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Buddy Holly

Charles Hardin Holley (September 7, 1936 – February 3, 1959), known as Buddy Holly, was an American singer and songwriter who was a central and pioneering figure of mid-1950s rock and roll. He was born to a musical family in Lubbock, Texas, during the Great Depression, and learned to play guitar and sing alongside his siblings. Holly's style was influenced by gospel music, country music, and rhythm and blues acts, which he performed in Lubbock with his friends from high school.

Buddy Holly
Holly in 1957
Born
Charles Hardin Holley

(1936-09-07)September 7, 1936
DiedFebruary 3, 1959(1959-02-03) (aged 22)
Cause of deathBlunt trauma as a result of a plane accident
Resting placeCity of Lubbock Cemetery in Lubbock County, Texas
Occupations
  • Singer
  • songwriter
Years active1952–1959
Spouse
(m. 1958)
Musical career
Genres
Instruments
  • Vocals
  • guitar
DiscographyBuddy Holly discography
Labels
Formerly of

Holly made his first appearance on local television in 1952, and the following year he formed the group "Buddy and Bob" with his friend Bob Montgomery. In 1955, after opening for Elvis Presley, Holly decided to pursue a career in music. He opened for Presley three times that year; his band's style shifted from country and western to entirely rock and roll. In October that year, when Holly opened for Bill Haley & His Comets, he was spotted by Nashville scout Eddie Crandall, who helped him get a contract with Decca Records.

Holly's recording sessions at Decca were produced by Owen Bradley, who had become famous for producing orchestrated country hits for stars like Patsy Cline. Unhappy with Bradley's musical style and control in the studio, Holly went to producer Norman Petty in Clovis, New Mexico, and recorded a demo of "That'll Be the Day", among other songs. Petty became the band's manager and sent the demo to Brunswick Records, which released it as a single credited to The Crickets, which became the name of Holly's band. In September 1957, as the band toured, "That'll Be the Day" topped the US and UK singles charts. Its success was followed in October by another major hit, "Peggy Sue."

The album The "Chirping" Crickets, released in November 1957, reached number five on the UK Albums Chart. Holly made his second appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show in January 1958 and soon after toured Australia and then the UK. In early 1959, he assembled a new band, consisting of future country music star Waylon Jennings (bass), famed session musician Tommy Allsup (guitar), and Carl Bunch (drums), and embarked on a tour of the midwestern US. After a show in Clear Lake, Iowa, Holly chartered an airplane to travel to his next show in Moorhead, Minnesota. Soon after takeoff, the plane crashed, killing Holly, Ritchie Valens, The Big Bopper, and pilot Roger Peterson in a tragedy later referred to by Don McLean as "The Day the Music Died" in his song "American Pie."

During his short career, Holly wrote and recorded many songs. He is often regarded as the artist who defined the traditional rock-and-roll lineup of two guitars, bass, and drums. Holly was a major influence on later popular music artists, including Bob Dylan, the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, Eric Clapton, the Hollies, Elvis Costello, Dave Edmunds, Marshall Crenshaw, and Elton John. Holly was among the first artists inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, in 1986. Rolling Stone magazine ranked him number 13 in its list of "100 Greatest Artists" in 2010.

Life and career edit

Early life and career (1936–1955) edit

Holly was born as Charles Hardin Holley (spelled "-ey") in Lubbock, Texas, on September 7, 1936, the youngest of four children of Lawrence Odell "L.O." Holley (1901–85) and Ella Pauline Drake (1902–90). His elder siblings were Larry (1925–2022),[2] Travis (1927–2016),[3] and Patricia Lou (1929–2008).[4] Holly was of mostly English and Welsh descent and had small amounts of Native American ancestry as well.[5] From early childhood, Holly was nicknamed "Buddy."[6] During the Great Depression, the Holleys frequently moved residence within Lubbock; L.O. changed jobs several times. Buddy Holly was baptized a Baptist, and the family were members of the Tabernacle Baptist Church.[6]

The Holleys had an interest in music; all the family members except L.O. were able to play an instrument or sing. The elder Holley brothers performed in local talent shows; on one occasion, Buddy joined them on violin. Since he could not play it, his brother Larry greased the bow so it would not make any sound. The brothers won the contest.[7] During World War II, Larry and Travis were called to military service. Upon his return, Larry brought with him a guitar he had bought from a shipmate while serving in the Pacific. At age 11, at his mother’s urging, Buddy took piano lessons but abandoned them after nine months. He switched to the guitar after he saw a classmate playing and singing on the school bus. Buddy's parents initially bought him a steel guitar, but he insisted that he wanted a guitar like his brother's. His parents bought him an acoustic guitar from a local pawnshop, and he learned how to play it from Travis.[8]

During his early childhood, Holly was influenced by the music of Hank Williams, Jimmie Rodgers, Moon Mullican, Bill Monroe, Hank Snow, Bob Wills, and the Carter Family. At Roscoe Wilson Elementary, Holly became friends with Bob Montgomery, and the two played together, practicing with songs by The Louvin Brothers and Johnnie & Jack.[9] They both listened to the radio programs Grand Ole Opry on WSM, Louisiana Hayride on KWKH, and Big D Jamboree. At the same time, Holly played with other musicians he met in high school, including Sonny Curtis and Jerry Allison.[10] In 1952 Holly and Jack Neal participated as a duo billed as "Buddy and Jack" in a talent contest on a local television show. After Neal left, he was replaced by Bob Montgomery, and they were billed as "Buddy and Bob." They soon started performing on the Sunday Party show on KDAV in 1953 and performed live gigs in Lubbock.[11] At that time, Holly was influenced by late-night radio stations that played blues and rhythm and blues (R&B). He would sit in his car with Curtis and tune to distant radio stations that could only be received at night, when local transmissions ceased.[12] Holly then modified his music by blending his earlier country and western (C&W) influence with R&B.[13]

By 1955, after graduating from Lubbock High School, Holly decided to pursue a full-time career in music. He was further encouraged after seeing Elvis Presley perform live in Lubbock, whose act was booked by Pappy Dave Stone of KDAV. In February, Holly opened for Presley at the Fair Park Coliseum, in April at the Cotton Club, and again in June at the Coliseum. By that time, Holly had incorporated into his band Larry Welborn on the stand-up bass and Allison on drums, as his style shifted from country and western to rock and roll due to seeing Presley's performances and hearing his music.[12] In October, Stone booked Bill Haley & His Comets and placed Holley as the opening act to be seen by Nashville scout Eddie Crandall. Impressed, Crandall persuaded Grand Ole Opry manager Jim Denny to seek a recording contract for Holley. Stone sent a demo tape, which Denny forwarded to Paul Cohen, who signed the band to Decca Records in February 1956.[14] In the contract, Decca misspelled Holly's surname as "Holly", and from then on he was known as "Buddy Holly", instead of his real name "Holley."[citation needed]

On January 26, 1956, Holly attended his first formal recording session, which was produced by Owen Bradley.[15] He attended two more sessions in Nashville, but with the producer selecting the session musicians and arrangements, Holly became increasingly frustrated by his lack of creative control.[14] In April 1956, Decca released "Blue Days, Black Nights" as a single, with "Love Me" on the B-side. Denny included Holly on a tour as the opening act for Faron Young. During the tour, they were promoted as "Buddy Holly and the Two Tones", while later Decca called them "Buddy Holly and the Three Tunes."[14] The label later released Holly's second single "Modern Don Juan", backed with "You Are My One Desire." Neither single made an impression. On January 22, 1957, Decca informed Holly his contract would not be renewed, but insisted he could not record the same songs for anyone else for five years.[16]

The Crickets (1956–1957) edit

 
Buddy Holly and the Crickets in 1957 (top to bottom: Allison, Holly and Mauldin)

Holly was unhappy with the results of his time with Decca, and inspired by the success of Buddy Knox's "Party Doll" and Jimmy Bowen's "I'm Stickin' with You", he visited Norman Petty, who had produced and promoted both records. Together with Allison, bassist Larry Welborn, and rhythm guitarist Niki Sullivan, he went to Petty's studio in Clovis, New Mexico. The group recorded a demo of "That'll Be the Day", a song they had previously recorded in Nashville. Now playing lead guitar, Holly achieved the sound he desired. Petty became his manager and sent the record to Brunswick Records in New York City. Holly, still under contract with Decca, could not release the record under his name, so a band name was used; Allison proposed the name "Crickets." Brunswick gave Holly a basic agreement to release "That'll Be the Day", leaving him with both artistic control and financial responsibility for future recordings.[17]

Impressed with the demo, the label's executives released it without recording a new version. "I'm Looking for Someone to Love" was the B-side; the single was credited to The Crickets. Petty and Holly later learned that Brunswick was a subsidiary of Decca, which legally cleared future recordings under the name Buddy Holly. Recordings credited to the Crickets would be released on Brunswick, while the recordings under Holly's name were released on another subsidiary label, Coral Records. Holly concurrently held a recording contract with both labels.[18]

Norman Petty reasoned correctly that disc jockeys would be reluctant to play and promote multiple new records by the same artist, but would have no problem playing these same records if they were credited to different performers. Holly himself was unaware of this strategy; in a 1957 radio interview with Dale Lowery, Holly said, "We have three records going out right now. Of course, the first one was 'That'll Be the Day', the first one released. Then we have a new one out by The Crickets, called 'Oh Boy!' and 'Not Fade Away', and then there's one out, it's the same group but it's under my name -- I don't know why they did it that way, but it went out under my name -- called 'Peggy Sue' and 'Everyday'."[19] Holly's records were released with labels reading "Buddy Holly" or "The Crickets"; the band was never credited on records as "Buddy Holly and the Crickets" until 1962, when a compilation album was released.

"That'll Be the Day" was released on July 27, 1957. Petty booked Holly and the Crickets for a tour with Irvin Feld, who had noticed the band after "That'll Be the Day" appeared on the R&B chart. He booked them for appearances in Washington, D.C., Baltimore, and New York City.[20] The band was booked to play at New York's Apollo Theater on August 16–22. During the opening performances, the group did not impress the audience, but they were accepted after they included "Bo Diddley." By the end of their run at the Apollo, "That'll Be the Day" was climbing the charts. Encouraged by the single's success, Petty started to prepare two album releases; a solo album for Holly and another for the Crickets.[21] Holly appeared on American Bandstand, hosted by Dick Clark on ABC, on August 26. Before leaving New York, the band befriended The Everly Brothers.[22]

 
Cashbox advertisement, August 3, 1957

"That'll Be the Day" topped the US "Best Sellers in Stores" chart on September 23 and was number one on the UK Singles Chart for three weeks in November.[23] Three days prior, Coral released "Peggy Sue", backed with "Everyday", with Holly credited as the performer. By October, "Peggy Sue" had reached number three on Billboard's pop chart and number two on the R&B chart; it peaked at number six on the UK Singles chart. As the success of the song grew, it brought more attention to Holly, with the band at the time being billed as "Buddy Holly and the Crickets"[24] (although never on records during Holly's lifetime).

