
Buddy's
Legend Lives On!

Hello, my name is Pete and this page is dedicated to the memory of Charles Hardin
Holley, his wonderful talent, and the making of a legend which still lives on
today. The music DID NOT die!
Cast your mind back to the mid-fifties when record companies paid artists by
the song and virtually told them which songs they could record , well my friends
Buddy Holly was one of the first Rock'n'Roll artists to write, arrange and record
his own work. Buddy and his manager Norman Petty also pioneered overdubbing
(at that time a crude way of re-recording to achieve several Buddys on one record!)
The very first record I bought was That'll Be The
Day and although I bought hundreds more by various
stars of the 50's and 60's I never forgot those great records that Buddy wrote
and recorded.
Buddy's first recording contract
was with U.S. Decca. He went to the famous Owen Bradley Studios in Nashville
in 1956 with high hopes of becoming a successful hit recording star, but even
with studio musicians that included the late great guitarist Grady Martin (Guitar
Genius?) things were just not right and although getting airplay on local radio
stations the record buying public just did not buy.
After arriving
back from Nashville Buddy felt dejected but not surprised at not attaining success
with those Decca recordings, for he was never really satisfied with the tracks
he did at Owen Bradley's studio because they weren't HIS musical arrangements,
although I don't think at any time did he have any doubts that he was going
to make something of his musical career .
Buddy decided
to drive to Clovis, New Mexico to meet a man that would be the vehicle to his
success, this man was Norman Petty who would later become Buddy's manager. Petty
gave Buddy the time and space he needed to perfect the recording techniques
that were really quite novel for the mid-fifties and I think it would be fair
to say that Petty's input at this time was crucial. Buddy "paid" for
his studio time by being available to play guitar backing on many tracks recorded
at Clovis.
Their re-working
of the song that was originally recorded in Nashville for Decca called "That'll
Be The Day" was presented to Coral Records who released it immediately on their
Brunswick subsidiary and although a slow seller to start with, the record picked
up in the autumn of '57 and it eventually topped the Billboard charts. Buddy
got round a clause in his Decca contract which stopped him re-recording his
Nashville tracks by naming the group The Crickets. Because Decca was the owner
of Coral and Brunswick they didn't pursue their legal rights and were quite
happy to give Buddy two contracts, one with Coral to be released as Buddy Holly.
Unusually he was given another contract which would release records as The Crickets.
The subsequent two LP
records that came out of the Clovis studio were cut for Brunswick and Coral
Records and remain classics to this day.
When Norman
Petty successfully signed Buddy with Coral he was
also making himself a rich man because as was usual in management in those days
he had secured songwriting credits on most of Buddy's work even though his input
was minimal.
When Buddy met his future
wife Maria she may have intimated to him that perhaps he was not getting a good
deal from Petty and eventually Buddy decided to base himself in New York, he
asked the Crickets to stay on with him but Petty persuaded Jerry Allison and
Joe Mauldin that they could still be big without Buddy and since he (Petty)
controlled all the money that Buddy and The Crickets had made he could starve
him back into the group.
Late
'58 Buddy spent time enjoying himself in New York and planning his future with
the help of Maria but as Petty had predicted Buddy found himself running out
of cash even though his former manager held royalties and performance money.
Buddy reluctantly
signed to tour with the Winter Dance Party, a show that included Dion and the
Belmonts, Frankie Sardo, The Big Bopper and
Ritchie Valens. The
tour was a nightmare for the performers with tour buses continually breaking
down in the severe cold weather that was affecting the mid-west of the U.S.A.
in early 1959. On February 2nd Buddy had hired a light aircraft for himself
and the new "Crickets" (Tommy Allsup and Waylon Jennings) so they could at least
arrive early on February 3rd at Fargo, North Dakota for their next show. However
when Ritchie Valens and The Big Bopper heard about the aircraft they both persuaded
Jennings and Allsup to give up their plane seats to them.
That night the
fated trio of stars along with their young inexperienced pilot Roger Petersen
took off and all four were killed when the aircraft plunged into a field not
far from the airport they had just left. Just what went wrong will never be
known .....
Mail
Pete
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