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Peggy Sue Got Married (song)

"Peggy Sue Got Married"
Single by Buddy Holly
B-side"Crying, Waiting, Hoping"
Released
  • July 20, 1959 (1959-07-20) (US)
  • August 28, 1959 (UK)
RecordedDecember 8, 1958 and June 30, 1959
GenreRock and roll
Length2:04
LabelCoral
Songwriter(s)Buddy Holly
Producer(s)Jack Hansen
Buddy Holly singles chronology
"It Doesn't Matter Anymore"
(1959)
"Peggy Sue Got Married"
(1959)
"True Love Ways"
(1960)

"Peggy Sue Got Married" is a song written and performed by Buddy Holly. It was posthumously released in July 1959 as a 45-rpm single with "Crying, Waiting, Hoping". It refers to his 1957 hit song "Peggy Sue". It was one of the first sequels of the rock era.

Buddy Holly version

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Buddy Holly recorded the vocal, accompanying himself on guitar, on December 8, 1958, in apartment 4H of "The Brevoort" on New York City's Fifth Avenue. Record producer Jack Hansen prepared Holly's solo recording for commercial release. The Ray Charles Singers recorded backup vocals, and studio musicians recorded an instrumental arrangement on June 30, 1959, at Coral Records' Studio A in New York. In 1964, Holly's former producer Norman Petty recorded an alternate version of the song, with new instrumentals (by The Fireballs) but without backup singers.

The studio recording sessions and overdubs for "Peggy Sue Got Married" were similar to those for the posthumous track "Crying, Waiting, Hoping". Buddy Holly's original, undubbed home recording was used as theme music in the film Peggy Sue Got Married.

The Crickets version

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After Buddy Holly had died in a plane crash on February 3, 1959, the Crickets recorded their own version in June 1959.[1] David Box, a native of Lubbock, Texas, and a Buddy Holly soundalike, joined the group as lead vocalist for this version of "Peggy Sue Got Married" which was released in the United States as the B-side of Coral 62238 in 1960. The Crickets had decided to use the original arrangements they had used for "Peggy Sue" with the only change being David Box on lead vocal.[2]

Other cover versions

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References

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  1. ^ "Who's Who On The Cricket's Recordings". Rockin50s.com. Archived from the original on 2013-02-11. Retrieved 2016-08-29.
  2. ^ Peggy Sue Gerron; Glenda Cameron (1960-08-11). Whatever Happened to Peggy Sue?: A Memoir by Buddy Holly's Peggy Sue. AuthorHouse. p. 134. ISBN 9780980008517. Retrieved 2016-08-29.

Sources

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