In the last week of September, the band members flew to Lubbock to visit their families.[25] Holly's high school girlfriend, Echo McGuire, had left him for a fellow student.[26] Aside from McGuire, Holly had a relationship with Lubbock fan June Clark.[27] After Clark ended their relationship, Holly realized the importance of his relationship with McGuire and considered his relationship with Clark a temporary one.[26] Meanwhile, for their return to recording, Petty arranged a session in Oklahoma City, where he was performing with his own band. While the band drove to the location, the producer set up a makeshift studio. The rest of the songs needed for an album and singles were recorded; Petty later dubbed the material in Clovis.[25] The resulting album, The "Chirping" Crickets, was released on November 27, 1957. It reached number five on the UK Albums Chart. In October, Brunswick released the second single by the Crickets, "Oh, Boy!", with "Not Fade Away" on the B-side. The single reached number 10 on the pop chart and 13 on the R&B chart.[24] Holly and the Crickets performed "That'll Be the Day" and "Peggy Sue" on The Ed Sullivan Show on December 1, 1957. Following the appearance, Niki Sullivan left the group because he was tired of the intensive touring, and he wanted to resume his education. On December 29, Holly and the Crickets performed "Peggy Sue" on The Arthur Murray Party.[28]

International tours and split (1958) edit

On January 8, 1958, Holly and the Crickets joined America's Greatest Teenage Recording Stars tour.[29] On January 25, Holly recorded "Rave On"; the next day, he made his second appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show, singing "Oh, Boy!"[29] Holly departed to perform in Honolulu, Hawaii, on January 27, and then started a week-long tour of Australia billed as the Big Show with Paul Anka, Jerry Lee Lewis and Jodie Sands.[30][31] In March, the band toured the United Kingdom, playing 50 shows in 25 days.[32] The same month, his debut solo album, Buddy Holly, was released. Upon their return to the United States, Holly and the Crickets joined Alan Freed's Big Beat Show tour for 41 dates. In April, Decca released That'll Be the Day, featuring the songs recorded with Bradley during his early Nashville sessions.[33]

A new recording session in Clovis was arranged in May; Holly hired Tommy Allsup to play lead guitar. The session produced the recordings of "It's So Easy" and "Heartbeat." Holly was impressed by Allsup and invited him to join the Crickets. In June, Holly traveled alone to New York for a solo recording session. Without the Crickets, he chose to be backed by a jazz and R&B band, recording "Now We're One" and Bobby Darin's "Early in the Morning."[34]

During a visit to the offices of Peer-Southern, Holly met María Elena Santiago. He asked her out on their first meeting and proposed marriage to her on their first date. The wedding took place on August 15. Norman Petty had tried to dissuade Holly from marriage; he felt that it would disappoint Holly's public and damage his career.

Holly and Santiago frequented many of New York's music venues, including the Village Gate, Blue Note, Village Vanguard, and Johnny Johnson's. Santiago later said that Holly was keen to learn fingerstyle flamenco guitar and that he would often visit her aunt's home to play the piano there. Holly planned collaborations between soul singers and rock and roll. He wanted to make an album with Ray Charles and Mahalia Jackson. Holly also had ambitions to work in film and registered for acting classes with Lee Strasberg's Actors Studio.[35]

Santiago accompanied Holly on tours. To hide her marriage to Holly, she was presented as the Crickets' secretary. She took care of the laundry and equipment set-up and collected the concert revenues. Santiago kept the money for the band instead of its habitual transfer to Petty in New Mexico.[36] She and her aunt Provi Garcia, an executive in the Latin American music department at Peer-Southern, convinced Holly that Petty was paying the band's royalties from Coral-Brunswick into his own company's account. Holly planned to retrieve his royalties from Petty and to later fire him as manager and producer. At the recommendation of the Everly Brothers, Holly hired lawyer Harold Orenstein to negotiate his royalties.[37] The problems with Petty were triggered after he was unable to pay Holly. At the time, New York promoter Manny Greenfield reclaimed a large part of Holly's earnings; Greenfield had booked Holly for shows during previous tours. The two had a verbal agreement; Greenfield would obtain 5% of the booking earnings. Greenfield later felt he was also acting as Holly's manager and deserved a higher payment, which Holly refused. Greenfield then sued Holly. Under New York law, because Holly's royalties originated in New York and were directed out of the state, the payments were frozen until the dispute was settled.[38]

In September, Holly returned to Clovis for a new recording session, which yielded "Reminiscing" and "Come Back Baby." During the session, he ventured into producing by recording Lubbock DJ Waylon Jennings. Holly produced the single "Jole Blon" and "When Sin Stops (Love Begins)" for Jennings.[39] Holly became increasingly interested in the New York music, recording, and publishing scene. Holly and Santiago settled in Apartment 4H of the Brevoort Apartments, at 11 Fifth Avenue in Greenwich Village, where he recorded a series of acoustic songs, including "Crying, Waiting, Hoping" and "What to Do."[40] The inspiration to record the songs is sometimes attributed to the ending of his relationship with McGuire.[41]

On October 21, 1958, Holly's final studio session was recorded at the Pythian Temple on West 70th Street (now a luxury condominium). Known by Holly fans as "the string sessions", Holly recorded four songs for Coral in an innovative collaboration with an 18-piece ensemble composed of former members of the NBC Symphony Orchestra (including saxophonist Boomie Richman) under the direction of Dick Jacobs.

The four songs recorded during the 3+12-hour session were:

These four songs were the only ones Coral ever mixed in stereo, but only "Raining in My Heart" was released that way (in 1959, on an obscure promotional LP titled Hitsville). All four records otherwise received releases in mono. The original stereo mixes were consulted many years later for compilation albums.

Holly ended his association with Petty in December 1958. His band members kept Petty as their manager and split from Holly. The split was amicable and based on logistics: Holly had decided to settle permanently in New York, where the business and publishing offices were, and the Crickets preferred not to leave their home state.

Winter Dance Party tour and death (1959) edit

 
Signpost near the Clear Lake crash site

Holly vacationed with his wife in Lubbock and visited Jennings's radio station in December 1958.[43] For the start of the Winter Dance Party tour, he assembled a band consisting of Waylon Jennings (electric bass), Tommy Allsup (guitar), and Carl Bunch (drums).[44] Holly and Jennings left for New York City, arriving on January 15, 1959. Jennings stayed at Holly's apartment by Washington Square Park on the days prior to a meeting scheduled at the headquarters of the General Artists Corporation, which organized the tour.[45] They then traveled by train to Chicago to join the rest of the band.[46]

 
Monument in front of Surf Ballroom in Clear Lake, Iowa

The Winter Dance Party tour began in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, on January 23, 1959. The amount of travel involved created logistical problems, as the distance between venues had not been considered when scheduling performances. Adding to the problem, the unheated tour buses twice broke down in freezing weather, with dire consequences. Holly's drummer, Carl Bunch, was hospitalized for frostbite to his toes (sustained while aboard the bus), so Holly decided to seek other transportation.[47] On February 2, before their appearance in Clear Lake, Iowa, Holly chartered a four-seat Beechcraft Bonanza airplane for Jennings, Allsup, and himself, from Dwyer Flying Service in Mason City, Iowa. Holly's idea was to depart following the show at the Surf Ballroom in Clear Lake and fly to their next venue, in Moorhead, Minnesota, via Fargo, North Dakota, allowing them time to rest and launder their clothes and avoid a rigorous bus journey. Immediately after the Clear Lake show (which ended just before midnight), Allsup agreed to flip a coin for the seat with Ritchie Valens. Valens called heads; when he won, he reportedly said, "That's the first time I've ever won anything in my life." Allsup later opened a restaurant/bar in Fort Worth, Texas, called Heads Up Saloon.[48] Waylon Jennings voluntarily gave up his seat to J. P. Richardson (the Big Bopper), who had influenza and complained that the tour bus was too cold and uncomfortable for a man of his size.[49]

The pilot, Roger Peterson, took off in inclement weather, even though he was not certified to fly by instruments only. Buddy's brother Larry Holley said, "I got the full report from the Civil Aeronautics – it took me a year to get it, but I got it – and they had installed a new Sperry gyroscope in the airplane. The Sperry works different than any other gyro. One of them, the background moves and the plane stays like this [stationary], and in the other one the background stays steady and the plane moves, it works just backwards. He [the pilot] could have been reading this backwards... they were going down, they thought they were still climbing."

Shortly after 1:00 a.m. on February 3, 1959, Holly, Valens, Richardson, and Peterson were killed when the aircraft crashed into a cornfield five miles northwest of Clear Lake shortly after takeoff. The three musicians, who were ejected from the fuselage upon impact, sustained severe head and chest injuries.[50] Holly was 22 years old.

The report did not mention a gun belonging to Holly that was found by a farmer two months after the crash. Newspaper accounts of the gun discovery fueled rumors among fans that the pilot was somehow shot, causing the crash. Another curious finding at the crash was that Richardson's body was discovered nearly 40 feet (12 metres) away from the crash while the others were found in or near the wreckage. However, an autopsy done at the request of Richardson's son in 2007 found no evidence to support the rumors. Dr. Bill Bass, a forensic anthropologist at the University of Tennessee, stated that "There was no indication of foul play," and that Richardson "died immediately."[51]

 
Holly's headstone in the City of Lubbock Cemetery

Holly's funeral was held on February 7, 1959, at the Tabernacle Baptist Church in Lubbock. The service was officiated by Ben D. Johnson, who had presided at the Hollys' wedding just months earlier. The pallbearers were Jerry Allison, Joe B. Mauldin, Niki Sullivan, Bob Montgomery, and Sonny Curtis. Some sources say that Phil Everly, one half of The Everly Brothers, was also pallbearer, but Everly said that he attended the funeral but was not a pallbearer.[52] Waylon Jennings was unable to attend because of his commitment to the still-touring Winter Dance Party. Holly's body was interred in the City of Lubbock Cemetery, in the eastern part of the city. Holly's headstone carries the correct spelling of his surname (Holley) and a carving of his Fender Stratocaster guitar.[53]

Santiago watched the first reports of Holly's death on television. The following day, she suffered a miscarriage. Holly's mother, who heard the news on the radio in Lubbock, Texas, screamed and collapsed. Because of Elena's miscarriage, in the months following the accident, some government authorities implemented a policy against announcing victims' names until after families are informed.[54] Santiago did not attend the funeral and has never visited the gravesite. She later told the Avalanche-Journal, "In a way, I blame myself. I was not feeling well when he left. I was two weeks pregnant, and I wanted Buddy to stay with me, but he had scheduled that tour. It was the only time I wasn't with him. And I blame myself because I know that, if only I had gone along, Buddy never would have gotten into that airplane."[55]

Image and style edit

Holly's singing style was characterized by his vocal hiccups and his alternation between his regular voice and falsetto.[56] Holly's "stuttering vocals" were complemented by his percussive guitar playing, solos, stops, bent notes, and rhythm and blues chord progressions.[57] He often strummed downstrokes that were accompanied by Allison's "driving" percussion.[13]

Holly bought his first Fender Stratocaster, which became his signature guitar, at Harrod Music in Lubbock for $249.50. Fender Stratocasters were popular with country musicians; Holly chose it for its loud sound.[58] His "innovative" playing style was characterized by its blending of "chunky rhythm" and "high string lead work." Holly played his first Stratocaster, a 1954 model, until it was stolen during a tour stop in Michigan in 1957. To replace it, he purchased a 1957 model before a show in Detroit. Holly owned four or five Stratocasters during his career.[59]

