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On this day in 1959, a small plane crashed on its way
to Fargo-Moorhead, instantly claiming the lives of four young menthree
of them rising stars in the hot new music genre called Rock and Roll.
A little more than a decade later, the day was immortalized as the
day the music died in Don McCleans cryptic popular song American
Pie.
The occupants of the chartered four-passenger Beech Bonanza were 22-year-old
Charles Hardin Holley, who was known as Buddy Holly, 17-year-old Richard
Steven Valenzuela known as Ritchie Valens, 28-year-old Jiles Perry Richardson,
known as The Big Bopper, and 21-year-old Roger Peterson, the pilot.
According to the Civil Aeronautics Board Accident Report, they were just
five minutes into their planned flight from Clear Lake, Iowa to Fargo
when Peterson likely became disoriented due to weather conditions and
darkness, and confused by instrumentation he was not familiar with. Peterson
and his passengers probably had no idea the plane was descending at 170
miles-per-hour toward a frozen cornfield. No one witnessed the 1:00 am
crash. It was discovered in a search after daybreak. None had survived
the impact.
For the three musicians, it was an abrupt end to brief yet influential
careers, and to a grueling non-stop 24-day tour, near the half-way point.
The Winter Dance Party Tour had started in Milwaukee on January
23rd, and was haphazardly criss-crossing the frigid Upper Midwest, playing
in a different ballroom, auditorium, or armory each and every night.
Other musicians on the package tour included Tommy Allsup, Waylon Jennings,
Frankie Sardo, and Dion and the Belmonts. They were all traveling in a
bus that kept breaking down and had no heat. Each one-night-stand was
followed by a bone-chilling ride to the next city
24 winter dance
parties in 24 days.
There were no Interstates in 1959. Imagine traveling from Fort Dodge,
Iowa, to Duluth, Minnesota, then to Green Bay, Wisconsin, and on to Clear
Lake, Iowa (all about 300 mile trips)
on two-lane highways...in January...in
a smoke-filled school bus with no heat. These people were mostly from
Texas and Southern California. They were miserable on that bus, and they
were getting sick.
The next gig was at the Armory in Moorhead, Minnesota--a long cold ride
from Clear Lake. Buddy Holly had had enough and decided to charter a plane.
Fellow musicians were invited to share the ride, and the cost--$36 each.
Dion didnt want to pay the price, and chose the bus. Waylon Jennings
reportedly was in on the charter, but gave his seat to the Big Bopper,
who was sick and would use the time to see a doctor in Fargo. Tommy Allsup
and Ritchie Valens flipped a coin for the remaining seat. Valens won the
toss
Dion recalls, The next day, I stood in the lobby of the hotel in
Moorhead, Minnesota. There was a television on the wall, announcing that
the plane carrying Buddy, Ritchie and the Big Bopper had gone down in
the storm. There were no survivors.
As fans and families mourned the tragic loss and the musicians were laid
to rest, the promoters booked replacements and the show went on. The Winter
Dance Party Tour continued as planned
in 13 more cities. They scrambled
to find some local talent to play in Moorhead, and found fifteen-year-old
Robert Velline, also known as Bobby Vee, of Fargo. He played that day
the music died...and a career was born.
Sources:
http://www.fiftiesweb.com/crash.htm
http://www.fiftiesweb.com/cab.htm
http://www.anomalies-unlimited.com/Death/Buddy.html
http://www.bobbyvee.com/bobby.html
http://www.buddyholly.com/bh/tournotes/winter_dance_party.html
http://www.ratpackstlouis.com/winter_dance_party.htm
http://www.buddyhollyonline.com/mainwdp.html
http://www.diondimucci.com/journey.html
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