|








|
b. Jiles Perry
Richardson, 24 October
1930, Sabine Pass, TX, USA.
d.
3 February 1959, Clear Lake, IA, USA. |
|
Jiles Perry (J.P.) Richardson
Jr. called Jape by friends but commonly known as The Big Bopper,
was a disc jockey who parlayed a big voice and exuberant
personality into a career as an early rock and roll star. One of
the station's sponsors wanted Richardson for a new time slot and
suggested a gimmick for the show. Richardson noticed all the
college kids doing a dance called The Bop, so he decided to become
known as "The Big Bopper". Around this time, Richardson --
who played guitar -- started writing more songs. The man who
launched Richardson as a recording artist was Harold
"Pappy" Dailey from Houston. Dailey was promotion director for
Mercury and Starday records and signed Richardson to Mercury. He
soon cut "Chantilly Lace" as "The Big Bopper" for Pappy Dailey's D
label. Mercury bought the recording and released it during the
summer of 1958. It reached #6 on the pop charts and spent 22 weeks
on the national Top 40. It also inspired an answer record by
Jayne
Mansfield titled "That Makes It". In "Chantilly Lace",
Richardson pretends to have a flirting phone call with his
girlfriend; the Mansfield record suggests what his girlfriend
might have been saying at the other end of the line. With the
success of "Chantilly Lace," Richardson took some time off from
KTRM radio and joined
Buddy Holly and The Crickets,
Ritchie Valens and Dion & the
Belmonts for a "Winter Dance Party" tour. On February 2, 1959,
Buddy Holly chartered a Beechcraft Bonanza to take him and his new
Crickets band (Tommy Allsup and
Waylon Jennings) to Fargo, North
Dakota. Richardson came down with the flu and didn't feel
comfortable on the bus, so Jennings gave his plane seat to
Richardson. Valens had never flown on a small plane and requested
Allsup's seat. They flipped a coin, and Valens called heads and
won the toss. In the early morning of February 3, after a
performance at the Surf Ballroom in Clear Lake, Iowa, the small
four-passenger Beechcraft Bonanza took off from the Mason City
airport during a blinding snow storm and crashed into Albert
Juhl’s corn field several miles after takeoff at 1:05 a.m. The
crash killed Holly, Valens, Richardson and the 21-year-old pilot,
Roger Peterson.
This event would become known as "The Day the Music Died".
Richardson, 28 when he died, left behind his wife, Adrianne, and
4-year-old daughter Debra Joy and a son, Jay Perry Richardson. The
Big Bopper is fondly remembered not only for his distinctive
singing and songwriting, but also as a humorist who combined the
best elements of country, R&B and rock'n'roll.

|
|
|