At the beginning of their music careers, Holly and his group wore business suits. When they met the Everly Brothers, Don Everly took the band to Phil's men's shop in New York City and introduced them to Ivy League clothes. The brothers advised Holly to replace his old-fashioned glasses with horn-rimmed glasses, which had been popularized by Steve Allen.[60] Holly bought a pair of glasses made in Mexico from Lubbock optometrist Dr. J. Davis Armistead. Teenagers in the United States started to request this style of glasses, which were later popularly known as "Buddy Holly glasses."[61]

When the plane crashed, the wreckage was strewn across many yards (meters) of snow-covered ground. While his other belongings were recovered immediately, there was no record of his signature glasses being found. They were presumed lost until, in March 1980, they were discovered in a Cerro Gordo County courthouse storage area by Sheriff Gerald Allen. They had been found in the spring of 1959, after the snow had melted, and had been given to the sheriff's office. They were placed in an envelope dated April 7, 1959, along with the Big Bopper's watch, a lighter, two pairs of dice and part of another watch, and misplaced when the county moved courthouses. The glasses, missing their lenses, were returned to Santiago a year later, after a legal contest over them with his parents. They are now on display at the Buddy Holly Center in Lubbock, Texas.[62][63]

Legacy edit

 
Poster for the ill-fated "Winter Dance Party" tour

Buddy Holly left behind dozens of unfinished recordings — solo transcriptions of his new compositions, informal jam sessions with bandmates, or tapes demonstrating songs intended for other artists. The last known recordings, made in Holly's apartment in late 1958, were his last six original songs. In June 1959, Coral Records overdubbed two of them with backing vocals by the Ray Charles Singers and studio musicians in an attempt to simulate the established Crickets sound. The finished tracks became the first posthumous Holly single, "Peggy Sue Got Married"/"Crying, Waiting, Hoping." The new release was successful enough to warrant an album drawing upon the other Holly demos, using the same studio personnel, in January 1960.[64] All six songs were included in The Buddy Holly Story, Vol. 2 (1960).

The demand for Holly records was so great, and Holly had recorded so prolifically, that his record label was able to release new Holly albums and singles for the next 10 years. Norman Petty produced most of these new editions, drawing upon unreleased studio masters, alternate takes, audition tapes, and even amateur recordings (some dating back to 1954 with low-fidelity vocals). The final "new" Buddy Holly album, Giant, was released in 1969; the single chosen from the album was "Love Is Strange."[65]

Encyclopædia Britannica stated that Holly "produced some of the most distinctive and influential work in rock music."[66] AllMusic defined him as "the single most influential creative force in early rock and roll."[67] Rolling Stone ranked him number 13 on its list of "100 Greatest Artists."[68] The Telegraph called him a "pioneer and a revolutionary [...] a multidimensional talent [...] (who) co-wrote and performed (songs that) remain as fresh and potent today."[69] In 2023, Rolling Stone ranked Holly at number 174 on its list of the 200 Greatest Singers of All Time.[70]

The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame included Holly among its first class in 1986. On its entry, the Hall of Fame remarked upon the large quantity of material he produced during his short musical career, and said it "made a major and lasting impact on popular music." It called him an "innovator" for writing his own material, his experimentation with double tracking and the use of orchestration; he is also said to have "pioneered and popularized the now-standard" use of two guitars, bass, and drums by rock bands.[71] The Songwriters Hall of Fame also inducted Holly in 1986, and said his contributions "changed the face of Rock 'n' Roll."[72] Holly developed in collaboration with Petty techniques of overdubbing and reverb, while he used innovative instrumentation later implemented by other artists.[13] Holly became "one of the most influential pioneers of rock and roll" who had a "lasting influence" on genre performers of the 1960s.[57]

 
The Buddy Holly Center, a museum in Lubbock, Texas

In 1980, Grant Speed sculpted a statue of Holly playing his Fender guitar. This statue is the centerpiece of Lubbock's Walk of Fame, which honors notable people who contributed to Lubbock's musical history. Other memorials to Buddy Holly include a street named in his honor and the Buddy Holly Center, which contains a museum of Holly memorabilia and fine arts gallery. The center is located on Crickets Avenue, one street east of Buddy Holly Avenue, in a building that previously housed the Fort Worth and Denver South Plains Railway Depot.[73] In 2010, the statue was taken down for refurbishment, and construction of a new Walk of Fame began.

In 1997, the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences gave Holly the Lifetime Achievement Award.[74] He was inducted into the Iowa Rock 'n' Roll Hall of Fame in 2000. On May 9, 2011, the City of Lubbock held a ribbon-cutting ceremony for the Buddy and Maria Elena Holly Plaza, the new home of the statue and the Walk of Fame.[75] On what would have been his 75th birthday, a star bearing Holly's name was placed on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.[76]

Groundbreaking was held on April 20, 2017, for the construction of a new performing arts center in Lubbock, the Buddy Holly Hall of Performing Arts and Sciences, a downtown $153 million project expected to be completed in 2020.[77] Thus far, the private group, the Lubbock Entertainment and Performing Arts Association, has raised or received pledges in the amount of $93 million to underwrite the project.[78]

According to a June 2019 article in The New York Times Magazine, "virtually all" of Holly's masters were lost in the 2008 Universal fire.[79] This is disputed by Chad Kassem of Analogue Productions, who claims to have used the master tapes of Holly's first two albums in Analogue Productions reissues of these albums on LP and SACD in 2017.[80]

Influence edit

John Lennon and Paul McCartney saw Holly for the first time when he appeared on Sunday Night at the London Palladium.[81] The two had recently met and begun their musical association. They studied Holly's records, learned his performance style and lyricism, and based their act around his persona. Inspired by Holly's insect-themed Crickets, they chose to name their band "the Beatles". Lennon and McCartney later cited Holly as one of their main influences.[82]

Lennon's band the Quarrymen covered "That'll Be the Day" in their first recording session, in 1958.[83] During breaks in the Beatles' first appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show, on February 9, 1964, Lennon asked CBS coordinator Vince Calandra about Holly's performances; Calandra said Lennon and McCartney repeatedly expressed their appreciation of Holly.[84] The Beatles recorded a close cover of Holly's version of "Words of Love", which was released on their 1964 album Beatles for Sale (in the US, in June 1965 on Beatles VI). During the January 1969 recording sessions for their album Let It Be, the Beatles played a slow, impromptu version of "Mailman, Bring Me No More Blues" – which Holly popularized but did not write – with Lennon mimicking Holly's vocal style.[85] Lennon recorded a cover version of "Peggy Sue" on his 1975 album Rock 'n' Roll.[86] McCartney owns the publishing rights to Holly's song catalog.[87]

On January 31, 1959, two nights before Holly's death, 17-year-old Bob Dylan attended Holly's performance in Duluth. Dylan referred to this in his acceptance speech when he received the Grammy Award for Album of the Year for Time Out of Mind in 1998: "... when I was sixteen or seventeen years old, I went to see Buddy Holly play at Duluth National Guard Armory and I was three feet away from him ... and he looked at me. And I just have some sort of feeling that he was ... with us all the time we were making this record in some kind of way."[88]

Mick Jagger saw Holly performing live in Woolwich, London, during a tour of the UK; Jagger particularly remembered Holly's performance of "Not Fade Away" – a song that also inspired Keith Richards, who modeled his early guitar playing on the track. The Rolling Stones had a hit version of the song in 1964.[89] Richards later said, "[Holly] passed it on via the Beatles and via [the Rolling Stones] ... He's in everybody."[90]

Don McLean's popular 1971 ballad "American Pie" was inspired by Holly's death and the day of the plane crash. The song's lyric, which calls the incident "The Day the Music Died", became popularly associated with the crash. McLean's album American Pie is dedicated to Holly.[91] In 2015, McLean wrote, "Buddy Holly would have the same stature musically whether he would have lived or died, because of his accomplishments ... By the time he was 22 years old, he had recorded some 50 tracks, most of which he had written himself ... in my view and the view of many others, a hit ... Buddy Holly and the Crickets were the template for all the rock bands that followed."[92]

Elton John was musically influenced by Holly. At age 13, although he did not require them, John started wearing horn-rimmed glasses to imitate Holly.[93] The Clash were also influenced by Holly, and referenced him in their song "If Music Could Talk" from the Sandinista! album.[94] The Chirping Crickets was the first album Eric Clapton ever bought; he later saw Holly on Sunday Night at the London Palladium. In his autobiography, Clapton recounted the first time he saw Holly and his Fender, saying, "I thought I'd died and gone to heaven ... it was like seeing an instrument from outer space and I said to myself: 'That's the future – that's what I want'".[95]

The launch of Bobby Vee's successful musical career resulted from Holly's death; Vee was selected to replace Holly on the tour that continued after the plane crash. Holly's profound influence on Vee's singing style can be heard in the songs "Rubber Ball" – the B-side of which was a cover of Holly's "Everyday" – and "Run to Him."[96] The name of the British rock band the Hollies is often claimed as a tribute to Holly; according to the band, they admired Holly, but their name was mainly inspired by sprigs of holly in evidence around Christmas 1962.[97] In an August 24, 1978, interview with Rolling Stone, Bruce Springsteen told Dave Marsh, "I play Buddy Holly every night before I go on; that keeps me honest."[98] The Grateful Dead performed the song "Not Fade Away" in concerts.[99]

In 2016, Richard Barone released his album Sorrows & Promises: Greenwich Village in the 1960s, paying tribute to the new wave of singer-songwriters in the Village during that pivotal, post-Holly era. The album opens with Barone's version of "Learning the Game", one of the final songs written and recorded by Holly at his home in Greenwich Village, a week before his death.[100]

Film and musical depictions edit

Holly's life story inspired a Hollywood biographical film, The Buddy Holly Story (1978); its lead actor Gary Busey received a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Actor for his portrayal of Holly. The film was widely criticized by the rock press, and by Holly's friends and family, for its inaccuracies.[101] This led Paul McCartney (whose MPL Communications by then controlled the publishing rights to Buddy Holly's song catalog) to produce and host his own documentary about Holly in 1985, titled The Real Buddy Holly Story. This video includes interviews with Keith Richards, Phil and Don Everly, Sonny Curtis, Jerry Allison, Holly's family, and McCartney, among others.[102]

In 1987, musician Marshall Crenshaw portrayed Buddy Holly in the movie La Bamba, which depicts him performing at the Surf Ballroom and boarding the fatal airplane with Ritchie Valens and the Big Bopper. Crenshaw's version of "Crying, Waiting, Hoping" is featured on the La Bamba original motion picture soundtrack.[103]

Buddy: The Buddy Holly Story, a jukebox musical depicting Holly's life, opened in 1989.

Holly was depicted in a 1989 episode of the science-fiction television program Quantum Leap titled "How the Tess Was Won"; Holly's identity is only revealed at the end of the episode. Dr. Sam Beckett (Scott Bakula) influences Buddy Holly to change his lyrics from "piggy, suey" to "Peggy Sue", setting up Holly's future hit song.[104] Holly's follow up to that hit song is featured in the 1986 Francis Ford Coppola film Peggy Sue Got Married, in which a 43-year-old mother and housewife facing divorce played by Kathleen Turner is thrust back in time and given the chance to change the course of her life.

Steve Buscemi appeared as Holly in a brief cameo as a 1950s-themed restaurant employee in Quentin Tarantino's 1994 film Pulp Fiction, in which he takes Mia Wallace and Vincent Vega's orders (portrayed respectively by Uma Thurman and John Travolta).

