Sixty-seven years ago today, a rising star known for his larger-than-life persona and novelty songs died alongside his ...
Lansing State Journal on MSN
Day the Music Died. What to know about 1959 crash that claimed icons
A late-night plane crash claimed three early Rock & Roll pioneers and became immortalized as The Day the Music Died.
On Feb. 3, 1959, plane accident took the lives of entertainers Holly, Valens, Richardson. Americans died in several other air ...
Buddy Holly passed on February 3, 1959, at the age of only 22. His short time on earth ended up changing rock music forever.
February 3 is remembered as ''The Day the Music Died'' after a 1959 plane crash killed Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens, and J.P Richardson. Here’s the history and significance.
For Black History Month, World Cafe correspondent John Morrison kicks off a weekly series with a deep dive into the history ...
Few titles in the musical theatre canon are as instantly recognizable—or as enduringly beloved—as the SOUND OF MUSIC.
Music critic Walter Tunis curates 15-track Valentine's Day playlist celebrating beauty beyond romance, spanning classical, jazz, folk, soul.
US singer Mariah Carey has stunned crowds with a performance of an Italian song during the 2026 Winter Olympics opening ceremony. The star, 56, took to the stage at the San Siro Stadium in Milan to ...
On Aug. 31, 1971, a 27-year-old folk singer and songwriter with a hit on the Billboard charts came to Charleston, West ...
What's the price of applause? Broadway’s ultimate stage mother storms into Cocoa Village with "Gypsy," on stage through Feb. 22.
Tuesday marked the 65th anniversary of “the day the music died.” In the early morning hours in 1959, a small airplane carrying early rock pioneers Buddy Holly, The Big Bopper and Richie Valens crashed ...
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