Buddy Holly
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | Date: 2008
Buddy Holly 1936-59, American rock singer, songwriter, and guitarist, b. Lubbock, Tex., as Charles Hardin Holley. He performed country and western music while a teenager, but influenced by black rhythm and blues and by Elvis Presley he switched to the rock 'n' roll in the mid-1950s. His band, the Crickets, was one of the first to use the instrumentation that became the rock standard: two guitars, bass, and drums. Holly's sweet tenor with its frequent hiccuping hesitations, his melodic songs, and the group's innovative studio work set them apart from other early bands. They scored their first hit with "That'll Be the Day" (1957), which as followed by "Peggy Sue" and "Oh Boy" (1957) and "Maybe Baby" and "Rave On" (1958). Holly left the Crickets in 1958, but his promising solo career ended when he died in a plane crash while on tour. Killed with him were two other popular young rockers, Richie Valens and J. P. Richardson (the Big Bopper). Holly, who influenced many in later generations of rock artists, was among the first group of musicians inducted (1986) into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
Bibliography: See biographies by J. Goldrosen and J. Beecher (1987, repr. 2001), E. Amburn (1995), and P. Norman (1996); L. Lehmer, The Day the Music Died (1997, repr. 2004).
Author not available, HOLLY, BUDDY.,
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
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You can still find echoes of Buddy Holly in his hometown.
Fort Worth Star-Telegram (Fort Worth, TX); 10/10/2005; 787 words
; Byline: Robert Philpot LUBBOCK _ If the road to rock `n' roll takes you to Lubbock, birthplace and hometown of Buddy Holly, be sure to tune in to KDAV/1590 AM. Not only is it a great oldies station _ one that plays seminal rock 'n' roll songs such as Ike Turner's Rocket 88 and Elvis' version of
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Why Buddy Holly still matters anymore, 38 years after his fatal crash.(Originated from Knight-Ridder/Tribune News Service)
Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service; 2/2/1997; Povey, Fred; 569 words
; ... Buddy Holly? That'll be the day. (Fred Povey, a longtime rock 'n roll collector and music historian, is news editor for Knight-Ridder/Tribune News Service.) (For more information on Buddy Holly, visit Kentucky Connect, the World Wide Web site of the ...
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'Buddy Holly' story a celebration of youth
The Topeka Capital-Journal; 4/20/2002; Chuck Berg Capital-Journal; 430 words
; R E V I E W By Chuck Berg Special to The Capital-Journal Last night, "The Buddy Holly Story" rocked a sold-out Lied Center with an adroit mix of classic rock 'n' roll and theatrical panache that left everyone shouting for more. Tracing Holly's meteoric rise from playing country gigs in Lubbock,
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Buddy Holly grows to mythic proportion: New biography upstages the truth.(Metropolitan Times)(Arts & Entertainment)(Book Review)
The Washington Times; 2/29/1996; Piccoli, Sean; 625 words
; Texas Monthly magazine got it right when it declared last fall, Buddy Holly Is Alive! The Lubbock-born beanpole boy wonder, who died Feb. 3, 1959, in an Iowa plane crash that snuffed out a brief but revolutionary rock 'n' roll career, is in full resurrection right now. Glorified in an
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BUDDY HOLLY REMEMBRANCE FLAWED
The Boston Globe; 3/15/1988; Steve Morse, Globe Staff; 626 words
; Buddy Holly, the '50s music pioneer from Lubbock, Texas, had an impact on everyone from the Beatles to Bruce Springsteen. He embodied the joyful spirit of early rock 'n' roll, writing such teen standards as "Peggy Sue," "That'll Be the Day" and "Rave On." So beloved was Holly that his death in a
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