In 1961, Mike Berry recorded "Tribute to Buddy Holly."

In 1985, the German punk band Die Ärzte composed a song centering on Buddy Holly's glasses, titled "Buddy Holly's Brille."[105]

In 1998, the post-apocalyptic film Six-String Samurai depicted Holly as a guitar-playing samurai traveling to Las Vegas to become the new king of Nevada after the death of Elvis Presley.

Weezer's first top 40 single in the US was titled "Buddy Holly."

In 2006, country band the Dixie Chicks mention Buddy Holly in their song "Lubbock or Leave It." Lead singer Natalie Maines and Holly share a hometown of Lubbock, Texas.

In the animated series The Venture Bros., it is implied that the elderly villains Dragoon and Red Mantle are actually Richardson and Buddy Holly, who were recruited into the supervillain organization the Guild of Calamitous Intent on the night of their supposed deaths.

The TV documentary Buddy Holly – Rave On: The Story of Buddy Holly aired on BBC Four in 2017.[106] An upcoming documentary The Day the Music Died/American Pie explores the story behind the Don McLean song[107]

Discography edit

The Crickets edit

Solo edit

References edit

  1. ^ Tobler, John The Buddy Holly Story, published 1979 Beaufort Books
  2. ^ Driggars, Alex (April 8, 2022). "Larry Holley, Eldest Brother of Buddy Holly, Dies at 96". Lubbock Avalanche-Journal.
  3. ^ . lubbockonline.com. Archived from the original on August 6, 2017. Retrieved December 30, 2016.
  4. ^ "Patricia Holley Obituary (2008) - Surrey Advertiser". www.legacy.com.
  5. ^ Buddy Holly: A Biography By Ellis Amburn pg. 10
  6. ^ a b Gribbin 2012, p. 12.
  7. ^ Gribbin 2012, p. 13.
  8. ^ Gribbin 2012, p. 14.
  9. ^ Norman 2011, p. 34.
  10. ^ Schinder & Schwartz 2007, p. 80.
  11. ^ Lehmer 2003, p. 6.
  12. ^ a b Lehmer 2003, p. 7.
  13. ^ a b c Wishart 2004, p. 540.
  14. ^ a b c Carr, Joseph & Munde, Alan 1997, p. 130.
  15. ^ Schinder & Schwartz 2007, p. 97.
  16. ^ Uslan & Solomon 1981, p. 49.
  17. ^ Amburn, Ellis (April 22, 2014). Buddy Holly: A Biography. St. Martin's Griffin. p. 101. ISBN 9781466868564 – via Google Books.
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  19. ^ Buddy Holly interviewed by Dale Lowery for KTOP radio (Topeka, Kansas), 1957.
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  71. ^ Rock and Roll Hall of Fame staff 2015.
  72. ^ Songwriters hall of Fame staff 2002.
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  74. ^ Hollywood Reporter Staff 1997.
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  78. ^ Kerns, William (April 1, 2017). "Restaurant Partnership, Groundbreaking Date Announced for Buddy Holly Hall". Lubbock Avalanche-Journal. Retrieved April 1, 2017.
  79. ^ Rosen, Jody (June 11, 2019). "The Day the Music Burned: It Was the Biggest Disaster in the History of the Music Business — and Almost Nobody Knew". The New York Times Magazine. Archived from the original on January 1, 2022. Retrieved June 11, 2019.
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  91. ^ Crouse, Richard 2012, p. 86.
  92. ^ McLean 2015.
  93. ^ Goldrosen 1979, p. 8.
  94. ^ Fletcher 2012, p. 174.
  95. ^ Clapton, Eric 2010, p. 19.
  96. ^ Dean, Maury 2003, p. 73.
  97. ^ Eder, Bruce 1996.
  98. ^ Deardorff II, Donald 2013, p. 16.
  99. ^ Meriwether 2013, p. 134.
  100. ^ "Richard Barone Breathes New Life into the Golden Age of Village Folk". Observer. April 12, 2017.
  101. ^ Flippo, Chet (September 21, 1978). . Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on November 17, 2017. Retrieved December 19, 2015.
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  103. ^ Green 1999, p. 267.
  104. ^ Phillips & Garcia 1996, p. 358.
  105. ^ Leim, Christof; Hömke, Andrea (April 14, 2019). "Time Jump: On April 7, 1959 Buddy Holly's Glasses Are Found in Iowa". U Discover (in German). Retrieved February 13, 2021.
  106. ^ "Buddy Holly: Rave On". BBC Four. Retrieved May 29, 2022.
  107. ^ "The Day the Music Died/American Pie". IMDb. Retrieved May 29, 2022.

Sources edit

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  • Blaney, John (2005). John Lennon: Listen to This Book. John Blaney. ISBN 978-0-954-45281-0.
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  • Clapton, Eric (2010). Eric Clapton: The Autobiography. Random House. ISBN 978-1-409-06039-0.
  • Corbin, Sky (2014). . KLLL. Archived from the original on July 14, 2014.
  • Crenshaw, Marshall (2015). "Buddy Holly (American Musician)". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved March 24, 2015.
  • Crouse, Richard (2012). Who Wrote The Book of Love?. Random House Digital. ISBN 978-0-385-67442-3.
  • Dean, Maury (2003). Rock and Roll: Gold Rush. Algora Publishing. ISBN 978-0-875-86227-9.
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  • Everitt, Rich (2004). Falling Stars: Air Crashes That Filled Rock and Roll Heaven. Harbor House. ISBN 978-1-891799-04-4.
  • Fletcher, Tony (2012). The Clash: The Music That Matters. Music Sales Group. ISBN 978-0-857-12749-5.
  • Gaar, Gillian (2013). 100 Things Beatles Fans Should Know & Do Before They Die. Triunph Books. ISBN 978-1-623-68202-6.
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  • Green, Stanley (1999). Hollywood Musicals Year by Year. Hal Leonard Corporation. ISBN 978-0-634-00765-1.
  • Gribbin, John (2012). Not Fade Away: The Life and Music of Buddy Holly. Icon Books. ISBN 978-1-848-31384-2.
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Further reading edit

  • Bustard, Anne (2005). Buddy: The Story of Buddy Holly. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-1-4223-9302-4.
  • Comentale, Edward P. (2013). Chapter Five. Sweet Air: Modernism, Regionalism, and American Popular Song. University of Illinois Press. ISBN 978-0-252-07892-7.
  • Dawson, Jim; Leigh, Spencer (1996). Memories of Buddy Holly. Big Nickel Publications. ISBN 978-0-936433-20-2.
  • Gerron, Peggy Sue (2008). Whatever Happened to Peggy Sue?. Togi Entertainment. ISBN 978-0-9800085-0-0.
  • Goldrosen, John; Beecher, John (1996). Remembering Buddy: The Definitive Biography. New York: Da Capo Press. ISBN 0-306-80715-7.
  • Goldrosen, John (1975). Buddy Holly: His Life and Music. Popular Press. ISBN 0-85947-018-0
  • Laing, Dave (1971–2010). Buddy Holly. Icons of Pop Music. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-22168-4. OCLC 611172616.
  • Mann, Alan (1996). The A-Z of Buddy Holly. Aurum Press (2nd edition). ISBN 1-85410-433-0 or 978–1854104335.
  • McFadden, Hugh (2005). "Elegy for Charles Hardin Holley". Elegies & Epiphanies: Selected Poems. Belfast: Lagan Press.
  • Norman, Phillip (1996) Rave On: The Biography of Buddy Holly. Simon & Schuster Publishing. ISBN 0684800829.
  • Peer, Elizabeth and Ralph II (1972). Buddy Holly: A Biography in Words, Photographs and Music Australia: Peer International. ASIN B000W24DZO.
  • Peters, Richard (1990). The Legend That Is Buddy Holly. Barnes & Noble Books. ISBN 0-285-63005-9 or 978–0285630055.
  • Rabin, Stanton (2009). OH BOY! The Life and Music of Rock 'n' Roll Pioneer Buddy Holly. Van Winkle Publishing (Kindle). ASIN B0010QBLLG.
  • Tobler, John (1979). The Buddy Holly Story. Beaufort Books.
  • VH1's Behind the Music The Day the Music Died interview with Waylon Jennings

