Buddy Holly's music raves on and his story still lives

January 26, 2019 at 8:07PM
Buddy Holly poster
The producers ask anyone at the Prom Ballroom that night to contact Sevan Garabedian at sevan1@sympatico.ca or at 514-931-6959. He is offering a reward for photos. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)

As they do every year, Buddy Holly fans young and old, mostly old, head to the Surf Ballroom in Clear Lake, Iowa, to pay homage to the Texas rocker who played his final show on Feb. 2, 1959, before boarding a small plane for the next stop in Moorhead. The plane crashed in an Iowa cornfield, killing Holly, Ritchie Valens and the Big Bopper. And the rest is rock 'n' roll history.

On this the 60th anniversary of the Day the Music Died, two film producers who have carefully documented the ill-fated Winter Dance Party tour will be there, too. After interviewing all the tour's living members — except Dion — hundreds of fans, and collecting dozens of photos from all but one of the tour's 11 venues, Sevan Garabedian of Montreal and Jim McCool of Madison, Wis., are putting the finishing touches on the latest incarnation of their labor of love: "The Winter Dance Party Tapes."

In 2011, they planned a film documentary called "Gotta Travel On: The Winter Dance Party Odyssey." But, Garabedian said, the plan changed when they decided it would be a shame to lose all the history contained in those many hours of interviews. "We ended up with all this wonderful footage, wonderful stories, each story had its own magic touch," he said in an interview last week, on his way to Clear Lake. "We thought, 'How can we possibly cut this down to two hours and leave all those wonderful interviews on the cutting room floor?' "

They have already released a trailer on YouTube and the interview with Frankie Sardo, the solo artist who joined Holly and the Crickets; Dion and the Belmonts; Valens, and J.P. Richardson (the Big Bopper) for the logistically insane and bitterly cold tour that started in Milwaukee on Jan. 23, 1959, then zigzagged across and up and down Wisconsin, Minnesota and Iowa.

The rest of the interviews will be released in increments starting in April.

In trailer sound bites, Sardo and two of the Belmonts, Carlo Mastrangelo and Fred Milano, talk dramatically about the toll the cold took traveling in school buses with no heat and one bus that memorably broke down after the Duluth show, leaving them stranded in northern Wisconsin.

Milano ticks off the temperatures: "17 degrees below zero, 35 below zero, 20 below zero. This is cold like we've never experienced," says the Bronx native. Mastrangelo adds: "We were freezing to death, all of us. The heat is gone. There we are on the bus, all 11 of us, freezing to death."

"And that was the straw that broke the camel's back for Buddy, and Buddy said, 'Screw this, let's get a plane,' " says Sardo. A conclusion that Garabedian heartily endorses. "There is no argument about that. It was a perfect storm. The highways, no heat, the weather, the logistics, not getting good sleep, not washing their clothes, the buses breaking down. Buddy was feeling responsible. He wasn't going to put up with this. When he got to Clear Lake, he found a charter service. He made up his mind, he was flying."

In addition to collecting stories, the two have scoured the tour towns for photos. They're still hoping for some more from the Jan. 28 concert at the once elegant Prom Ballroom in St. Paul. They have three taken downstairs but none from the concert.

They recently scored about a dozen photos from the Moorhead concert, which went on despite the plane crash only hours earlier. Some photos came from Robby Vee, son of Bobby Vee, who at 15 famously played with his band the Shadows at the Moorhead Armory that night, along with the other distraught tour performers, including Waylon Jennings, who had taken the bus from Clear Lake.

So once again Garabedian and McCool will be in Clear Lake. As they've done in the past, they'll go to the crash site about 1:05 a.m., the time the plane crashed, and sing the 1970s ode to Holly "American Pie" with a couple of drinks.

Why do people keep coming back to Clear Lake? "The answer is simple," Garabedian said. "People long for a simpler time where you can go to this really small town, to a ballroom, the same ballroom that was there in 1959. And you keep going back."

Pamela Huey • 612-673-7044

about the writer

about the writer

Pamela Huey

Copy Desk Chief

Nation/world editor Pamela Huey has spent 44 years in the news business, including stints at UPI, MPR, AP and the Star Tribune. As a wire reporter, she covered politics, crime, sports, agriculture and human interest stories. She also spent seven years on Capitol Hill serving as a deputy press secretary to a U.S. senator.  

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