BLACKSBURG -- Virginia Tech TB Ryan Williams has become known for his shifty moves and breakaway speed this fall.
In Saturday's 38-10 Atlantic Coast Conference rout of N.C. State, Williams displayed the kind of power which will become a staple of highlight films for a long time.
On a second down run from the Wolfpack 19-yard line, Williams busted into the open off left tackle. Backup safety Earl Wolff grabbed Williams' jersey at the 12 and got a free ride -- all the way into the end zone for Williams' fourth touchdown of the day.
It was the longest play of a grinding afternoon for Williams, who finished with 120 yards on 32 carries.
"He was making me mad," Williams said of Wolff. "I wanted him off my jersey. I tried to smack his hand off because I'm not big on stiffarming people, but it looked cool on the big screen. I liked it."
So did his teammates, who have gotten used to seeing that kind of brilliance from a redshirt freshman who's rushed for 1,355 yards and scored 16 touchdowns.
"I didn't see the replay, but I had the back view," QB Tyrod Taylor said. "He's very powerful. I've seen him do that in the weight room. I know he's very strong."
Williams' four TDs were the most for a Tech freshman in a game since Tommy Edwards scored four in a 63-21 win at Pittsburgh in 1993.
Williams needs just one score in the last two games to break the ACC freshman record for most TDs in a season. He's currently tied with North Carolina's Leon Johnson, who originally set the mark in 1993.
Boykin's Best Sophomore WR Jarrett Boykin might be headed for the Hokies' high-water mark for a pass-catcher in six years. With his career-high 164 yards on six grabs, Boykin is up to 715 yards on the season, the most for a Tech player since Ernest Wilford recorded 886 yards as a senior in 2003.
"Jarrett made a couple of great adjustments on the ball and got those big claws up there and came down with it," coach Frank Beamer said. "He is very, very dependable. If you get that ball up there around him, we have a very good shot of coming down with it."
Among Boykin's grabs were 42, 38 and 36-yarders. His 38-yard catch late in the third quarter served as the Hokies' final TD.
On the season, Boykin has 36 receptions and is averaging nearly 20 yards per catch.
"Today, I was just focused on making plays," he said. "Whenever the ball was in the air, I just did my best to come down with it so he would have confidence in me. That is just kind of how the day went along."
Shorthanded Wolfpack N.C. State has regressed this season. After using a season-ending four-game winning streak last year to make the PapaJohn's Bowl, the Wolfpack fell to 4-7 Saturday and won't play in a bowl game.
One major reason is a ridiculous wave of injuries which has cost N.C. State 13 projected starters. It even hit its coaching staff for this game.
Offensive coordinator Dana Bible wasn't with the team after finding out Friday that his doctor recommended he not travel due to the need to undergo tests at a Raleigh hospital.
Coach Tom O'Brien had no other information on Bible's situation.
"You always have a backup that you think you have to do this, that or another thing," O'Brien said. "But 24 hours before a football game -- it's a tough situation."
Running backs coach Jason Swepson and O'Brien teamed to call plays. O'Brien said Swepson did a fine job, although the Wolfpack's 10 points was their fewest since a season-opening loss to South Carolina.
Extra Points
Redshirt freshman Michael Via made his third straight start at center, although Beau Warren (knee) was cleared to play ... DT Demetrius Taylor and TE Sam Wheeler picked up starts because it was Senior Day ... Tech unveiled the Wild Turkey for the first time since September as TE Greg Boone took four second half snaps. Boone tried a pass but it fell incomplete. The former high school QB can throw the ball 80 yards in the air.
Source
Monday, December 28, 2009
Tuesday, December 15, 2009
Southern Miss state of mind
East Carolina's 2009 football schedule contains numerous oddities that were evident even before the season began.
Most notably, the middle of the campaign featured a three-game stretch in which the Pirates played no Saturday games, but instead Tuesday, Thursday and Sunday games.
ECU head coach Skip Holtz looked past that and immediately saw something perhaps even more daunting.