External links edit

buddy, holly, this, article, about, musician, album, album, weezer, song, song, charles, holly, redirects, here, colorado, judge, charles, frederick, holly, charles, hardin, holley, september, 1936, february, 1959, known, american, singer, songwriter, central,. This article is about the musician For his album see Buddy Holly album For the Weezer song see Buddy Holly song Charles Holly redirects here For the Colorado judge see Charles Frederick Holly Charles Hardin Holley September 7 1936 February 3 1959 known as Buddy Holly was an American singer and songwriter who was a central and pioneering figure of mid 1950s rock and roll He was born to a musical family in Lubbock Texas during the Great Depression and learned to play guitar and sing alongside his siblings Holly s style was influenced by gospel music country music and rhythm and blues acts which he performed in Lubbock with his friends from high school Buddy HollyHolly in 1957BornCharles Hardin Holley 1936 09 07 September 7 1936Lubbock Texas U S DiedFebruary 3 1959 1959 02 03 aged 22 Clear Lake Iowa U S Cause of deathBlunt trauma as a result of a plane accidentResting placeCity of Lubbock Cemetery in Lubbock County TexasOccupationsSingersongwriterYears active1952 1959SpouseMaria Elena Santiago m 1958 wbr Musical careerGenresRock and rollrockabillypopcountry 1 InstrumentsVocalsguitarDiscographyBuddy Holly discographyLabelsDeccaBrunswickCoralFormerly ofBuddy and BobThe Crickets Holly made his first appearance on local television in 1952 and the following year he formed the group Buddy and Bob with his friend Bob Montgomery In 1955 after opening for Elvis Presley Holly decided to pursue a career in music He opened for Presley three times that year his band s style shifted from country and western to entirely rock and roll In October that year when Holly opened for Bill Haley amp His Comets he was spotted by Nashville scout Eddie Crandall who helped him get a contract with Decca Records Holly s recording sessions at Decca were produced by Owen Bradley who had become famous for producing orchestrated country hits for stars like Patsy Cline Unhappy with Bradley s musical style and control in the studio Holly went to producer Norman Petty in Clovis New Mexico and recorded a demo of That ll Be the Day among other songs Petty became the band s manager and sent the demo to Brunswick Records which released it as a single credited to The Crickets which became the name of Holly s band In September 1957 as the band toured That ll Be the Day topped the US and UK singles charts Its success was followed in October by another major hit Peggy Sue The album The Chirping Crickets released in November 1957 reached number five on the UK Albums Chart Holly made his second appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show in January 1958 and soon after toured Australia and then the UK In early 1959 he assembled a new band consisting of future country music star Waylon Jennings bass famed session musician Tommy Allsup guitar and Carl Bunch drums and embarked on a tour of the midwestern US After a show in Clear Lake Iowa Holly chartered an airplane to travel to his next show in Moorhead Minnesota Soon after takeoff the plane crashed killing Holly Ritchie Valens The Big Bopper and pilot Roger Peterson in a tragedy later referred to by Don McLean as The Day the Music Died in his song American Pie During his short career Holly wrote and recorded many songs He is often regarded as the artist who defined the traditional rock and roll lineup of two guitars bass and drums Holly was a major influence on later popular music artists including Bob Dylan the Beatles the Rolling Stones Eric Clapton the Hollies Elvis Costello Dave Edmunds Marshall Crenshaw and Elton John Holly was among the first artists inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1986 Rolling Stone magazine ranked him number 13 in its list of 100 Greatest Artists in 2010 Contents 1 Life and career 1 1 Early life and career 1936 1955 1 2 The Crickets 1956 1957 1 3 International tours and split 1958 1 4 Winter Dance Party tour and death 1959 2 Image and style 3 Legacy 3 1 Influence 3 2 Film and musical depictions 4 Discography 4 1 The Crickets 4 2 Solo 5 References 5 1 Sources 6 Further reading 7 External linksLife and career editEarly life and career 1936 1955 edit Holly was born as Charles Hardin Holley spelled ey in Lubbock Texas on September 7 1936 the youngest of four children of Lawrence Odell L O Holley 1901 85 and Ella Pauline Drake 1902 90 His elder siblings were Larry 1925 2022 2 Travis 1927 2016 3 and Patricia Lou 1929 2008 4 Holly was of mostly English and Welsh descent and had small amounts of Native American ancestry as well 5 From early childhood Holly was nicknamed Buddy 6 During the Great Depression the Holleys frequently moved residence within Lubbock L O changed jobs several times Buddy Holly was baptized a Baptist and the family were members of the Tabernacle Baptist Church 6 The Holleys had an interest in music all the family members except L O were able to play an instrument or sing The elder Holley brothers performed in local talent shows on one occasion Buddy joined them on violin Since he could not play it his brother Larry greased the bow so it would not make any sound The brothers won the contest 7 During World War II Larry and Travis were called to military service Upon his return Larry brought with him a guitar he had bought from a shipmate while serving in the Pacific At age 11 at his mother s urging Buddy took piano lessons but abandoned them after nine months He switched to the guitar after he saw a classmate playing and singing on the school bus Buddy s parents initially bought him a steel guitar but he insisted that he wanted a guitar like his brother s His parents bought him an acoustic guitar from a local pawnshop and he learned how to play it from Travis 8 During his early childhood Holly was influenced by the music of Hank Williams Jimmie Rodgers Moon Mullican Bill Monroe Hank Snow Bob Wills and the Carter Family At Roscoe Wilson Elementary Holly became friends with Bob Montgomery and the two played together practicing with songs by The Louvin Brothers and Johnnie amp Jack 9 They both listened to the radio programs Grand Ole Opry on WSM Louisiana Hayride on KWKH and Big D Jamboree At the same time Holly played with other musicians he met in high school including Sonny Curtis and Jerry Allison 10 In 1952 Holly and Jack Neal participated as a duo billed as Buddy and Jack in a talent contest on a local television show After Neal left he was replaced by Bob Montgomery and they were billed as Buddy and Bob They soon started performing on the Sunday Party show on KDAV in 1953 and performed live gigs in Lubbock 11 At that time Holly was influenced by late night radio stations that played blues and rhythm and blues R amp B He would sit in his car with Curtis and tune to distant radio stations that could only be received at night when local transmissions ceased 12 Holly then modified his music by blending his earlier country and western C amp W influence with R amp B 13 By 1955 after graduating from Lubbock High School Holly decided to pursue a full time career in music He was further encouraged after seeing Elvis Presley perform live in Lubbock whose act was booked by Pappy Dave Stone of KDAV In February Holly opened for Presley at the Fair Park Coliseum in April at the Cotton Club and again in June at the Coliseum By that time Holly had incorporated into his band Larry Welborn on the stand up bass and Allison on drums as his style shifted from country and western to rock and roll due to seeing Presley s performances and hearing his music 12 In October Stone booked Bill Haley amp His Comets and placed Holley as the opening act to be seen by Nashville scout Eddie Crandall Impressed Crandall persuaded Grand Ole Opry manager Jim Denny to seek a recording contract for Holley Stone sent a demo tape which Denny forwarded to Paul Cohen who signed the band to Decca Records in February 1956 14 In the contract Decca misspelled Holly s surname as Holly and from then on he was known as Buddy Holly instead of his real name Holley citation needed On January 26 1956 Holly attended his first formal recording session which was produced by Owen Bradley 15 He attended two more sessions in Nashville but with the producer selecting the session musicians and arrangements Holly became increasingly frustrated by his lack of creative control 14 In April 1956 Decca released Blue Days Black Nights as a single with Love Me on the B side Denny included Holly on a tour as the opening act for Faron Young During the tour they were promoted as Buddy Holly and the Two Tones while later Decca called them Buddy Holly and the Three Tunes 14 The label later released Holly s second single Modern Don Juan backed with You Are My One Desire Neither single made an impression On January 22 1957 Decca informed Holly his contract would not be renewed but insisted he could not record the same songs for anyone else for five years 16 The Crickets 1956 1957 edit nbsp Buddy Holly and the Crickets in 1957 top to bottom Allison Holly and Mauldin Holly was unhappy with the results of his time with Decca and inspired by the success of Buddy Knox s Party Doll and Jimmy Bowen s I m Stickin with You he visited Norman Petty who had produced and promoted both records Together with Allison bassist Larry Welborn and rhythm guitarist Niki Sullivan he went to Petty s studio in Clovis New Mexico The group recorded a demo of That ll Be the Day a song they had previously recorded in Nashville Now playing lead guitar Holly achieved the sound he desired Petty became his manager and sent the record to Brunswick Records in New York City Holly still under contract with Decca could not release the record under his name so a band name was used Allison proposed the name Crickets Brunswick gave Holly a basic agreement to release That ll Be the Day leaving him with both artistic control and financial responsibility for future recordings 17 Impressed with the demo the label s executives released it without recording a new version I m Looking for Someone to Love was the B side the single was credited to The Crickets Petty and Holly later learned that Brunswick was a subsidiary of Decca which legally cleared future recordings under the name Buddy Holly Recordings credited to the Crickets would be released on Brunswick while the recordings under Holly s name were released on another subsidiary label Coral Records Holly concurrently held a recording contract with both labels 18 Norman Petty reasoned correctly that disc jockeys would be reluctant to play and promote multiple new records by the same artist but would have no problem playing these same records if they were credited to different performers Holly himself was unaware of this strategy in a 1957 radio interview with Dale Lowery Holly said We have three records going out right now Of course the first one was That ll Be the Day the first one released Then we have a new one out by The Crickets called Oh Boy and Not Fade Away and then there s one out it s the same group but it s under my name I don t know why they did it that way but it went out under my name called Peggy Sue and Everyday 19 Holly s records were released with labels reading Buddy Holly or The Crickets the band was never credited on records as Buddy Holly and the Crickets until 1962 when a compilation album was released That ll Be the Day was released on July 27 1957 Petty booked Holly and the Crickets for a tour with Irvin Feld who had noticed the band after That ll Be the Day appeared on the R amp B chart He booked them for appearances in Washington D C Baltimore and New York City 20 The band was booked to play at New York s Apollo Theater on August 16 22 During the opening performances the group did not impress the audience but they were accepted after they included Bo Diddley By the end of their run at the Apollo That ll Be the Day was climbing the charts Encouraged by the single s success Petty started to prepare two album releases a solo album for Holly and another for the Crickets 21 Holly appeared on American Bandstand hosted by Dick Clark on ABC on August 26 Before leaving New York the band befriended The Everly Brothers 22 nbsp Cashbox advertisement August 3 1957 That ll Be the Day topped the US Best Sellers in Stores chart on September 23 and was number one on the UK Singles Chart for three weeks in November 23 Three days prior Coral released Peggy Sue backed with Everyday with Holly credited as the performer By October Peggy Sue had reached number three on Billboard s pop chart and number two on the R amp B chart it peaked at number six on the UK Singles chart As the success of the song grew it brought more attention to Holly with the band at the time being billed as Buddy Holly and the Crickets 24 although never on records during Holly s lifetime In the last week of September the band members flew to Lubbock to visit their families 25 Holly s high school girlfriend Echo McGuire had left him for