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Buddy Holly

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@ National Portrait Gallery

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Born Lubbock, TexasKilled in a plane crash just as he attained stardom, Charles Hardin “Buddy” Holly is one of the most influential and mythic figures in American music. Raised in a musical family and steeped in a crossroads of musical genres that included gospel, country, and rhythm and blues, Holly formed his own band out of high school. Soon he was opening for Elvis Presley in Lubbock, Texas (1955). By 1957, Holly had a new record contract and a new band, and his career took off nationally and internationally; his first hit was “That’ll Be the Day.” Tragically, Holly and performers Richie Valens and J. P. Richardson (“The Big Bopper”) were killed in a plane crash in Iowa in January 1959. Memorialized later as “The Day the Music Died,” the myth of Buddy Holly has overshadowed his influence as a performer and guitarist in the history of rock and roll.Nacido en Lubbock, TexasCharles Hardin “Buddy” Holly, fallecido en un accidente aéreo cuando apenas alcanzaba el estrellato, es una de las figuras más influyentes y míticas de la música estadounidense. Holly creció en el seno de una familia musical absorbiendo una confluencia de géneros como el góspel, el country y el rhythm and blues, y al terminar la escuela superior formó su propia banda. Poco después ya había logrado presentarse como primer acto en un concierto de Elvis Presley en Lubbock, Texas (1955). Para 1957 tenía contrato nuevo y banda nueva, y su carrera despegó a nivel nacional e internacional. Su...
Type:
Image
Format:
Gelatin Silver Print
Rights:
National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution
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National Portrait Gallery

Record Harvested From

Smithsonian Institution