Buddy Holly’s most intimate recordings In rock ’n’ roll’s received history, what’s usually considered Buddy Holly’s last recording session is the string-drenched October 1958 date that produced the ...
"My life has been what you might call an uneventful one, and it seems there is not much of interest to tell,” Buddy Holly once wrote in a high school essay. Still, the young student — born Charles ...
Jerry Allison, the drummer in the 1950s rock band Buddy Holly and the Crickets whose rough-hewed style on “Peggy Sue” and “That’ll Be the Day” and on later recordings by the Everly Brothers set a ...
At least one: Buddy Holly, whose legacy lives in recordings, movies (Gary Busey was Oscar-nominated for playing him) and stage shows such as "Buddy! The Buddy Holly Story," now playing at the History ...
Jerry Allison released a single in 1958 under his middle name, Ivan. It only reached No. 68 on the charts. However, as a drummer and songwriter with Buddy Holly and the Crickets, Allison had much more ...
Revisiting comments made by The Beatles member John Lennon about his love for Buddy Holly and how he was able to sing the hit ...
The Beatles had several music influences, including Chuck Berry, Bob Dylan, and Elvis Presley. Another influence was Buddy Holly, a significant figure for The Beatles, as his unique style became ...
Buddy Holly’s musical ascent had the unstoppable buoyancy of bubbles rising in soda sipped at a 1956 burger joint. His songs live on — just try to say the phrase “That’ll be the day” without hearing ...
Lou Giordano was a jack-of-all-trades who dreamed of becoming a singing superstar My father, Lou Giordano, was a man who always dreamed big. He lived life to the fullest, or at least as full as a man ...
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