a fellow student 26 Aside from McGuire Holly had a relationship with Lubbock fan June Clark 27 After Clark ended their relationship Holly realized the importance of his relationship with McGuire and considered his relationship with Clark a temporary one 26 Meanwhile for their return to recording Petty arranged a session in Oklahoma City where he was performing with his own band While the band drove to the location the producer set up a makeshift studio The rest of the songs needed for an album and singles were recorded Petty later dubbed the material in Clovis 25 The resulting album The Chirping Crickets was released on November 27 1957 It reached number five on the UK Albums Chart In October Brunswick released the second single by the Crickets Oh Boy with Not Fade Away on the B side The single reached number 10 on the pop chart and 13 on the R amp B chart 24 Holly and the Crickets performed That ll Be the Day and Peggy Sue on The Ed Sullivan Show on December 1 1957 Following the appearance Niki Sullivan left the group because he was tired of the intensive touring and he wanted to resume his education On December 29 Holly and the Crickets performed Peggy Sue on The Arthur Murray Party 28 International tours and split 1958 edit On January 8 1958 Holly and the Crickets joined America s Greatest Teenage Recording Stars tour 29 On January 25 Holly recorded Rave On the next day he made his second appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show singing Oh Boy 29 Holly departed to perform in Honolulu Hawaii on January 27 and then started a week long tour of Australia billed as the Big Show with Paul Anka Jerry Lee Lewis and Jodie Sands 30 31 In March the band toured the United Kingdom playing 50 shows in 25 days 32 The same month his debut solo album Buddy Holly was released Upon their return to the United States Holly and the Crickets joined Alan Freed s Big Beat Show tour for 41 dates In April Decca released That ll Be the Day featuring the songs recorded with Bradley during his early Nashville sessions 33 A new recording session in Clovis was arranged in May Holly hired Tommy Allsup to play lead guitar The session produced the recordings of It s So Easy and Heartbeat Holly was impressed by Allsup and invited him to join the Crickets In June Holly traveled alone to New York for a solo recording session Without the Crickets he chose to be backed by a jazz and R amp B band recording Now We re One and Bobby Darin s Early in the Morning 34 During a visit to the offices of Peer Southern Holly met Maria Elena Santiago He asked her out on their first meeting and proposed marriage to her on their first date The wedding took place on August 15 Norman Petty had tried to dissuade Holly from marriage he felt that it would disappoint Holly s public and damage his career Holly and Santiago frequented many of New York s music venues including the Village Gate Blue Note Village Vanguard and Johnny Johnson s Santiago later said that Holly was keen to learn fingerstyle flamenco guitar and that he would often visit her aunt s home to play the piano there Holly planned collaborations between soul singers and rock and roll He wanted to make an album with Ray Charles and Mahalia Jackson Holly also had ambitions to work in film and registered for acting classes with Lee Strasberg s Actors Studio 35 Santiago accompanied Holly on tours To hide her marriage to Holly she was presented as the Crickets secretary She took care of the laundry and equipment set up and collected the concert revenues Santiago kept the money for the band instead of its habitual transfer to Petty in New Mexico 36 She and her aunt Provi Garcia an executive in the Latin American music department at Peer Southern convinced Holly that Petty was paying the band s royalties from Coral Brunswick into his own company s account Holly planned to retrieve his royalties from Petty and to later fire him as manager and producer At the recommendation of the Everly Brothers Holly hired lawyer Harold Orenstein to negotiate his royalties 37 The problems with Petty were triggered after he was unable to pay Holly At the time New York promoter Manny Greenfield reclaimed a large part of Holly s earnings Greenfield had booked Holly for shows during previous tours The two had a verbal agreement Greenfield would obtain 5 of the booking earnings Greenfield later felt he was also acting as Holly s manager and deserved a higher payment which Holly refused Greenfield then sued Holly Under New York law because Holly s royalties originated in New York and were directed out of the state the payments were frozen until the dispute was settled 38 In September Holly returned to Clovis for a new recording session which yielded Reminiscing and Come Back Baby During the session he ventured into producing by recording Lubbock DJ Waylon Jennings Holly produced the single Jole Blon and When Sin Stops Love Begins for Jennings 39 Holly became increasingly interested in the New York music recording and publishing scene Holly and Santiago settled in Apartment 4H of the Brevoort Apartments at 11 Fifth Avenue in Greenwich Village where he recorded a series of acoustic songs including Crying Waiting Hoping and What to Do 40 The inspiration to record the songs is sometimes attributed to the ending of his relationship with McGuire 41 On October 21 1958 Holly s final studio session was recorded at the Pythian Temple on West 70th Street now a luxury condominium Known by Holly fans as the string sessions Holly recorded four songs for Coral in an innovative collaboration with an 18 piece ensemble composed of former members of the NBC Symphony Orchestra including saxophonist Boomie Richman under the direction of Dick Jacobs The four songs recorded during the 3 1 2 hour session were True Love Ways written by Buddy Holly Moondreams written by Norman Petty Raining in My Heart written by Felice and Boudleaux Bryant and It Doesn t Matter Anymore written by Paul Anka 42 These four songs were the only ones Coral ever mixed in stereo but only Raining in My Heart was released that way in 1959 on an obscure promotional LP titled Hitsville All four records otherwise received releases in mono The original stereo mixes were consulted many years later for compilation albums Holly ended his association with Petty in December 1958 His band members kept Petty as their manager and split from Holly The split was amicable and based on logistics Holly had decided to settle permanently in New York where the business and publishing offices were and the Crickets preferred not to leave their home state Winter Dance Party tour and death 1959 edit Main article The Day the Music Died nbsp Signpost near the Clear Lake crash site Holly vacationed with his wife in Lubbock and visited Jennings s radio station in December 1958 43 For the start of the Winter Dance Party tour he assembled a band consisting of Waylon Jennings electric bass Tommy Allsup guitar and Carl Bunch drums 44 Holly and Jennings left for New York City arriving on January 15 1959 Jennings stayed at Holly s apartment by Washington Square Park on the days prior to a meeting scheduled at the headquarters of the General Artists Corporation which organized the tour 45 They then traveled by train to Chicago to join the rest of the band 46 nbsp Monument in front of Surf Ballroom in Clear Lake Iowa The Winter Dance Party tour began in Milwaukee Wisconsin on January 23 1959 The amount of travel involved created logistical problems as the distance between venues had not been considered when scheduling performances Adding to the problem the unheated tour buses twice broke down in freezing weather with dire consequences Holly s drummer Carl Bunch was hospitalized for frostbite to his toes sustained while aboard the bus so Holly decided to seek other transportation 47 On February 2 before their appearance in Clear Lake Iowa Holly chartered a four seat Beechcraft Bonanza airplane for Jennings Allsup and himself from Dwyer Flying Service in Mason City Iowa Holly s idea was to depart following the show at the Surf Ballroom in Clear Lake and fly to their next venue in Moorhead Minnesota via Fargo North Dakota allowing them time to rest and launder their clothes and avoid a rigorous bus journey Immediately after the Clear Lake show which ended just before midnight Allsup agreed to flip a coin for the seat with Ritchie Valens Valens called heads when he won he reportedly said That s the first time I ve ever won anything in my life Allsup later opened a restaurant bar in Fort Worth Texas called Heads Up Saloon 48 Waylon Jennings voluntarily gave up his seat to J P Richardson the Big Bopper who had influenza and complained that the tour bus was too cold and uncomfortable for a man of his size 49 The pilot Roger Peterson took off in inclement weather even though he was not certified to fly by instruments only Buddy s brother Larry Holley said I got the full report from the Civil Aeronautics it took me a year to get it but I got it and they had installed a new Sperry gyroscope in the airplane The Sperry works different than any other gyro One of them the background moves and the plane stays like this stationary and in the other one the background stays steady and the plane moves it works just backwards He the pilot could have been reading this backwards they were going down they thought they were still climbing Shortly after 1 00 a m on February 3 1959 Holly Valens Richardson and Peterson were killed when the aircraft crashed into a cornfield five miles northwest of Clear Lake shortly after takeoff The three musicians who were ejected from the fuselage upon impact sustained severe head and chest injuries 50 Holly was 22 years old The report did not mention a gun belonging to Holly that was found by a farmer two months after the crash Newspaper accounts of the gun discovery fueled rumors among fans that the pilot was somehow shot causing the crash Another curious finding at the crash was that Richardson s body was discovered nearly 40 feet 12 metres away from the crash while the others were found in or near the wreckage However an autopsy done at the request of Richardson s son in 2007 found no evidence to support the rumors Dr Bill Bass a forensic anthropologist at the University of Tennessee stated that There was no indication of foul play and that Richardson died immediately 51 nbsp Holly s headstone in the City of Lubbock Cemetery Holly s funeral was held on February 7 1959 at the Tabernacle Baptist Church in Lubbock The service was officiated by Ben D Johnson who had presided at the Hollys wedding just months earlier The pallbearers were Jerry Allison Joe B Mauldin Niki Sullivan Bob Montgomery and Sonny Curtis Some sources say that Phil Everly one half of The Everly Brothers was also pallbearer but Everly said that he attended the funeral but was not a pallbearer 52 Waylon Jennings was unable to attend because of his commitment to the still touring Winter Dance Party Holly s body was interred in the City of Lubbock Cemetery in the eastern part of the city Holly s headstone carries the correct spelling of his surname Holley and a carving of his Fender Stratocaster guitar 53 Santiago watched the first reports of Holly s death on television The following day she suffered a miscarriage Holly s mother who heard the news on the radio in Lubbock Texas screamed and collapsed Because of Elena s miscarriage in the months following the accident some government authorities implemented a policy against announcing victims names until after families are informed 54 Santiago did not attend the funeral and has never visited the gravesite She later told the Avalanche Journal In a way I blame myself I was not feeling well when he left I was two weeks pregnant and I wanted Buddy to stay with me but he had scheduled that tour It was the only time I wasn t with him And I blame myself because I know that if only I had gone along Buddy never would have gotten into that airplane 55 Image and style editHolly s singing style was characterized by his vocal hiccups and his alternation between his regular voice and falsetto 56 Holly s stuttering vocals were complemented by his percussive guitar playing solos stops bent notes and rhythm and blues chord progressions 57 He often strummed downstrokes that were accompanied by Allison s driving percussion 13 Holly bought his first Fender Stratocaster which became his signature guitar at Harrod Music in Lubbock for 249 50 Fender Stratocasters were popular with country musicians Holly chose it for its loud sound 58 His innovative playing style was characterized by its blending of chunky rhythm and high string lead work Holly played his first Stratocaster a 1954 model until it was stolen during a tour stop in Michigan in 1957 To replace it he purchased a 1957 model before a show in Detroit Holly owned four or five Stratocasters during his career 59 At the beginning of their music careers Holly and his group wore business suits When they met the Everly Brothers Don Everly took the band to Phil s men s shop in New York City and introduced them to Ivy League clothes