“People started looking at the Tuesday, Thursday, Sunday schedule, and they looked at being on the road at West Virginia and North Carolina and two of the first three are on the road against very quality, BCS-type opponents,” Holtz said. “The thing that always caught my eye is that Southern Miss is last.”
The Pirates (7-4, 6-1 Conference USA) finish their regular season when they host the Golden Eagles at 1:30 Saturday afternoon in a C-USA East Division clash.
The winner of the game will claim the East and play in the following weekend's C-USA championship game.
Given that Southern Miss has 26 wins in 34 previous games against ECU, Holtz said he would love to make the Pirates' end of the rivalry a little more legitimate.
In his four previous games against the Golden Eagles (7-4, 5-2 C-USA), Holtz is 1-3.
“I wonder if it's a rivalry for them,” Holtz said. “You've got to win every once in a while to make it a rivalry. I just don't know how they view it. I know how we view it, as a rivalry game, but it is extremely lopsided, especially being 2-15 at home and how spaced out our wins are.”
Holtz's lone win in the series came in overtime at Hattiesburg in 2006. The Pirates lost last season's meeting in Mississippi by a convincing 21-3 score.
Injuries
Senior linebacker Jeremy Chambliss is perhaps the biggest question for ECU after he injured his shoulder early in the Pirates' win over UAB last weekend.
Holtz said even if Chambliss, who is fourth on the team with 62 tackles despite having already missed a game this season with the flu, suits up against Southern Miss, he would likely be very limited.
The Pirates will also likely be without true freshman linebacker Marke Powell, who steadily carved a niche in the rotation before his foot injury last weekend left him doubtful for this Saturday. Reserve linebacker and special teams man Austin Haynes (knee) is also questionable.
The defensive line got a boost from the return of Josh Smith from his shoulder injury last week, and Holtz said he expects Smith to make a full return this week after not having any lingering pain.
The offense hopes to welcome back senior receiver Jamar Bryant (shoulder) and running back Jon Williams (knee) by Saturday.
Out for the season are defensive lineman A.J. Johnson (knee), tight end Rob Kass (knee), linebackers Dustin Lineback (knee) and Matt Thompson (elbow) and defensive back Dekota Marshall (leg).
Harris honored
East Carolina's Dwayne Harris, who set a school record with his third kickoff return for a touchdown in ECU's win over UAB, was named Conference USA Special Teams Player of the Week. It's the second time this season Harris has won the award.
Harris established a new East Carolina single-season and career record for most kickoff returns for touchdowns with his third of the 2009 campaign, a 99-yarder against UAB in the fourth quarter. In all, he racked up 146 kickoff return yards on three attempts.
The 99-yard return was the second-longest kickoff return in program history and was his third return for a score this season. Harris compiled 254 all-purpose yards and accounted for three touchdowns with two scoring receptions, including a 59-yarder that was ECU's longest pass play and longest touchdown (rushing or passing) of the season.
With his eight-catch, 108-yard performance against the Blazers, Harris moved into second place on ECU's career receptions list with 146.
Source
Most notably, the middle of the campaign featured a three-game stretch in which the Pirates played no Saturday games, but instead Tuesday, Thursday and Sunday games.
ECU head coach Skip Holtz looked past that and immediately saw something perhaps even more daunting.
“People started looking at the Tuesday, Thursday, Sunday schedule, and they looked at being on the road at West Virginia and North Carolina and two of the first three are on the road against very quality, BCS-type opponents,” Holtz said. “The thing that always caught my eye is that Southern Miss is last.”
The Pirates (7-4, 6-1 Conference USA) finish their regular season when they host the Golden Eagles at 1:30 Saturday afternoon in a C-USA East Division clash.
The winner of the game will claim the East and play in the following weekend's C-USA championship game.
Given that Southern Miss has 26 wins in 34 previous games against ECU, Holtz said he would love to make the Pirates' end of the rivalry a little more legitimate.
In his four previous games against the Golden Eagles (7-4, 5-2 C-USA), Holtz is 1-3.
“I wonder if it's a rivalry for them,” Holtz said. “You've got to win every once in a while to make it a rivalry. I just don't know how they view it. I know how we view it, as a rivalry game, but it is extremely lopsided, especially being 2-15 at home and how spaced out our wins are.”
