Inspired by the death of the three entertainers, then-
KFXM DJ
Tommy Dee from
San Bernardino, California wrote a tribute song called "
Three Stars" on the night of the accident. On February 5, 1959, the song was recorded by
Eddie Cochran, a friend of Holly and Valens. The purpose of the recording was to divide the royalties of the song for the family of the deceased. While Cochran's version remained unreleased until 1966, Dee's version was released in 1959. In the months following the crash, the media stopped broadcasting the names of victims before the next of kin were notified. Following Holly's death, "
It Doesn't Matter Anymore" peaked at number 13 on the
Billboard Hot Singles Chart and Decca Records put out compilations of his music. While his recordings sold well in the United States, Holly's large sales in the United Kingdom prompted his label to publish unreleased recordings, demos and outtakes of his recording sessions. In 1961, writer
Geoff Goddard composed for British producer
Joe Meek the song "
Tribute to Buddy Holly". Meek, who was interested in occultism, held
séances to attempt to contact Holly to gain his approval for the release of the song. Meek then gave the composition to singer
Mike Berry, who later expressed that while he did not share the producer's beliefs, that he liked the idea of recording a tribute for Holly. Berry also denied the rumor that his recording was banned by the
BBC, and he clarified that he saw the paperwork approving of its broadcast, while he attributed its few plays to the lack of interest by show producers. "Tribute to Buddy Holly" reached number 24 on the
UK Singles Chart. Ten years after the singer's death, in 1969, the Buddy Holly Appreciation Society in the UK had a membership of 20,000. In 1971, singer
Don McLean released the song "
American Pie": by January 15, 1972 it reached the top of the
Billboard Hot 100, where it stayed for four weeks. McLean wrote "American Pie" as he was 24 years old, with the narration centered around the plane crash described by himself as "the day the music died". The line of McLean's song would later be used to refer to the accident in popular culture. McLean had first learned of the accident while working his route as a paperboy in
New Rochelle, New York. In a 1972 interview with
P. F. Kluge for
Life, while the composer refused to clarify the meaning of all of the lyrics to the song, he stated "I like paying my debts" regarding his acknowledgment of Holly and the accident. Furthermore, McLean told Kluge: "Buddy Holly was the first and last person I idolized as a kid", he continued "I liked Holly because he spoke to me", and then he added that the singer was "a symbol of something deeper than the music he made". McLean then told the
Des Moines Register that his composition used the event as a starting point to narrate what he perceived to be the loss of the American innocence of the 1950s, as the country changed with the
counterculture of the 1960s and the
Vietnam War. McLean stated: “The music is the poetry of life, it’s the spirit of something [...] It’s the essence of art. It’s so many things. So, as the song develops after each verse, that music has died, you see? So I realize as a metaphor it was perfect for what I was thinking". A popular misconception is that the aircraft was called
American Pie, but no record exists of any name ever having been given to N3794N. Jerry Dwyer died in 2016 at the age of 85. During an interview in 2009, Dwyer deemed the plane crash "the worst thing that ever happened" to him until the death of his oldest son. In the decades following the accident, Dwyer would often join the yearly tribute concert at the Surf Ballroom and he became close to the people in the remaining Holly scene. Dwyer did not consider that the results of the investigation by the Civil Aeronautics Board were correct and in multiple occasions, he mentioned that he was writing a book about the crash. At the time of his death, his wife Barbara announced that she was working with a California author to release the book.
