Book description
Science writer John Gribbin's popular biography of Buddy Holly -
his first ever non-science title - originally published on the 50th
anniversary of Holly's tragic death. Buddy Holly was killed at 22 when
the plane he was travelling in crashed on 3 February 1959. Although
this was less than two years after Holly's first hit record, Don
McLean described this as 'the day the music died.' But Sonny Curtis,
Holly's friend and musical colleague, told us that the music didn't
die, because 'Buddy Holly lives every time you play rock'n'roll.'
More than fifty years after Holly's death, his lasting influence on
pop is clear; a musical based on his life has run for longer than
Holly was alive. The Beatles chose That'll Be the Day by Buddy's
group The Crickets as their first attempt at recording, as well taking
inspiration for their name. Clearly, the music didn't die! John
Gribbin, an ardent fan since he was 12 presents this labour of love
written in the spirit of Sonny Curtis' lyric, as a celebration of
Holly's all too brief life, and as an introduction, for all those not
around in 1959, to the man and his astonishing musical legacy. It also
includes - uniquely - a full and detailed account of every Holly
recording session, which any Buddy fan will devour.
Dr. John Gribbin trained as an astrophysicist at the University
of Cambridge before becoming a full-time science writer. He has worked
for the science journal Nature, and the magazine New Scientist (for
which he is now physics consultant) and has contributed articles on
science topics to the Times, the Guardian and the Independent. Gribbin
has received awards for his writing in both Britain and the United
States and is currently a visiting Fellow in astronomy at the
University of Sussex.