Sivamohan Sumathy Long before MIT and Jeff Bezos (the latter reluctantly referred to here) had supposedly banned PowerPoint ...
Buddy Holly may have looked cute, but behind those iconic glasses was a fiery rebel who played by his own rules—until that ...
On February 3, 1959, 22-year-old Buddy Holly, 28-year-old Jiles Perry Richardson Jr., better known by his stage name The Big ...
Iowa. To commemorate Feb. 3, 1959 – aka “The Day the Music Died” – the Milwaukee-based National Bobblehead Hall of Fame announced the release of the first officially licensed bobbleheads ...
“We’re excited to unveil the first bobbleheads celebrating music legends Ritchie Valens ... He made some pretty serious mistakes that day that forever changed rock history, but almost nothing ...
The National Bobblehead Hall of Fame and Museum is honoring the music icons with their own bobbleheads, but why doesn't Buddy ...
has become commonly referred to in pop culture as "The Day the Music Died" — but for "American Pie" creator Don McLean and Connie Valens, the younger sister of late hitmaker Ritchie Valens ...
It's been coined as "The Day the Music Died," which is the famous line from Don McLean's hit song "American Pie." But more than 60 years later, it is clear the music didn't die.