The brothers advised Holly to replace his old fashioned glasses with horn rimmed glasses which had been popularized by Steve Allen 60 Holly bought a pair of glasses made in Mexico from Lubbock optometrist Dr J Davis Armistead Teenagers in the United States started to request this style of glasses which were later popularly known as Buddy Holly glasses 61 When the plane crashed the wreckage was strewn across many yards meters of snow covered ground While his other belongings were recovered immediately there was no record of his signature glasses being found They were presumed lost until in March 1980 they were discovered in a Cerro Gordo County courthouse storage area by Sheriff Gerald Allen They had been found in the spring of 1959 after the snow had melted and had been given to the sheriff s office They were placed in an envelope dated April 7 1959 along with the Big Bopper s watch a lighter two pairs of dice and part of another watch and misplaced when the county moved courthouses The glasses missing their lenses were returned to Santiago a year later after a legal contest over them with his parents They are now on display at the Buddy Holly Center in Lubbock Texas 62 63 Legacy edit nbsp Poster for the ill fated Winter Dance Party tour Buddy Holly left behind dozens of unfinished recordings solo transcriptions of his new compositions informal jam sessions with bandmates or tapes demonstrating songs intended for other artists The last known recordings made in Holly s apartment in late 1958 were his last six original songs In June 1959 Coral Records overdubbed two of them with backing vocals by the Ray Charles Singers and studio musicians in an attempt to simulate the established Crickets sound The finished tracks became the first posthumous Holly single Peggy Sue Got Married Crying Waiting Hoping The new release was successful enough to warrant an album drawing upon the other Holly demos using the same studio personnel in January 1960 64 All six songs were included in The Buddy Holly Story Vol 2 1960 The demand for Holly records was so great and Holly had recorded so prolifically that his record label was able to release new Holly albums and singles for the next 10 years Norman Petty produced most of these new editions drawing upon unreleased studio masters alternate takes audition tapes and even amateur recordings some dating back to 1954 with low fidelity vocals The final new Buddy Holly album Giant was released in 1969 the single chosen from the album was Love Is Strange 65 Encyclopaedia Britannica stated that Holly produced some of the most distinctive and influential work in rock music 66 AllMusic defined him as the single most influential creative force in early rock and roll 67 Rolling Stone ranked him number 13 on its list of 100 Greatest Artists 68 The Telegraph called him a pioneer and a revolutionary a multidimensional talent who co wrote and performed songs that remain as fresh and potent today 69 In 2023 Rolling Stone ranked Holly at number 174 on its list of the 200 Greatest Singers of All Time 70 The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame included Holly among its first class in 1986 On its entry the Hall of Fame remarked upon the large quantity of material he produced during his short musical career and said it made a major and lasting impact on popular music It called him an innovator for writing his own material his experimentation with double tracking and the use of orchestration he is also said to have pioneered and popularized the now standard use of two guitars bass and drums by rock bands 71 The Songwriters Hall of Fame also inducted Holly in 1986 and said his contributions changed the face of Rock n Roll 72 Holly developed in collaboration with Petty techniques of overdubbing and reverb while he used innovative instrumentation later implemented by other artists 13 Holly became one of the most influential pioneers of rock and roll who had a lasting influence on genre performers of the 1960s 57 nbsp The Buddy Holly Center a museum in Lubbock Texas In 1980 Grant Speed sculpted a statue of Holly playing his Fender guitar This statue is the centerpiece of Lubbock s Walk of Fame which honors notable people who contributed to Lubbock s musical history Other memorials to Buddy Holly include a street named in his honor and the Buddy Holly Center which contains a museum of Holly memorabilia and fine arts gallery The center is located on Crickets Avenue one street east of Buddy Holly Avenue in a building that previously housed the Fort Worth and Denver South Plains Railway Depot 73 In 2010 the statue was taken down for refurbishment and construction of a new Walk of Fame began In 1997 the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences gave Holly the Lifetime Achievement Award 74 He was inducted into the Iowa Rock n Roll Hall of Fame in 2000 On May 9 2011 the City of Lubbock held a ribbon cutting ceremony for the Buddy and Maria Elena Holly Plaza the new home of the statue and the Walk of Fame 75 On what would have been his 75th birthday a star bearing Holly s name was placed on the Hollywood Walk of Fame 76 Groundbreaking was held on April 20 2017 for the construction of a new performing arts center in Lubbock the Buddy Holly Hall of Performing Arts and Sciences a downtown 153 million project expected to be completed in 2020 77 Thus far the private group the Lubbock Entertainment and Performing Arts Association has raised or received pledges in the amount of 93 million to underwrite the project 78 According to a June 2019 article in The New York Times Magazine virtually all of Holly s masters were lost in the 2008 Universal fire 79 This is disputed by Chad Kassem of Analogue Productions who claims to have used the master tapes of Holly s first two albums in Analogue Productions reissues of these albums on LP and SACD in 2017 80 Influence edit John Lennon and Paul McCartney saw Holly for the first time when he appeared on Sunday Night at the London Palladium 81 The two had recently met and begun their musical association They studied Holly s records learned his performance style and lyricism and based their act around his persona Inspired by Holly s insect themed Crickets they chose to name their band the Beatles Lennon and McCartney later cited Holly as one of their main influences 82 Lennon s band the Quarrymen covered That ll Be the Day in their first recording session in 1958 83 During breaks in the Beatles first appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show on February 9 1964 Lennon asked CBS coordinator Vince Calandra about Holly s performances Calandra said Lennon and McCartney repeatedly expressed their appreciation of Holly 84 The Beatles recorded a close cover of Holly s version of Words of Love which was released on their 1964 album Beatles for Sale in the US in June 1965 on Beatles VI During the January 1969 recording sessions for their album Let It Be the Beatles played a slow impromptu version of Mailman Bring Me No More Blues which Holly popularized but did not write with Lennon mimicking Holly s vocal style 85 Lennon recorded a cover version of Peggy Sue on his 1975 album Rock n Roll 86 McCartney owns the publishing rights to Holly s song catalog 87 On January 31 1959 two nights before Holly s death 17 year old Bob Dylan attended Holly s performance in Duluth Dylan referred to this in his acceptance speech when he received the Grammy Award for Album of the Year for Time Out of Mind in 1998 when I was sixteen or seventeen years old I went to see Buddy Holly play at Duluth National Guard Armory and I was three feet away from him and he looked at me And I just have some sort of feeling that he was with us all the time we were making this record in some kind of way 88 Mick Jagger saw Holly performing live in Woolwich London during a tour of the UK Jagger particularly remembered Holly s performance of Not Fade Away a song that also inspired Keith Richards who modeled his early guitar playing on the track The Rolling Stones had a hit version of the song in 1964 89 Richards later said Holly passed it on via the Beatles and via the Rolling Stones He s in everybody 90 Don McLean s popular 1971 ballad American Pie was inspired by Holly s death and the day of the plane crash The song s lyric which calls the incident The Day the Music Died became popularly associated with the crash McLean s album American Pie is dedicated to Holly 91 In 2015 McLean wrote Buddy Holly would have the same stature musically whether he would have lived or died because of his accomplishments By the time he was 22 years old he had recorded some 50 tracks most of which he had written himself in my view and the view of many others a hit Buddy Holly and the Crickets were the template for all the rock bands that followed 92 Elton John was musically influenced by Holly At age 13 although he did not require them John started wearing horn rimmed glasses to imitate Holly 93 The Clash were also influenced by Holly and referenced him in their song If Music Could Talk from the Sandinista album 94 The Chirping Crickets was the first album Eric Clapton ever bought he later saw Holly on Sunday Night at the London Palladium In his autobiography Clapton recounted the first time he saw Holly and his Fender saying I thought I d died and gone to heaven it was like seeing an instrument from outer space and I said to myself That s the future that s what I want 95 The launch of Bobby Vee s successful musical career resulted from Holly s death Vee was selected to replace Holly on the tour that continued after the plane crash Holly s profound influence on Vee s singing style can be heard in the songs Rubber Ball the B side of which was a cover of Holly s Everyday and Run to Him 96 The name of the British rock band the Hollies is often claimed as a tribute to Holly according to the band they admired Holly but their name was mainly inspired by sprigs of holly in evidence around Christmas 1962 97 In an August 24 1978 interview with Rolling Stone Bruce Springsteen told Dave Marsh I play Buddy Holly every night before I go on that keeps me honest 98 The Grateful Dead performed the song Not Fade Away in concerts 99 In 2016 Richard Barone released his album Sorrows amp Promises Greenwich Village in the 1960s paying tribute to the new wave of singer songwriters in the Village during that pivotal post Holly era The album opens with Barone s version of Learning the Game one of the final songs written and recorded by Holly at his home in Greenwich Village a week before his death 100 Film and musical depictions edit Holly s life story inspired a Hollywood biographical film The Buddy Holly Story 1978 its lead actor Gary Busey received a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Actor for his portrayal of Holly The film was widely criticized by the rock press and by Holly s friends and family for its inaccuracies 101 This led Paul McCartney whose MPL Communications by then controlled the publishing rights to Buddy Holly s song catalog to produce and host his own documentary about Holly in 1985 titled The Real Buddy Holly Story This video includes interviews with Keith Richards Phil and Don Everly Sonny Curtis Jerry Allison Holly s family and McCartney among others 102 In 1987 musician Marshall Crenshaw portrayed Buddy Holly in the movie La Bamba which depicts him performing at the Surf Ballroom and boarding the fatal airplane with Ritchie Valens and the Big Bopper Crenshaw s version of Crying Waiting Hoping is featured on the La Bamba original motion picture soundtrack 103 Buddy The Buddy Holly Story a jukebox musical depicting Holly s life opened in 1989 Holly was depicted in a 1989 episode of the science fiction television program Quantum Leap titled How the Tess Was Won Holly s identity is only revealed at the end of the episode Dr Sam Beckett Scott Bakula influences Buddy Holly to change his lyrics from piggy suey to Peggy Sue setting up Holly s future hit song 104 Holly s follow up to that hit song is featured in the 1986 Francis Ford Coppola film Peggy Sue Got Married in which a 43 year old mother and housewife facing divorce played by Kathleen Turner is thrust back in time and given the chance to change the course of her life Steve Buscemi appeared as Holly in a brief cameo as a 1950s themed restaurant employee in Quentin Tarantino s 1994 film Pulp Fiction in which he takes Mia Wallace and Vincent Vega s orders portrayed respectively by Uma Thurman and John Travolta In 1961 Mike Berry recorded Tribute to Buddy Holly In 1985 the German punk band Die Arzte composed a song centering on Buddy Holly s glasses titled Buddy Holly s Brille 105 In 1998 the post apocalyptic film Six String Samurai depicted Holly as a guitar playing samurai traveling to Las Vegas to become the new king of Nevada after the death of Elvis Presley Weezer s first top 40 single in the US was titled Buddy Holly In 2006 country band the Dixie Chicks mention Buddy Holly in their song Lubbock or Leave It Lead singer Natalie Maines and Holly share a hometown of Lubbock Texas In the animated series The Venture Bros it is