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      • This accident, in which Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens, and Jiles Perry “J.P.” Richardson, Jr., aka “The Big Bopper” died, is remembered because it was the first widely-publicized air crash to involve well-known rock musicians and because it was immortalized by Don McLean in his 1971 hit song “American Pie”: “A long long time ago I can still remember how That music used to make me smile And I knew if I had my chance That I could make those people dance And maybe they'd be happy for a while But...
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  2. Feb 22, 2024 · Stevie Ray Vaughan, an American musician known for his influence on blues rock, met an untimely death at the age of 35. On August 27, 1990, after a sensational performance at Alpine Valley Music Theatre, Vaughan was involved in a fatal helicopter crash in East Troy, Wisconsin.

    • Glenn Miller
    • Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens and The Big Bopper
    • Patsy Cline
    • Jim Reeves
    • Otis Redding
    • Jim Croce
    • Lynyrd Skynyrd
    • Randy Rhoads
    • Ricky Nelson
    • Stevie Ray Vaughan

    The popular swing-era bandleader disappeared over the English Channel on December 15, 1944, while a passenger on a single-engine UC-64-A Norseman. The airplane took off from Twinwood Airfield, about 50 miles north of London, en route to Paris, where Major Miller, 40, was going to make arrangements to bring his Army band to the continent to entertai...

    Immortalized by Don McLean’s song “American Pie” as “The Day the Music Died,”the crash of a Beechcraft Bonanza on February 3, 1959, took the lives of 22-year-old Buddy Holly (“Peggy Sue”), Ritchie Valens (17) and J.P. Richardson (“The Big Bopper,” who was 28). Shortly after taking off from the airport in Clear Lake, Iowa, on a flight to Fargo, Nort...

    Country singer Patsy Cline, 30, and three others died in a crash of a Piper Comancheon March 5, 1963. Cline was on her way back to her home in Nashville, Tennessee, after performing in Kansas City, Kansas. The pilot was her manager, Ramsey “Randy” Dorris Hughes. Bad weather had been making the trip difficult and forced several stops along the way. ...

    Country singer Jim Reeves, 40, died in a crash similar to Cline’s, except in this case Reeves was flying his own airplane. The singer, known for hits like “Four Walls,” took off from Batesville, Arkansas, on July 31, 1964, for a flight to Nashville. Reeves was at the controls of his single-engine Beechcraft 35-B33 Debonair. His only passenger was h...

    Soul singer Otis Redding, 26, died in the crash of his chartered twin-engine Beechcraft 18 on December 10, 1967. Redding and members of his band, the Bar-Kays, had taken off from the airport in Cleveland for a flight to Madison, Wisconsin, with pilot Richard Fraser. The weather was bad, with cold drizzle and fog. While on the approach to Madison th...

    Singer/songwriter Jim Croce, 30, was a rising star on September 20, 1973, when he performed his last concert at Northwestern State University in Natchitoches, Louisiana. He had achieved chart success with “Bad, Bad Leroy Brown” and other songs and was working on a third album. Weary of the road, he was eager to get to the next and final stop on the...

    Members of the country rock band Lynyrd Skynyrd (“Sweet Home Alabama,” “Free Bird”) were aboard a chartered flight of a twin-engine Convair CV-240 on October 20, 1977. The band’s fifth album, Street Survivors, had been released only three days before. The flight flew out of Greenville, South Carolina, en route to Baton Rouge, Louisiana, when it cra...

    On March 19, 1982, Randy Rhoads, guitarist for rocker Ozzy Osbourne, died in the crash of a Beechcraft Bonanza in Leesburg, Florida. Rhoads, 25, was a passenger in the airplane, which was flown by Andrew Aycock, who drove a bus for the band. The airplane belonged to country singer Jerry Calhoun. The accident happened when Aycock, whose pilot’s lice...

    Singer Ricky Nelson, 45, had become famous as one of the offspring of Ozzie and Harriet Nelson and played himself on his parents’ shows on radio and television. Interested in music, Nelson launched a musical career, with hits that included “Hello Mary Lou” and “Garden Party.” He was killed on December 31, 1985, when his airplane, a 1944 Douglas DC-...

    After serving as David Bowie’s guitarist on the 1983 album Let’s Dance, Stevie Ray Vaughan, 35, enjoyed a successful solo career as a blues singer/guitarist with his band Double Trouble. He died early in the morning of August 27, 1990, in the crash of a Bell 206B JetRanger helicopter outside Elkhorn, Wisconsin. The helicopter had departed from the ...

  3. Aug 27, 1990 · A helicopter carrying Grammy-winning blues guitarist Stevie Ray Vaughan, three members of rock legend Eric Clapton’s entourage and a pilot slammed into a hill in dense fog early today, killing...

  4. Jan 25, 2024 · Tragically, the band’s story came to an abrupt and heartbreaking end when several members, including the band's leader, perished in a deadly plane crash. Explore this list of famous musicians and bands who died in a plane crash, including Buddy Holly, Stevie Ray Vaughan, and more.

  5. In the early morning of Monday, August 27, 1990, American musician Stevie Ray Vaughan was killed in a helicopter crash near East Troy, Wisconsin, at age 35. [1] He was one of the most influential blues guitarists of the 1980s, described by the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as "the second coming of the blues".

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  6. He had a history of drunk-driving records to his name, and was legally not permitted to fly when the accident happened. Denver was the sole passenger on the aircraft when it crashed. He was 53 when he died. Other famous musicians who lost their lives in plane crashes are: ♫ Ricky Nelson. ♫ Otis Redding.

  7. Sep 14, 2017 · The details of Montgomery Gentry singer Troy Gentry 's tragic helicopter crash have now been made public, as it's revealed that the fatal accident was caused by engine failure. The...

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