Concerts and events In 1978, DJ Darryl Hensley started the rock-and-roll FM station
KZEV in Clear Lake, Iowa. The first anniversary of the station coincided with the 20th anniversary of the date of the concert at the Surf Ballroom, which led Hensley to organize the Tribute to Buddy Holly Concert. Hensley turned to the Buddy Holly Memorial Society to form a line-up for the event: Waylon Jennings rejected the offer as he did not desire to return to Clear Lake on account of his "bad memories", while Dion DiMucci's fee was too expensive. Due to scheduling conflicts
Paul McCartney,
Linda Ronstadt, Don McLean, Gary Busey, Bobby Vee, and members of the Holly family could not appear on the show. Hensley then filled the line-up with singer
Jimmy Clanton, Nikki Sullivan,
The Drifters,
Del Shannon, the local cover band the White Sidewalls, and DJ
Wolfman Jack. The Tribute to Buddy Holly Concert took place on February 2, 1979 at the Surf Ballroom with the attendance of an audience of 1,700 spectators coming from 36 states and Canada. The proceeds of the tickets at a price of US$17.50 () went to the Buddy Holly Memorial Society, as well as to the local charity Handicapped Village. The concert would later become an annual event. In 1988, a conflict arose between Hensley and the new owner of the Surf Ballroom, Darrell Hein. Hein planned to hold at the Surf Ballroom a memorial event for Valens and Richardson in the immediate nights before the tenth annual Buddy Holly Tribute would take place. The Surf Ballroom's manager later told the
Toronto Star that he planned to also make it an annual event. In 1989, Hensley moved his Holly tribute to the North Iowa Fair Grounds, but he canceled it after the tickets sold poorly. The public instead purchased tickets to Hein's event at the original venue. In 1990, KZEV was sold to the Minnesota-based Lindner Broadcasting Group that expressed that they wanted to re-start Hensley's event. That year, Hein moved his tribute event to August with the original Crickets as the headliner. In 1992, the new owner of the Surf Ballroom, Bruce Christiansen, expanded the Holy tribute to a four-night event. In 1994, McLean performed for the first time in the tribute at the Surf Ballroom. For the 40th anniversary of the Winter Dance Party in 1999, a Holly tribute band fronted by John Mueller played the same eleven cities as Holly, Richardson, and Valens on the same dates. During the 1990s, Mueller portrayed Holly in the musical
Buddy: The Buddy Holly Story. The Winter Dance Party Tour later became an annual event: while the troupe repeated the same schedule the following year, they deemed it too exhausting and in follow-up tours they scheduled the dates in a more convenient order. Regarding the original tour schedule and distances, Mueller called the order they followed "an incredibly grueling tour". In 2008, Tommy Allsup joined Mueller (as Holly), Ray Anthony (as Ritchie Valens) and J.P. Richardson, Jr. (as his father). By 2009, five of the original 11 venues still existed. The Winter Dance party tour was at the time also performing year-round dates in other locations. The 50th anniversary of the original Surf Ballroom concert took place on February 2, 2009, with
Delbert McClinton,
Joe Ely,
Wanda Jackson,
Los Lobos,
Chris Montez,
Bobby Vee,
Graham Nash,
Peter and Gordon, Tommy Allsup, and a house band featuring
Chuck Leavell,
James "Hutch" Hutchinson,
Bobby Keys, and
Kenny Aronoff. J.P. Richardson, Jr. was among the participating artists, and Bob Hale was the master of ceremonies, as he was at the 1959 concert. After the death of Richardson's son in August 2013, the Big Bopper was portrayed by Linwood Sasser. On February 3, 2021, McLean performed at the Surf Ballroom to kick off his American Pie 50th Anniversary tour on the first night of the Winter Dance Party tribute. The recreation and live show is endorsed by the estates of Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens, and Richardson.
Memorials In 1988, the new manager of the Surf Ballroom, Darrell Hein, donated US$4,000 () for the construction of a tall
granite memorial bearing the names of Peterson and the three entertainers. In February 1988, Valens' siblings, Connie and Bob, visited the Surf Ballroom and the site of the crash for the first time. In June of that year, the memorial was dedicated after a convertible parade that included Maria Elena Holly on a 1957
Ford Fairlane, Jay P. Richardson (son of the singer) on a 1954
Chevrolet Bel Air, Connie Alvarez and Irma Padilla (sisters of Valens) on a 1980
Ford Mustang, and the parents of Roger Peterson together with his re-married widow DeAnn Johnson. The ceremony also included the renaming of a road originating near the Surf Ballroom to "Buddy Holly Place", as well as the turn-over of Richardson's watch to his son. Richardson's watch and Holly's glasses were misfiled by the police, and both were given to María Elena Holly earlier that year. The tenth anniversary of the Surf Ballroom annual concert in 1989 featured Bobby Vee,
the Diamonds, and
Freddy Cannon. The following day, February 3, 1989, the remaining original Crickets, Allison and Mauldin, played a concert in Fargo, North Dakota, to commemorate the 30th anniversary of the date of the Winter Dance Party that the three entertainers never reached. On February 4, 1989, Ken Paquette and Chuck Renner, sheet-metal workers from the
Marinette Marine shipyard in