Holtz's lone win in the series came in overtime at Hattiesburg in 2006. The Pirates lost last season's meeting in Mississippi by a convincing 21-3 score.
Injuries
Senior linebacker Jeremy Chambliss is perhaps the biggest question for ECU after he injured his shoulder early in the Pirates' win over UAB last weekend.
Holtz said even if Chambliss, who is fourth on the team with 62 tackles despite having already missed a game this season with the flu, suits up against Southern Miss, he would likely be very limited.
The Pirates will also likely be without true freshman linebacker Marke Powell, who steadily carved a niche in the rotation before his foot injury last weekend left him doubtful for this Saturday. Reserve linebacker and special teams man Austin Haynes (knee) is also questionable.
The defensive line got a boost from the return of Josh Smith from his shoulder injury last week, and Holtz said he expects Smith to make a full return this week after not having any lingering pain.
The offense hopes to welcome back senior receiver Jamar Bryant (shoulder) and running back Jon Williams (knee) by Saturday.
Out for the season are defensive lineman A.J. Johnson (knee), tight end Rob Kass (knee), linebackers Dustin Lineback (knee) and Matt Thompson (elbow) and defensive back Dekota Marshall (leg).
Harris honored
East Carolina's Dwayne Harris, who set a school record with his third kickoff return for a touchdown in ECU's win over UAB, was named Conference USA Special Teams Player of the Week. It's the second time this season Harris has won the award.
Harris established a new East Carolina single-season and career record for most kickoff returns for touchdowns with his third of the 2009 campaign, a 99-yarder against UAB in the fourth quarter. In all, he racked up 146 kickoff return yards on three attempts.
The 99-yard return was the second-longest kickoff return in program history and was his third return for a score this season. Harris compiled 254 all-purpose yards and accounted for three touchdowns with two scoring receptions, including a 59-yarder that was ECU's longest pass play and longest touchdown (rushing or passing) of the season.
With his eight-catch, 108-yard performance against the Blazers, Harris moved into second place on ECU's career receptions list with 146.
Source
Wednesday, October 7, 2009
Educators close the books: retiring school employees look back on their careers
Before he retired last week, Tom Hall could look at his colleagues in the Roanoke County Public Schools and see very few people who, like him, had been around for decades.
Hall would know. For the past decade, he's been in charge of personnel for the school system.
"There's 1,200 teachers and in my 10 years, 11 years in my position, I've pretty much replaced all but 200," said Hall, a 37-year school system veteran. "A lot of them were my age and they're retiring."
For decades, the country's teaching ranks were filled with people born shortly after World War II, the so-called baby boomers. Now many of those people are retiring and being replaced by younger teachers and administrators.
A report released in April by the National Commission on Teaching and America's Future found that more than half of the country's teachers could retire within the next 10 years, causing a "tsunami" of teacher turnover. In Virginia, the report says, 47 percent of teachers are over 50.
In Roanoke and Roanoke County, several hundred of those baby boomers retired June 30. Below are the stories of four longtime educators.
Source
Hall would know. For the past decade, he's been in charge of personnel for the school system.
"There's 1,200 teachers and in my 10 years, 11 years in my position, I've pretty much replaced all but 200," said Hall, a 37-year school system veteran. "A lot of them were my age and they're retiring."
For decades, the country's teaching ranks were filled with people born shortly after World War II, the so-called baby boomers. Now many of those people are retiring and being replaced by younger teachers and administrators.
A report released in April by the National Commission on Teaching and America's Future found that more than half of the country's teachers could retire within the next 10 years, causing a "tsunami" of teacher turnover. In Virginia, the report says, 47 percent of teachers are over 50.
In Roanoke and Roanoke County, several hundred of those baby boomers retired June 30. Below are the stories of four longtime educators.
