Alan Freed: "You can stop me, but you're never gonna stop rock & roll!".
http://www.omaha.com/index.php?u_page=2798&u_sid=10552791 Published Sunday February 1, 2009
Rave On: 50 years after plane crash, fans dispute the music ever died
BY ELIZABETH AHLIN
WORLD-HERALD STAFF WRITER
CLEAR LAKE, Iowa — J.P. "The Big Bopper" Richardson leaned against the pineapple-print wallpaper in the Surf Ballroom and entertained the eager greeting of one more teenage fan.
It was late, and the 28-year-old singer had just finished playing the 11th concert of a grueling 24-city tour, but he took a minute to ask a local denim-clad 4-H president a couple of questions.
The glasses Buddy Holly was wearing when he was killed in a plane crash Feb. 3, 1959. The glasses were found by a farmer in the field of the plane crash in April of 1959 after the snow had melted.
Where do you go to school? What grade are you in? It was just a few moments, and then Alan Duea, 18, went back to his star-struck friends.
The Big Bopper headed into the cold, blustery night. He was going to the airport where he, Buddy Holly and Ritchie Valens planned to catch a plane to their next show.
Today, almost 50 years later, everyone knows how this story ends. Before the crowd in Clear Lake could be forgotten by those young rock sensations, their lives were over. Modern music history changed on Feb. 3, 1959, and generations of fans would come to know it as The Day the Music Died.
But that four-seat Beechcraft Bonanza also changed the course of Clear Lake when it went down in a field just north of this little Iowa town.
FULL story at link.
• Photo Showcase: The Day The Music Died
• The Facts: The Day the Music Died
• Animated Map: Detailing the crash
• Audio and Video: Holly & The Crickets' 'Not Fade Away' is an oft-covered song
• Audio and Video: "La Bamba" by Richie Valens • "Chantilly Lace" by the Big Bopper • "Peggy Sue" by Buddy Holly & The Crickets