Marinette, Wisconsin, installed a life-sized guitar made by Paquette at the site of the crash, which had previously been marked only by a flattened fence. On the day both of them mounted the memorial, Paquette saw the inscription "Buddy" in the snow and a guitar pick wedged to a fence post. Paquette originally visited the site in 1987, where he only saw flowers left on a fence: he had to use a picture of the day of the crash to count the fence posts to find the exact place where the aircraft came to rest against the barbed wire. The engraved guitar read: "Buddy Holly Richie Valens Big Bopper 2/3/59". In 1990 Paquette expanded the memorial: he added three sheet-metal records that read "Chantilly Lace", "Peggy Sue", and "Donna" after the hits of the three singers. In 2003, Paquette was commissioned by The Music Lives Here Committee of Green Bay, Wisconsin, to build a memorial featuring the silhouettes of the three entertainers in sheet-metal to be placed in front of the Riverside Ballroom. The materials were paid for by the committee, while Paquette donated his time. The memorial was dedicated on July 17, 2003. In January 2004, the guitar monument at the crash site was auctioned on
eBay to benefit the Winter Dance Party Music Scholarships dedicated to the three singers and Peterson. The highest bidder was local business owner Ellie Harmeyer, whose offer of US$3.309 () closed the auction the same month. The sheet-metal guitar remained at the site of the crash. In 2009, during the 50th anniversary of the accident, Paquette together with Jerry Dwyer and his wife unveiled a small memorial for pilot Roger Peterson at the crash site. The entrance of the trail leading to the site of the accident is marked by a memorial consisting of a set of metal glasses made by local artist Michael Connor, at the intersection of Gull Avenue and 315th Street in the northern part of Clear Lake. The site and memorials are located from the head of the trail. During the 1960s, the farm where the crash happened was purchased by William H. Nicholas. His grandson, Jeff Nicholas, owned the land as of 2024 and he maintained the site of the crash and the surrounding memorials. Nicholas rejected suggestions to pave the road leading to it, or to add lights, and he decided to keep it as a corn and soybean field. Nicholas expressed: "When you stand out here and close your eyes, you can go right back to 1959". In 2019, the documentary
Gotta Travel on: Remembering When the Music Died was premiered during the 60th anniversary of the Winter Dance Party. In 2013, producer Sevan Garabedian began to work on the film that chronicled the Winter Dance Party and the plane accident: It featured interviews with the musicians of the tour that were still alive at the time, as well as with local fans of the 24 cities were the tour played. The accident was featured in the 2022 documentary ''The Day the Music Died: The Story of Don McLean's American Pie''. The film contained interviews with McLean recounting how he learned of the crash, Dwyer's account of the flight and search of the wreck, and Connie Valens' thanking McLean for his composition. In February 2026, the Music Experience Center in Clear Lake, inaugurated the immersive exhibit
Not Fade Away that featured the history of the Surf Ballroom using video, images, and music, while it also included tributes to the three performers and Peterson. File:Surf Ballroom Monument.jpg|Monument in front of the
Surf Ballroom in
Clear Lake, Iowa File:GlassesSign.jpg|alt=A sculpture consisting of two white posts holding a black spectacles frame in Buddy Holly's characteristic style|Signpost east of the crash site replicating Holly's signature glasses. The crash site is actually about from this location, down the path along the fence line. File:CrashSiteClearLakeIowa.JPG|Memorial at crash site, 2024 File:Buddy Holley's Pilot.JPG|Memorial to pilot Roger Peterson at crash site
In popular culture The accident closes the 1978 biographical film
The Buddy Holly Story starring
Gary Busey; the film ends as the Clear Lake concert concludes, and a freeze-frame shot is followed with a caption revealing their deaths later that night. The run-up to the accident and its aftermath are depicted in the 1987 Valens biopic
La Bamba. In the 5th episode of the 6th season of
The Simpsons aired on October 9, 1994, "
Sideshow Bob Roberts", the fictional graves of Holly, Valens, and Richardson are found and identified as deceased voters by
Lisa and
Bart Simpson at the Springfield Cemetery, as they investigate
electoral fraud by
Sideshow Bob. Meanwhile, on the 15th episode of the 14th season episode "
C.E.D'oh" aired on March 16, 2003, the three entertainers appear as vampires on an episode of the fictional animated series
The Itchy & Scratchy Show before the plane carrying them and Scratchy crashes. In the animated series
The Venture Brothers, the villainous duo of Red Mantle and Dragoon are implied to be Holly and Richardson, with the crash being used as a cover up of their abduction and turn to life of crime. In 1978,
Waylon Jennings briefly added his own memories of the incident onto his song "A Long Time Ago", from the album ''
I've Always Been Crazy''. Jennings sings the lines "Don't ask me who I gave my seat to on that plane, I think you already know, I told you that a long time ago". In 1985, German punk rock band
Die Ärzte released their second album
Im Schatten der Ärzte, which includes the song "Buddy Holly's Brille". In their trademark humorous fashion, they address the accident by asking where Holly's glasses ended up. In 2006, Dion DiMucci recorded "Hug My Radiator" which references the "broken-down bus" and the chilling cold the performers experienced on the tour. The song does not directly reference the three performers who died, but DiMucci established the connection in an interview.
Howard Waldrop's short story "Save a Place in the Lifeboat for Me" collected in the 1986 book
Howard Who? describes a fictional attempt by a sextet of famous
slapstick characters (
Chico and
Harpo Marx,
Abbott and Costello, and
Laurel and Hardy) to prevent the accident from occurring.
TJ Klune's 2020 fantasy novel
The House in the Cerulean Sea features a character, Lucy, who collects records of Holly, the Big Bopper, and Valens, and discusses the crash with the protagonist, Linus. ==See also==