Source
Monday, September 28, 2009
Bob Shiller didn't kill the housing market
NEW YORK (Fortune) -- It's noon in New Haven, and Yale economist Robert Shiller and I are leaving his office to walk down the block for pizza. It was a damp morning, but now the sun is breaking through the clouds. "Do we need an umbrella?" he asks. I say I don't think so. But a few steps outside his office, he turns around to get one. "It's better to be safe," he says.
That's Bob Shiller for you. He's a worrier. Well, more than that. He's obsessed with taming risk. And that means all kinds of risk -- from the chance of stray showers to a danger that's on everyone's mind these days: falling home prices. Shiller's name will forever be linked with the worst housing bust since the Great Depression and the economic slump it caused. He first warned of a housing bubble back in 2003 when bankers were merrily minting mortgage-backed securities. And it is the widely cited gauge he helped create -- the S&P/Case-Shiller home-price index -- that has heralded, in grim monthly installments, the devastating collapse of the residential real estate market.
Two years into the housing bust, Shiller finally sees some faint rays of sunshine (that's just light, not green shoots yet). When the June Case-Shiller figures were released, he said they showed "striking improvement in the rate of decline." Asked to look ahead, he says, "My guess is that prices will continue to fall for a while, but at a slower pace, and then stabilize. We've become very speculative in our attitude toward real estate, so there could be another boom. But if so, it likely won't happen for another five to 10 years."
Source
That's Bob Shiller for you. He's a worrier. Well, more than that. He's obsessed with taming risk. And that means all kinds of risk -- from the chance of stray showers to a danger that's on everyone's mind these days: falling home prices. Shiller's name will forever be linked with the worst housing bust since the Great Depression and the economic slump it caused. He first warned of a housing bubble back in 2003 when bankers were merrily minting mortgage-backed securities. And it is the widely cited gauge he helped create -- the S&P/Case-Shiller home-price index -- that has heralded, in grim monthly installments, the devastating collapse of the residential real estate market.
Two years into the housing bust, Shiller finally sees some faint rays of sunshine (that's just light, not green shoots yet). When the June Case-Shiller figures were released, he said they showed "striking improvement in the rate of decline." Asked to look ahead, he says, "My guess is that prices will continue to fall for a while, but at a slower pace, and then stabilize. We've become very speculative in our attitude toward real estate, so there could be another boom. But if so, it likely won't happen for another five to 10 years."
Source
Tuesday, September 1, 2009
Dodson reflects on her work in county schools:
Reflecting on her eight years as head of the Henry County Schools, Superintendent Sharon Dodson said a “culture of expectation” enabled the division to come a long way in spite of continued economic challenges.
“The legacy of my time here would be that together we created a culture of expectation,” Dodson said. “We expect students to learn, we expect teachers to teach, we expect administrators to be responsible and efficiently and fairly run the schools, and we expect the support staff to support the efforts of the teachers in the classroom.”
During her tenure, the schools were consolidated, numerous improvements were made to school buildings, and all 15 schools achieved full accreditation for the first time.
Then, during a school board meeting in October 2008, Dodson announced she would not seek to renew her current contract, which will expire Tuesday.
Dodson, 57, said she made the decision to step down because “I’m done. You just come to a point where you realize you’ve accomplished what brought you here.”
Also, she said, “since my own kids are through college and on their own now ... there’s no compelling reason to continue at this time. It’s just time.”
Dodson took the helm of Henry County Schools in the 2001-02 school year. Before that, she was superintendent of King William County public schools starting in 1996.
Dodson holds a doctorate in education administration and special education from Virginia Tech, as well as a certificate of advanced graduate studies in education administration and business. She also holds a master’s degree from Auburn University and a bachelor’s from the University of Kentucky, the state where she spent most of her childhood.
She has held many positions in education during her career, having worked as a teacher, school psychologist, director of student services, director of instruction and principal.
“I don’t look back much, not a whole lot,” Dodson said of her time as superintendent.
“I’m kind of the philosophy that ... sometimes circumstances require you to make a decision and make it right,” she said. That is “not to say there aren’t things we could’ve done better, but I think we just learn those lessons and apply what we’ve learned to decisions in the future.”
With the end of her contract just days away, Dodson said she is “not at liberty to discuss” what her next move will be.
