Biography
Buddy Holly was born
in Lubbock, Texas. The
Holleys were a musical
family and as a young
boy Holly learned to
play the violin, piano
and guitar. As a
teenager he was already
singing professionally
as part of a country
duo. Holly's big break
came when they opened
for Bill Haley and the
Comets at a local rock
show. He was signed by a
scout from Decca Records
to a solo recording
contract. However, early
success as a solo artist
eluded him.
Back in Lubbock, Buddy
Hollyformed his own
band, "The Crickets,"
and began making records
at Norman Petty's
studios in Clovis, New
Mexico. Among the songs
they recorded was
That'll Be the Day,
which takes its title
from a phrase which John
Wayne's character says
repeatedly in the movie,
The Searchers. Norman
had music industry
contacts, and believing
that That'll Be the Day
would be a hit single,
he contacted publishers
and labels. Coral
Records, a subsidiary of
Decca, signed Buddy
Holly and The Crickets.
This put Buddy in the
unusual position of
having two record
contracts at the same
time!
Holly's music was
sophisticated for its
day, including the use
of novel instruments
(for rock and roll).
Holly was an influential
rhythm guitarist,
notably on songs such as
Peggy Sue and Not Fade
Away. While Holly could
pump out boy-loves-girl
songs with the best of
his contemporaries,
other songs featured
more sophisticated
lyrics and more complex
harmonies and melodies
than had been previously
shown in the genre.
Buddy Holly also managed
to bridge some of the
racial divide that
punctuated rock, notably
winning over an
all-black audience when
accidentally booked for
New York's Apollo
Theatre (though, unlike
the fictional portrayal
in his movie biography,
it took several
performances for
audiences to be
convinced of his
talents).
After the release of
several highly
successful songs, in
March of 1958, he and
the Crickets toured
Great Britain. In the
audience was a teenager
named Paul McCartney,
who later cited Holly as
a primary influence (his
band's name, The
Beatles, was later
chosen partly in homage
to Holly's Crickets).
Holly's personal style,
more controlled and
cerebral than Elvis's
and more youthful and
innovative than the
country and western
stars of his day, would
have an influence on
youth culture on both
sides of the Atlantic
for decades to come,
reflected particularly
in the New Wave movement
in artists such as Elvis
Costello and Marshall
Crenshaw, and earlier in
folk rock bands like The
Byrds and The Turtles.
In 1959, Buddy Holly
split with the Crickets
and began a solo tour
with other notable
performers including
Ritchie Valens and J.P.
Richardson, "The Big
Bopper".
Following a February 3rd
performance at the Surf
Ballroom in Clear Lake,
Iowa, a small
four-passenger
Beechcraft Bonanza took
off into a blinding snow
storm and crashed into
Albert Juhl's corn field
several miles after
takeoff at 1:05 a.m. The
crash killed Holly,
Valens, Richardson, and
pilot Roger Peterson,
leaving Holley's
pregnant bride a widow.
(She would miscarry soon
after.) This event
inspired singer Don
McLean's popular 1971
ballad American Pie, and
immortalized February
3rd as The Day The Music
Died. Funeral services
were held at the
Tabernacle Baptist
Church in Lubbock,
Texas, and Buddy Holly
was interred in the City
of Lubbock Cemetery.
In 1988, Ken Paquette, a
Wisconsin fan of the
?50s era, erected a
stainless steel monument
depicting a steel guitar
and a set of three
records bearing the
names of each of the
three performers. It is
located on private
farmland, about one
quarter mile west of the
intersection of 315th
Street and Gull Avenue,
approximately eight
miles north of Clear
Lake. He also created a
similar stainless steel
monument to the three
musicians near the
Riverside Ballroom in
Green Bay, Wisconsin.
That memorial was
unveiled on July 17,
2003.
The dramatic arc of
Buddy Holly's life story
inspired a Hollywood
biography The Buddy
Holly Story, for which
actor Gary Busey
received a nomination
for Academy Award for
Best Actor for his
portrayal of Holly, as
well as a successful
Broadway musical
documenting his career.
Buddy Holly is
considered one of the
founding fathers of rock
'n roll and one of its
most influential.
Although his career was
cut short, his body of
work is considered some
of the best in rock
music history and his
music would influence
not only many of his
recording
contemporaries, but also
the future direction
music would take.
Selected Discography
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