Planet Comicon Kansas City has announced that Kiefer Sutherland, Lou Diamond Phillips, and Sean Astin will be attending this ...
Garcia toured relentlessly with Tiger from 1979 to 1989 — and played the renowned guitar during his final night onstage. After Garcia’s death, Tiger landed in the hands of Jim Irsay, the late owner of ...
A tragedy in February 1959 meant that the original songwriter of "White Lightning" never got to see George Jones' rendition top the charts.
Residents and visitors of Shippensburg alike gathered in the Luhrs Center to experience this unique music experience and viewed a slide show featuring the three singers: Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens ...
Audiences will be transported back to 1959 for over two hours of high-voltage rock ‘n’ roll featuring the hit songs that changed music forever, including “That’ll Be the Day,” “Peggy Sue,” “Oh Boy,” ...
I can see for miles. It’s not uncommon for beer gardens to come stocked with plenty of outdoor games like corn hole, Jenga, and ladder toss. But Elsewhere Too may be the only bar in Texas with its own ...
The Legacy Theater will take a step back into musical history to “The Day the Music Died” with a memorable show in Carthage ...
McLean included the song on his album, American Pie, which he released in October 1971. A month later, he released the ...
A late-night plane crash claimed three early Rock & Roll pioneers and became immortalized as The Day the Music Died.
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.
On February 3, 1959, a small plane crashed in a snowy Iowa field, killing three rising American rock-and-roll stars—Buddy ...
February 3 has witnessed numerous breakthrough hits and milestones that have shaped the rock genre: 1961: Bob Dylan made his first known recordings in New Jersey, featuring songs like "San Francisco ...