“I’m excited about some of the opportunities that I’m looking at right now,” she said, adding she has “a number of options I’m not able to discuss in detail yet.”
Whether she remains in Henry County “depends on which way I decide to go,” she said.
Dodson’s husband, veterinarian Scott Noe, works in Bedford. The two have residences in both Bedford and Henry County, but Henry County is “our primary residence,” she said.
Regardless of her job plans, she said, “I’m going to immediately take some down time” and “take some time to sleep.”
Dodson said she will miss “the opportunity to interact with tomorrow’s future — the youngsters we have in our schools — and to see the hope for the future in what they’re learning. I really will miss that.”
However, she said, “I won’t miss the 24/7 nature of the position” and “some of the intractable problems presented every day.”
Dodson used the analogy of baking a cake to describe what challenges await her successor, Anthony DeWayne Jackson, who will start as Henry County superintendent in July.
“We’ve worked hard in Henry County the last eight years gathering up the ingredients. ... Everything’s assembled now,” she said. The challenge will be “baking the perfect cake.”
Source
“The legacy of my time here would be that together we created a culture of expectation,” Dodson said. “We expect students to learn, we expect teachers to teach, we expect administrators to be responsible and efficiently and fairly run the schools, and we expect the support staff to support the efforts of the teachers in the classroom.”
During her tenure, the schools were consolidated, numerous improvements were made to school buildings, and all 15 schools achieved full accreditation for the first time.
Then, during a school board meeting in October 2008, Dodson announced she would not seek to renew her current contract, which will expire Tuesday.
Dodson, 57, said she made the decision to step down because “I’m done. You just come to a point where you realize you’ve accomplished what brought you here.”
Also, she said, “since my own kids are through college and on their own now ... there’s no compelling reason to continue at this time. It’s just time.”
Dodson took the helm of Henry County Schools in the 2001-02 school year. Before that, she was superintendent of King William County public schools starting in 1996.
Dodson holds a doctorate in education administration and special education from Virginia Tech, as well as a certificate of advanced graduate studies in education administration and business. She also holds a master’s degree from Auburn University and a bachelor’s from the University of Kentucky, the state where she spent most of her childhood.
She has held many positions in education during her career, having worked as a teacher, school psychologist, director of student services, director of instruction and principal.
“I don’t look back much, not a whole lot,” Dodson said of her time as superintendent.
“I’m kind of the philosophy that ... sometimes circumstances require you to make a decision and make it right,” she said. That is “not to say there aren’t things we could’ve done better, but I think we just learn those lessons and apply what we’ve learned to decisions in the future.”
With the end of her contract just days away, Dodson said she is “not at liberty to discuss” what her next move will be.
“I’m excited about some of the opportunities that I’m looking at right now,” she said, adding she has “a number of options I’m not able to discuss in detail yet.”
Whether she remains in Henry County “depends on which way I decide to go,” she said.
Dodson’s husband, veterinarian Scott Noe, works in Bedford. The two have residences in both Bedford and Henry County, but Henry County is “our primary residence,” she said.
Regardless of her job plans, she said, “I’m going to immediately take some down time” and “take some time to sleep.”
Dodson said she will miss “the opportunity to interact with tomorrow’s future — the youngsters we have in our schools — and to see the hope for the future in what they’re learning. I really will miss that.”
However, she said, “I won’t miss the 24/7 nature of the position” and “some of the intractable problems presented every day.”
Dodson used the analogy of baking a cake to describe what challenges await her successor, Anthony DeWayne Jackson, who will start as Henry County superintendent in July.
“We’ve worked hard in Henry County the last eight years gathering up the ingredients. ... Everything’s assembled now,” she said. The challenge will be “baking the perfect cake.”
Source
Will the revisionist history ever stop?
Shortly after John Calipari went to Kentucky, former Memphis assistant John Robic went on the radio in Memphis and talked about how Calipari had "more help" at his new school and "everything you need to win a national title."
Those comments, of course, upset a number of people in Memphis since they came just days after some of the most influential people in this city had offered Calipari $5 million a year, practically unlimited private plane time, stock options, a seat on the board of directors of a major company and essentially whatever else he might have wanted to get him to stay.
