For rock ‘n’ roll fans, February 3, 1959, has a special significance. It’s “the day the music died,” because on that date Buddy Holly, one of the pioneers of rock ‘n’ roll music, was killed in a plane accident in the midwest along with Ritchie Valens and the Big Bopper. The incident robbed the world of a true musical visionary whose constant experimentation in this new music might have had an even greater impact on the recording industry had he lived. But Holly’s music had a life of its own and would later serve as inspiration to the Beatles and musicians like Marshall Crenshaw (who would eventually play Buddy Holly in La Bamba, 1987, a dramatization of Ritchie Valens’ life). In The Buddy Holly Story (1978), the legend from Lubbock, Texas, is reassessed in a thoroughly entertaining musical biography that mixes fact and fiction in equal parts, a practice Hollywood is unable to resist despite the potential for distortion and false allegations. Luckily, the film captures Holly’s charm and stubborn individuality through Gary Busey’s chameleon-like performance in the title role.
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Joe Meek: Studio Recording Wizard

Most record collectors and music lovers of the baby boom generation fondly remember some of the top forty hits created by such innovative producers like Phil Spector, Bob Crewe and Eddie Kramer during the 1960s. Another major talent also emerged in England during this time period who took a unique, hands-on approach to producing records – Joe Meek. With an arsenal of sound effects and recording devices he kept secret from everyone, Meek had a meteoric rise and fall between 1961 through 1967 but is still famous today for “Telstar,” performed by The Tornadoes. It was a monster hit in the U.K. and became the number one single in the U.S. on Billboard’s top 40 chart during the week of December 22, 1962. As a producer, Meek was not a one-hit wonder and had other best-selling singles such as “Johnny Remember Me,” a ghost ballad performed by actor turned pop star John Leyton, and “Have I the Right?” by the Honeycombs. Unfortunately, personal problems, poor financial management and competition with major labels contributed to his downfall (he committed suicide in February 1967). But a fascinating window into his life and career was produced for the Arena documentary series for the BBC in 1991 entitled The Very Strange Story of the Legendary Joe Meek.
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