The Crickets were a group with two careers, one that lasted less than a year-and-a-half, and another that continued for decades. Originally formed by singer and guitarist
Buddy Holly, drummer
Jerry Allison, and bassist
Joe B. Mauldin,
the Crickets went from being
Holly's backing musicians to a self-contained band when they re-recorded a song that
Holly had already cut under his own name to avoid violating an earlier contract.
The Crickets went on to a successful run of hits with
Holly -- including "Maybe Baby," "Not Fade Away," and "That'll Be the Day" -- until his death in 1959. After that,
the Crickets, joined by guitarist
Sonny Curtis, went on to a long run recording on their own as well as backing other artists, most notably
Bobby Vee and
the Everly Brothers. Their first post-
Holly album, In Style with the Crickets, included the original version of
Curtis' song "I Fought the Law," but by the mid-'70s, they had walked away from recording and primarily performed live, especially after the 1978 film The Buddy Holly Story revived interest in their former frontman.
The Crickets came back in 1988 with T Shirt, which was produced in part by longtime fan
Paul McCartney, and 2004's
The Crickets & Their Buddies found them covering their classics with help from
Eric Clapton,
Waylon Jennings,
John Prine,
Graham Nash, and many more.
The "Crickets" started out as a ruse. In 1956,
Buddy Holly signed a contract with Decca Records, but after two sessions in Nashville, no one was happy with the results, and
Holly and Decca parted ways. After finding a more sympathetic producer in
Norman Petty,
Holly,
Jerry Allison, and
Joe B. Mauldin decamped to
Petty's studio in Clovis, New Mexico, and, among other things, cut a new version of one of
Holly's Decca efforts, "That'll Be the Day." Coral Records was interested in
Holly's
Clovis recordings, but the terms of the Decca contract meant he couldn't re-record "That'll Be the Day" under his own name, so the new version was credited to
the Crickets.
The Crickets' "That'll Be the Day" became a Number One hit in 1957, and for the next 15 months, there were records by
the Crickets and records by
Buddy Holly -- which were virtually interchangeable -- and on-stage they were billed as
Buddy Holly & the Crickets. By the end of 1958, however, the references to "
Buddy Holly & the Crickets" were becoming valid in the worst possible way.
Holly's shifting and expanding musical interests, coupled with his move to New York and marriage to Maria Elena Santiago, and the differing relationships that the three had with
Petty, who was now their manager, led to a split between
Holly and his bandmates in the months immediately prior to
Holly's death in a plane crash on February 3, 1959.
The result of their split was a separate existence for
the Crickets.
Jerry Allison became the de facto leader of the group, and they were soon a quartet, with
Sonny Curtis on guitar and Earl Sinks as lead singer. In 1959, still managed and produced by
Norman Petty, they recorded "Love's Made a Fool of You" backed with "Someone, Someone," which failed to chart. Their next serious assault on the charts -- a version of
Curtis' "I Fought the Law" cut for Coral Records -- vanished without a trace in 1959, and their rendition of "More Than I Can Say" also failed to find an audience for them, though it did wonders for
Bobby Vee (and, by extension, for
Curtis as its composer). They recorded a handful of singles for Coral Records, and later signed to Liberty Records with
Jerry Naylor in the lead singer spot (sometimes switching off with
Curtis), in addition to recording with
Buddy Holly soundalike
Bobby Vee.
The group recorded for Liberty for four years, from 1961 through 1965, even doing their versions of several
Beatles songs, but apart from a pair of minor hits, "My Little Girl" and "Please Don't Ever Change," were unable to generate any enthusiasm. One of
Naylor's successors, David Box, died in a plane crash in 1964. They did find some lingering success in England, where they headlined shows as well as serving as a backing band for
the Everly Brothers, and the group even managed to appear in two jukebox movies on either side of the Atlantic, Just for Fun (1963) in England (doing "My Little Girl" and "Teardrops Feel Like Rain") and The Girls on the Beach (1965) in America (doing "La Bamba"). By the end of the '60s,
Mauldin had left music while
Allison was singing lead; he and
Curtis were also working as session musicians, and
Curtis scored a huge success at the dawn of the '70s as the composer of "Love Is All Around," the theme song for The Mary Tyler Moore Show.
Allison and
Curtis were the core of the group in the early '70s, mostly working as a touring act rather than a recording outfit, though new records did appear on various labels, including Mercury and
MCA. In the wake of the revival of interest in
Holly's music at the end of the '70s, thanks in part to the 1978 movie The Buddy Holly Story,
the Crickets re-formed on a steady basis, with
Joe B. Mauldin returning to the lineup after more than a decade out of music. In 1986,
Curtis left the fold to re-establish himself as a solo performer, and was replaced by
Gordon Payne on vocals. In 1988, they recorded the single "T-Shirt," produced by noted fan
Paul McCartney, which became a minor hit and led to the release of an LP of the same name from Epic Records. The British label Carlton Records issued
Too Much Monday Morning in 1996, which included guest vocals from Texas country-folk artist
Nanci Griffith. In 2004,
the Crickets released
The Crickets & their Buddies, in which they re-recorded a number of their
Holly-era hits with notable guest stars, among them
Eric Clapton,
John Prine,
Rodney Crowell,
Graham Nash,
Bobby Vee, and
Waylon Jennings (whose contribution was recorded shortly before his death). After the death of
Joe B. Mauldin in 2015 and the advancing age of the other
Crickets, the band faded away from both recording and live work, but a steady flow of archival reissues and the group's induction into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2012 kept their music and memory alive. In 2018, the British Not Now label issued The Crickets Story, which collected the group's complete recordings from 1957 to 1962. ~ Bruce Eder & Mark Deming