More help? Seriously? To the people who had poured significant money into the Memphis program over the years and were prepared to do even more, the "more help" comment seemed like revisionist history at best.
Now, Robic has seemingly done it again. He told Jody Demling of the Courier-Journal that Kentucky's No. 1-ranked recruiting class is a tribute to the allure of Kentucky.
"What we have seen here already is that it's a different deal; its Kentucky," Robic said. "It's a match between a talented coach and a place like this. Coach (Rick) Pitino was that and coach (Tubby) Smith was that; it's what Kentucky should be.
"At UMass we had to offer 50 guys and hope a few of them took it. We even had to do some of that early on at Memphis. But here if you offer 20 then 21 will accept because you might offer one by mistake. We have to be careful and now we know better what style fits the system best."
Let's be very, very clear. The recruiting class John Calipari got to Kentucky this year is essentially the same recruiting class that would have been at Memphis had he stayed. In fact, Memphis' recruiting class would have actually been better because it would have included Xavier Henry, who is now at Kansas.
If Calipari had gone to Arizona, that recruiting class would have gone to Arizona. If Calipari had gone to Virginia Commonwealth, that recruiting class would have gone to Virginia Commonwealth.
Kentucky just happened to be the school that got it. There was nothing inherent about Kentucky - besides the fact that it hired John Calipari - to make it happen.
Source
Those comments, of course, upset a number of people in Memphis since they came just days after some of the most influential people in this city had offered Calipari $5 million a year, practically unlimited private plane time, stock options, a seat on the board of directors of a major company and essentially whatever else he might have wanted to get him to stay.
More help? Seriously? To the people who had poured significant money into the Memphis program over the years and were prepared to do even more, the "more help" comment seemed like revisionist history at best.
Now, Robic has seemingly done it again. He told Jody Demling of the Courier-Journal that Kentucky's No. 1-ranked recruiting class is a tribute to the allure of Kentucky.
"What we have seen here already is that it's a different deal; its Kentucky," Robic said. "It's a match between a talented coach and a place like this. Coach (Rick) Pitino was that and coach (Tubby) Smith was that; it's what Kentucky should be.
"At UMass we had to offer 50 guys and hope a few of them took it. We even had to do some of that early on at Memphis. But here if you offer 20 then 21 will accept because you might offer one by mistake. We have to be careful and now we know better what style fits the system best."
Let's be very, very clear. The recruiting class John Calipari got to Kentucky this year is essentially the same recruiting class that would have been at Memphis had he stayed. In fact, Memphis' recruiting class would have actually been better because it would have included Xavier Henry, who is now at Kansas.
If Calipari had gone to Arizona, that recruiting class would have gone to Arizona. If Calipari had gone to Virginia Commonwealth, that recruiting class would have gone to Virginia Commonwealth.
Kentucky just happened to be the school that got it. There was nothing inherent about Kentucky - besides the fact that it hired John Calipari - to make it happen.
Source
Thursday, August 20, 2009
Dukes dreams big
“God created rocks,” said Spencer native and musician Cameron Dukes. “We can make a hospital with it or beat someone over the head with it.” Dukes said he uses this analogy to explain his view on music. He explained that music itself isn’t a bad thing. It can be molded for good or molded to promote badness. Once he began to realize the power of music, Dukes, who currently resides in Midwest City, made a decision to always let his music be a positive influence.
This musician didn’t always subscribe to this train of thought, however. An avid music-lover, Dukes recorded his first album when he was 11 years old. The next few years were a series of talent shows and shows with various singing groups in the local area. After graduating from high school, Dukes decided to create his own recording company. He had begun producing records for four artists when a decision he made flipped his view of music upside-down.
“I got saved. And I started working on gospel music after that,” Dukes said. This was in 2000. Since that day, Dukes has been committed to performing solo gospel songs.
This change in music style didn’t slow down his career, however. In 2004, Dukes received a distribution deal on his first CD, titled “Cam Just Listen.” The CD went nationwide. His second CD, released in 2007, is titled “Cam, the platform.” This CD also went nationwide.