implied that the elderly villains Dragoon and Red Mantle are actually Richardson and Buddy Holly who were recruited into the supervillain organization the Guild of Calamitous Intent on the night of their supposed deaths The TV documentary Buddy Holly Rave On The Story of Buddy Holly aired on BBC Four in 2017 106 An upcoming documentary The Day the Music Died American Pie explores the story behind the Don McLean song 107 Discography editMain article Buddy Holly discography The Crickets edit The Chirping Crickets 1957 Solo edit Buddy Holly 1958 That ll Be the Day 1958 References edit Tobler John The Buddy Holly Story published 1979 Beaufort Books Driggars Alex April 8 2022 Larry Holley Eldest Brother of Buddy Holly Dies at 96 Lubbock Avalanche Journal Travis Holley One of Buddy s Brothers Dies Thursday Playbill by Kerns Blog lubbockonline com Archived from the original on August 6 2017 Retrieved December 30 2016 Patricia Holley Obituary 2008 Surrey Advertiser www legacy com Buddy Holly A Biography By Ellis Amburn pg 10 a b Gribbin 2012 p 12 Gribbin 2012 p 13 Gribbin 2012 p 14 Norman 2011 p 34 Schinder amp Schwartz 2007 p 80 Lehmer 2003 p 6 a b Lehmer 2003 p 7 a b c Wishart 2004 p 540 a b c Carr Joseph amp Munde Alan 1997 p 130 Schinder amp Schwartz 2007 p 97 Uslan amp Solomon 1981 p 49 Amburn Ellis April 22 2014 Buddy Holly A Biography St Martin s Griffin p 101 ISBN 9781466868564 via Google Books Carr Joseph amp Munde Alan 1997 p 131 Buddy Holly interviewed by Dale Lowery for KTOP radio Topeka Kansas 1957 Lehmer 2003 p 16 Lehmer 2003 p 17 Lehmer 2003 p 18 Lehmer 2003 p 19 a b Gribbin 2012 p 57 a b Gribbin 2012 p 58 a b Norman 1996 p 156 Norman 1996 p 127 Moore 2011 p 127 a b Moore 2011 p 128 Norman 2011 p 189 Lo Ping October 29 2008 The night I saw Buddy Holly and the Crickets for free Australian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved March 27 2020 Buddy Holly amp The Crickets March 1958 American Rock n Roll The UK Tours Schinder amp Schwartz 2007 p 90 Schinder amp Schwartz 2007 p 91 Norman 2011 p 281 Norman 2011 p 274 Norman 2011 p 280 Laing 2010 p 153 Carr Joseph amp Munde Alan 1997 p 155 Norman 2011 p 274 278 Lloyd Webber 2015 Norman 2011 p 276 278 Jennings amp Kaye 1996 p 51 Corbin Sky 2014 Jennings amp Kaye 1996 p 58 59 Jennings amp Kaye 1996 p 62 Everitt 2004 p 13 Galloway Paul June 24 1988 Hit parade Chicago Tribune ProQuest 882608515 Denberg Jody January 1988 Chantilly Lace and a Jolly Face Texas Monthly p 100 via Google Books Associated Press staff 1959 Big Bopper rumours put to rest by autopsy The Associated Press March 7 2007 via CBC Amburn Ellis 2014 p 347 Amburn Ellis 2014 p 348 52 Suddath 2009 Kerns 2008 Rolling Stone staff 2001 a b Henderson amp Stacey 2014 p 296 Amburn 2014 p 59 Hunter 2013 p 87 Norman 1996 p 144 Jones 2014 p 175 Holly s glasses returned to family The Beaver County Times March 12 1980 Retrieved December 19 2015 Eyeglasses returned The Prescott Courier March 22 1981 Retrieved December 19 2015 Goldrosen John 1979 The Buddy Holly Story Quick Fox ISBN 978 0 825 63936 4 Buddy Holly Giant discogs 1969 Retrieved February 24 2019 Crenshaw Marshall 2015 Eder Bruce 2015 Mellecamp 2011 Norman Phillip 2015 The 200 Greatest Singers of All Time Rolling Stone January 1 2023 Retrieved February 20 2023 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame staff 2015 Songwriters hall of Fame staff 2002 Buddy Holly Center staff 2014 Hollywood Reporter Staff 1997 Kerns 2011 Duke Alan 2011 Lubbock s 153M Buddy Holly Hall Due to Open in 2020 constructionequipmentguide com Retrieved August 7 2019 Kerns William April 1 2017 Restaurant Partnership Groundbreaking Date Announced for Buddy Holly Hall Lubbock Avalanche Journal Retrieved April 1 2017 Rosen Jody June 11 2019 The Day the Music Burned It Was the Biggest Disaster in the History of the Music Business and Almost Nobody Knew The New York Times Magazine Archived from the original on January 1 2022 Retrieved June 11 2019 The Crickets Buddy Holly Buddy Holly Acoustic Sounds Retrieved April 25 2021 Humphries 2003 p 73 Riley 2011 p 67 70 Gaar 2013 p 238 Harris 2014 p 192 193 Margotin amp Guesdon 2014 p 186 Blaney John 2005 p 163 BBC News staff 2003 Shelton 2011 p 37 Norman 2011 p 12 Amburn Ellis 2014 p 274 Crouse Richard 2012 p 86 McLean 2015 Goldrosen 1979 p 8 Fletcher 2012 p 174 Clapton Eric 2010 p 19 Dean Maury 2003 p 73 Eder Bruce 1996 Deardorff II Donald 2013 p 16 Meriwether 2013 p 134 Richard Barone Breathes New Life into the Golden Age of Village Folk Observer April 12 2017 Flippo Chet September 21 1978 The Truth Behind The Buddy Holly Story Rolling Stone Archived from the original on November 17 2017 Retrieved December 19 2015 Lehmer 2003 p 174 176 Green 1999 p 267 Phillips amp Garcia 1996 p 358 Leim Christof Homke Andrea April 14 2019 Time Jump On April 7 1959 Buddy Holly s Glasses Are Found in Iowa U Discover in German Retrieved February 13 2021 Buddy Holly Rave On BBC Four Retrieved May 29 2022 The Day the Music Died American Pie IMDb Retrieved May 29 2022 Sources edit Amburn Ellis 2014 Buddy Holly A Biography St Martin s Press ISBN 978 0 312 14557 6 Iowa Crash Kills 3 Singers Rock n Roll Stars and Pilot Die as Chartered Craft Falls After Its Take Off The New York Times Associated Press 1959 p 1 Retrieved November 13 2010 Sir Paul s fortune boosted BBC News 2003 Retrieved January 2 2010 Blaney John 2005 John Lennon Listen to This Book John Blaney ISBN 978 0 954 45281 0 The Buddy Holly Center History The Buddy Holly Center The City of Lubbock 2014 Archived from the original on March 25 2015 Retrieved March 25 2015 Carr Joseph Munde Alan 1997 Prairie Nights to Neon Lights The Story of Country Music in West Texas Texas Tech University Press ISBN 978 0 89672 365 8 Clapton Eric 2010 Eric Clapton The Autobiography Random House ISBN 978 1 409 06039 0 Corbin Sky 2014 The Waylon Jennings Years at KLLL Part Five KLLL Archived from the original on July 14 2014 Crenshaw Marshall 2015 Buddy Holly American Musician Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved March 24 2015 Crouse Richard 2012 Who Wrote The Book of Love Random House Digital ISBN 978 0 385 67442 3 Dean Maury 2003 Rock and Roll Gold Rush Algora Publishing ISBN 978 0 875 86227 9 Deardorff II Donald 2013 Bruce Springsteen American Poet and Prophet Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 810 88427 4 Duke Alan 2011 Buddy Holly s Officially a Hollywood Star CNN Retrieved March 24 2015 Eder Bruce 1996 Just One More Look at The Hollies Goldmine 22 14 Eder Bruce 2015 Buddy Holly Biography AllMusic Retrieved March 24 2015 Eiss Harry 2013 The Mythology of Dance Cambridge Scholars Publishing ISBN 978 1 443 85288 3 Everitt Rich 2004 Falling Stars Air Crashes That Filled Rock and Roll Heaven Harbor House ISBN 978 1 891799 04 4 Fletcher Tony 2012 The Clash The Music That Matters Music Sales Group ISBN 978 0 857 12749 5 Gaar Gillian 2013 100 Things Beatles Fans Should Know amp Do Before They Die Triunph Books ISBN 978 1 623 68202 6 Goldrosen John 1979 The Buddy Holly Story Quick Fox ISBN 978 0 825 63936 4 Green Stanley 1999 Hollywood Musicals Year by Year Hal Leonard Corporation ISBN 978 0 634 00765 1 Gribbin John 2012 Not Fade Away The Life and Music of Buddy Holly Icon Books ISBN 978 1 848 31384 2 Harris Michael 2014 Always on Sunday An Inside View of Ed Sullivan the Beatles Elvis Sinatra amp Ed s Other Guests Word International Henderson Lol Stacey Lee 2014 Encyclopedia of Music in the 20th Century Routledge ISBN 978 1 135 92946 6 Highest Honor Hollywood News Reporter 1997 Retrieved March 24 2015 via Newspapers com nbsp Humphries Patrick 2003 Elvis The No 1 Hits The Secret History of the Classics Andrews McMeel Publishing ISBN 978 0 740 73803 6 Hunter Dave 2013 The Fender Stratocaster The Life amp Times of the World s Greatest Guitar amp Its Players Voyageur Press ISBN 978 0 760 34484 2 Jennings Waylon Kaye Lenny 1996 Waylon An Autobiography Warner Books ISBN 978 0 446 51865 9 Jones Steve 2014 Start You Up Rock Star Secrets to Unleash Your Personal Brand and Set Your Career on Fire Greenleaf Book Group ISBN 978 1 626 34070 1 Kerns William 2008 Buddy and Maria Elena Holly Married 50 Years Ago LubbockOnline com Archived from the original on March 23 2016 Retrieved March 25 2015 Kerns William 2011 Buddy and Maria Holly Plaza dedication attracts large turnout Lubbock Online com Retrieved March 25 2015 Laing Dave 2010 Buddy Holly Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 22168 1 Lehmer Larry 2003 The Day the Music Died The Last Tour of Buddy Holly the Big Bopper and Ritchie Valens Music Sales Group ISBN 978 0 825 67287 3 Margotin Phillipe Guesdon Jean Michael 2014 All The Songs The Story Behind Every Beatles Release Black Dog Leventhal ISBN 978 1 603 76371 4 McLean Don 2015 Don McLean Buddy Holly rest in peace CNN Retrieved March 26 2015 Mellecamp John 2011 100 Greatest Artists Rolling Stone Archived from the original on March 29 2015 Retrieved March 24 2015 Meriwether Nicholas 2013 Studying the Dead The Grateful Dead Scholars Caucus an Informal History Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 810 89125 8 Moore Gary 2011 Hey Buddy In Pursuit of Buddy Holly My New Buddy John and My Lost Decade of Music Savas Beatie ISBN 978 1 932 71497 5 Norman Phillip 1996 Rave on The Biography of Buddy Holly Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 684 80082 0 Norman Philip 2011 Buddy The Definitive Biography of Buddy Holly Pan MacMillan ISBN 978 1 447 20340 7 Norman Philip February 3 2015 Why Buddy Holly will never fade away The Telegraph Archived from the original on January 9 2022 Retrieved August 27 2015 Phillips Mark Garcia Frank 1996 Science Fiction Television Series Episode Guides Histories and Casts and Credits for 62 Prime Time Shows 1959 through 1989 McFarland ISBN 978 1 476 61030 6 Riley Tim 2011 Lennon The Man the Myth the Music Random House ISBN 978 1 448 11319 4 Buddy Holly Biography Rock and Roll Hall of Fame The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum Inc 2015 Archived from the original on August 8 2017 Retrieved March 24 2015 Buddy Holly Biography Rolling Stone 2001 Retrieved March 24 2015 Schinder Scott Schwartz Andy 2007 Icons of Rock An Encyclopedia of the Legends Who Changed Music Forever Vol 1 Greenwood ISBN 978 0 313 33845 8 Shelton Robert 2011 No Direction Home The Life And Music of Bob Dylan Omnibus Press ISBN 978 0 857 12616 0 Buddy Holly Songwriters Hall of Fame American National Academy of Popular Music 2002 Archived from the original on April 2 2015 Retrieved March 24 2015 Suddath Claire 2009 The Day the Music Died Time Archived from the original on February 5 2009 Retrieved February 23 2011 Uslan Michael Solomon Bruce 1981 Dick Clark s the First 25 Years of Rock amp Roll Dell Publishing Company ISBN 978 0 440 51763 4 Lloyd Webber Julian 2015 Buddy Holly s heartbreak songs The Telegraph Archived from the original on January 11 2022 Retrieved May 11 2015 Wishart David 2004 Encyclopedia of the Great Plains University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 0 80 324787 1 Further reading editBustard Anne 2005 Buddy The Story of Buddy Holly Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 1 4223 9302 4 Comentale Edward P 2013 Chapter Five Sweet Air Modernism Regionalism and American Popular Song University of Illinois Press ISBN 978 0 252 07892 7 Dawson Jim Leigh Spencer 1996 Memories of Buddy Holly Big Nickel Publications ISBN 978 0 936433 20 2 Gerron Peggy Sue 2008 Whatever Happened to Peggy Sue Togi Entertainment ISBN 978 0 9800085 0 0 Goldrosen John Beecher John 1996 Remembering Buddy The Definitive Biography New York Da Capo Press ISBN 0 306 80715 7 Goldrosen John 1975 Buddy Holly His Life and Music Popular Press ISBN 0 85947 018 0 Laing Dave 1971 2010 Buddy Holly Icons of Pop Music Bloomington IN Indiana University Press ISBN 0 253 22168 4 OCLC 611172616 Mann Alan 1996 The A Z of Buddy Holly Aurum Press 2nd edition ISBN 1 85410 433 0 or 978 1854104335 McFadden Hugh 2005 Elegy for Charles Hardin Holley Elegies amp Epiphanies Selected Poems Belfast Lagan Press Norman Phillip 1996 Rave On The Biography of Buddy Holly Simon amp Schuster Publishing ISBN 0684800829 Peer Elizabeth and Ralph II 1972 Buddy Holly A Biography in Words Photographs and Music Australia Peer International ASIN B000W24DZO Peters Richard 1990 The Legend That Is Buddy Holly Barnes amp Noble Books ISBN 0 285 63005 9 or 978 0285630055 Rabin Stanton 2009 OH BOY The Life and Music of Rock n Roll Pioneer Buddy Holly Van Winkle Publishing Kindle ASIN B0010QBLLG Tobler John 1979 The Buddy Holly Story Beaufort Books VH1 s Behind the Music The Day the Music Died interview with Waylon JenningsExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Buddy Holly nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Buddy Holly Buddy Holly news archives at the Lubbock Avalanche Journal Buddy Holly at AllMusic nbsp Buddy Holly at IMDb nbsp Buddy Holly sessions and cover songs Buddy Holly recordings at the Discography of American Historical Recordings Retrieved from https en 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