
the mulekickers....cecil brown
EFDSS Bursary Video Diary part 2 - 14th Jan
Mudd n gears Hurt acoustic.wmv
STANKY POCKETS - "The Groove"
Whoosh
Rockin Roger
Ramona and Bill Cheatham on Violin
Turbulance @ Hootananny 29aug13 pt 15 (Nortorious)
Danny Schmidt - This Too Shall Pass
Joseph Fink - These And More Than These
Molly Sue Gonzalez - Save Me (official video)
Boogie in the P'Nut Gallery with POLYTOXIC - part 1 "Comic Book Hero"
The Harris Brothers "I know a little"
8/04 Cleburne County Commission Board Meeting
Todd Snider & Friends - Ballad of the Kingsmen
Boogie in the P'Nut Gallery with POLYTOXIC - part 2 "Me, Myself, & Id"
WIDESPREAD PANIC - Mikey webisode
Caroline Herring and Kathryn Roberts
Ben McKenzie
DJ LOGIC in the P'Nut Gallery - Part 1
Jonathan Wilson - Full Performance (Live on KEXP)
STANKY POCKETS "Hangin' On By A Thread"
P3210052 Miranda Dawn at Evangeline Cafe
Michael Jackson tribute "I Want You Back" (Jackson 5) by DJ Logic & Friends
Widespread Panic - 2006/10/14 Birmingham, AL (complete show)
Behind The Tune with WIDESPREAD PANIC - Surprise Valley webisode
Lonnie Holley / Happy Muley @ Hopscotch 2013
This House Is Not For Sale - (Ryan Adams Cover)
Jack Campbell, "Absentee"
Polytoxic @ Owsley's Golden Road, Denver 4/2/09
INFUSION EXPERIENCE AT NEWPORT BLUES CAFE -avi
GEORGE PALMER MACIAS - YOU TURN MY LIGHT ON @ THREADGILL'S 1-28-2014
Oscar Perez 2011 Football Highlights.avi
Cecil Frank Isbell (July 11, 1915 – June 23, 1985) was an American football player and coach. He played college football as a halfback at Purdue University from 1935 to 1937. The Green Bay Packers selected Isbell in the first round of the 1938 NFL Draft. He played with Green Bay from 1938 to 1942 and was best known for passing to Don Hutson. Isbell led the Packers to the NFL Championship in 1939. After retiring from playing, Isbell served as the head football coach at his alma mater, Purdue, for three seasons from 1944 to 1946, compiling a record of 14–14–1. He then coached the Baltimore Colts of the All-America Football Conference from 1947 to 1949, and the Chicago Cardinals of the National Football League for two games in 1951, tallying a career professional coaching record of 10–23–1. Isbell was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame as a player in 1967.
Isbell was born in Houston, Texas, the second son of Adger and Sarah Isbell. His older brother Cody was also a football player for Purdue. Cecil also had two younger brothers who played college football, "Dub" Isbell at Rice University and Larry Isbell at Baylor University. Cecil attended Sam Houston High School in Houston. Cecil played for Purdue from 1935 through 1937. He was voted the Boilermakers' most valuable player for the 1937 season. In the summer of 1938, he led the College All-Stars to victory over the NFL champion Washington Redskins at Soldier Field in Chicago. Isbell was named the game's MVP as the All-Stars prevailed, 28–16.
Peyton Williams Manning (born March 24, 1976) is an American football quarterback for the Denver Broncos of the National Football League (NFL). He played for the Indianapolis Colts for 14 seasons from 1998–2011. He is the son of former NFL quarterback Archie Manning and an elder brother of New York Giants quarterback Eli Manning.
Manning played college football at the University of Tennessee, leading the Volunteers to the 1997 SEC Championship in his senior season. He was chosen by the Indianapolis Colts with the first overall pick in the 1998 NFL Draft. From 1998 to 2010, he led the Colts to seven AFC South division championships, two AFC championships, and to a Super Bowl championship (Super Bowl XLI). He has won a record four league most valuable player awards, was the most valuable player of Super Bowl XLI, has been named to eleven Pro Bowls, has eleven 4,000-yard passing seasons (including a record six straight), and is the Indianapolis Colts' all-time leader in passing yards (54,828) and touchdown passes (399). In 2009, he was named the best player in the NFL and Fox Sports along with Sports Illustrated named him the NFL player of the decade of the 2000s.
Jason Isbell (born February 1, 1979) is a singer, songwriter, and guitarist from Greenhill, Alabama, near Muscle Shoals.
Almost all of Isbell's family, except his parents, were musicians, and his father was an avid music listener. After some work as a songwriter, in 2001 Isbell joined the rock band Drive-By Truckers while they toured in support of their album Southern Rock Opera. Isbell recorded and wrote with the Truckers for their next three albums, and for most of this time was married to Shonna Tucker, who joined the band as a bassist after Isbell. The two later divorced.
On April 5, 2007, Isbell announced that he was no longer a member of Drive-By Truckers. The following day, Patterson Hood confirmed the break on the band's official site. In his letter to the fans, Hood described the parting of ways as "amicable" and expressed the hope that fans would continue to support Drive-By Truckers as well as Jason's solo efforts.
Jason Isbell released his first solo album, Sirens of the Ditch, on July 10, 2007.
Danny Schmidt is an American singer-songwriter based in Austin, Texas where he was born and raised and now lives with fellow musician and singer-songwriter Carrie Elkin.
Schmidt was born 1970 in Austin, Texas, and grew up there. He started playing guitar at the age of 12. At age 20, he discovered he liked the blues after tracking the music of Jimi Hendrix back through Muddy Waters, Mississippi John Hurt, and Lightning Hopkins all the way to old country gospel and spirituals. He bought an acoustic guitar and eventually discovered the likes of Dylan, Neil Young, Tom Waits and John Prine who taught him about poetry and the melody of words.
After three years of college he joined the East Wind Community in the Ozark Mountains of southern Missouri for a year. He then became part of the Twin Oaks Community in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia for about four years, where he met fellow singer-songwriter Devon Sproule. At 25 Schmidt began writing songs—a developing talent which ultimately earned him the 2007 Kerrville Folk Festival New Folk award.
The Harris Brothers are a professional wrestling team. The term may also refer to:
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