Dukes writes and produces over 80 percent of his content under his company Doulos Records. When not making music, he travels the nation and world performing. Dukes has been to Texas, Kansas, California, Canada, Africa, Arizona, Michigan and Virginia. Dukes said his Virginia performance was especially impacting on him because he sang at a memorial service for students killed by a student shooter at Virginia Tech.
For a time, Dukes became interested in starting a jingle company. It was during this period that he composed the Internet-famous Mr. Spriggs BBQ song, a well-known commercial for a Midwest City restaurant. Although this was more of a fun side project for Dukes, he has had opportunities to spread his music through the experience.
“Somebody called from Canada--a DJ. He said he wanted to be the first to play it on the radio,” said Dukes. The DJ told him that several dance clubs in the area were playing the song already. Dukes agreed to let the DJ release the barbecue jingle on the radio as long as the DJ agreed to play his other music as well.
This isn’t the first mainstream media to pick up Dukes tunes, though. He said that 103.5 FM and 1140 AM play his music.
“There’s a lot of stations across the nation actually playing my music as well,” he said.
BET Gospel also plays his music video on their television station.
Performing is not the only thing that Dukes foresees in his future. He is in the beginning stages of creating a Christian record label in Oklahoma. He said he wants to feature many of the talented local artists. Right now, Dukes is primarily working on creating connections to help him get started.
Although Dukes said he is living his dream, it is often a surreal experience. He credits most of his success to prayer. He also studied diligently to learn the ins and outs of the music industry. Dukes remembers spending days at the library, studying marketing books.
As for his music talent, Dukes gives the credit elsewhere.
“It’s all a gift from God.”
Source
This musician didn’t always subscribe to this train of thought, however. An avid music-lover, Dukes recorded his first album when he was 11 years old. The next few years were a series of talent shows and shows with various singing groups in the local area. After graduating from high school, Dukes decided to create his own recording company. He had begun producing records for four artists when a decision he made flipped his view of music upside-down.
“I got saved. And I started working on gospel music after that,” Dukes said. This was in 2000. Since that day, Dukes has been committed to performing solo gospel songs.
This change in music style didn’t slow down his career, however. In 2004, Dukes received a distribution deal on his first CD, titled “Cam Just Listen.” The CD went nationwide. His second CD, released in 2007, is titled “Cam, the platform.” This CD also went nationwide.
Dukes writes and produces over 80 percent of his content under his company Doulos Records. When not making music, he travels the nation and world performing. Dukes has been to Texas, Kansas, California, Canada, Africa, Arizona, Michigan and Virginia. Dukes said his Virginia performance was especially impacting on him because he sang at a memorial service for students killed by a student shooter at Virginia Tech.
For a time, Dukes became interested in starting a jingle company. It was during this period that he composed the Internet-famous Mr. Spriggs BBQ song, a well-known commercial for a Midwest City restaurant. Although this was more of a fun side project for Dukes, he has had opportunities to spread his music through the experience.
“Somebody called from Canada--a DJ. He said he wanted to be the first to play it on the radio,” said Dukes. The DJ told him that several dance clubs in the area were playing the song already. Dukes agreed to let the DJ release the barbecue jingle on the radio as long as the DJ agreed to play his other music as well.
This isn’t the first mainstream media to pick up Dukes tunes, though. He said that 103.5 FM and 1140 AM play his music.
“There’s a lot of stations across the nation actually playing my music as well,” he said.
BET Gospel also plays his music video on their television station.
Performing is not the only thing that Dukes foresees in his future. He is in the beginning stages of creating a Christian record label in Oklahoma. He said he wants to feature many of the talented local artists. Right now, Dukes is primarily working on creating connections to help him get started.
Although Dukes said he is living his dream, it is often a surreal experience. He credits most of his success to prayer. He also studied diligently to learn the ins and outs of the music industry. Dukes remembers spending days at the library, studying marketing books.
As for his music talent, Dukes gives the credit elsewhere.
“It’s all a gift from God.”
Source
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