Tag Archives: texas

Team, Team, Market, Product, Traction

Last week, I had the distinct pleasure of sharing with an audience through Texas State’s tech incubator, Spectrum, some thoughts on how team and culture determines your future as a startup. Joined throughout the morning by Paula Soileau, CEO of Affintus, Casey Amidon, Human Relations for Drillinginfo, and Jason Seats, Managing Director of Techstars Austin, we explored with entrepreneurs what it takes to build a team, create customers, attract talent and partners, and raise capital. Arguably, the most profound and important statement made was that of Seats in characterizing how they decide which entrepreneurs and startups are worth a closer look.

Profound, as our talk preceded by mere hours, a fantastic post from Engine Cofounder Michael McGeary highlighting the 3 things every entrepreneurial hub should import from Austin. McGeary noted during his time in Austin at Startup Week:

  1. Fail well and let success breed stewardship – “There is obvious financial upside, but for many of the investors I spoke with here, it isn’t good enough to make a profit, the bigger aim is to create opportunity. In doing that, they make Austin and the startup community here stronger and more vibrant.”
  2. Open, unfettered communication and collaboration – Startup focused events dominating the local calendar creates the opportunity for cross-pollination and collaboration.
  3. Civic engagement – While you no doubt have a multitude of technology-focused business and trade associations, they must focus on community engagement.

“Austin is providing a blueprint for other communities that want to strengthen their local economies by incubating the growth of young high-tech companies,” McGeary remarked. “Granted, Austin has some incredible advantages that other cities cannot offer… but there are lessons that can be learned and actions that can be replicated.”

Michael goes on to clarify the importance of collaboration.

“In practice, the need for collaborative efforts, breaking down siloed communication, couldn’t be more real. The more entrepreneurial folks interact, the deeper they set their roots into the community, and that only means good things for opportunity.”

Still, what’s so profound?
How often have you been asked about your traction and MVP more than your team and your market? Those very tenets of Michael’s observation foster the teams and markets that enable revolutionary innovation.

How Techstars is transforming entrepreneurship in Texas

What are your skills, experiences, and passions? I’m paraphrasing now, giving my own perspective on an approach that Techstars takes to deciding which ventures, rather, which entrepreneurs, are accepted into their program. Their near singular focus is on team. Before asking what you’re doing, your business model, or even exploring the idea of traction, they want to know you.

Second to team, is team. No, that’s not a typo. Successful entrepreneurs are not islands unto themselves but teams of individuals within on complementary skills and experience, and shared vision. Still, before know what you’re doing, they stress the utmost importance of the team in which they are investing.

Having passed that bar, Jason shared during our panel, that Techstars next explores your market. I’ve characterized my own experience with how Silicon Valley embraces this priority, the fact that experienced, sophisticated marketing must be a part of your earliest team and determines the product you build. I won’t go so far as to suggest that Techstars agrees with that manifestation of your venture, but the third most important consideration of your business is the market.

With three green lights, the impact that Techstars is having on entrepreneurship throughout Texas is to highlight that only then does how you are approaching that market matter. Your product is the result of the team, team, and your understanding of and opportunity in a market.

If the team at Techstars believes in the potential for your product, with an exceptional time horizon, only then, does traction influence their decision and interest in you.

Let me reiterate, this is my interpretation of their rank ordered evaluation of your potential as a venture: team, team, market, product, and traction. How often have you been asked about your traction and MVP more than your team and your market? Consider if you are involved with the right advisors, the right investors, the right partners; if your experience as an entrepreneur in your economy is reversed: traction, product, market, team, team. There is no right answer, there is no right way to find success as an entrepreneur and that reversed focus on product and traction is simply different; rather, what’s exciting about Techstars’ impact on Texas is their diligence that team (the right collaborations) and market (dare I say, industry, marketing, brand, opportunity) is of the utmost importance.

Techstars provides seed funding from over 75 top venture capital firms and angel investors who are vested in the success of your startup, as well as intense mentorship from hundreds of the best entrepreneurs in the world.

Forbes and Bloomberg have been calling Austin the No. 1 Boomtown and the best place for your startup for years now,” highlighted David Cohen, founder and CEO of Techstars in announcing their launch in Austin, “and Google recently chose it as the second city to receive the fastest Internet on the planet.”

What does Austin have to do with Techstars throughout Texas?? Philosophy aside, Techstars already calls San Antonio home through Geekdom and their Techstars Cloud program, making it one of the few organizations in Texas serving entrepreneurs directly through different cities; supporting your growth through various cities.

Techstars’ program is backed by over 75 different venture capital firms and angel investors and provides for entrepreneurs, three months of intensive mentorship and acceleration. As a result, Techstars’ startups average over $1.4M in outside venture capital and their track record speaks for itself; while conventional wisdom affirms that 9 out of 10 startups fail, 190 or 234 Techstars ventures remain active.

In nearly the same breath as Michael McGeary’s timely post about what startup communities can learn from Austin, Marco Zappacosta, Cofounder and CEO of Thumbtack, shared with Sequoia Capital the incredible story of their growth through the “firing” of customers; seemingly abandoning what many embrace as the very definition of traction.

“We’ve gone through three different business models in order to find the one that’s best for us,” shared Zappacosta. “The thing that got us to our current one, which I suspect is the one we’ll keep, is a relentless focus on the places where we provide the most value.”

The timing of their story struck me as no mere coincidence: only an incredible team focused on their market first, could accomplish as much as being in a position to fire hundreds of thousands of paying customers. Team, Team, Market, Product, Traction.

Techstars’ inaugural, Austin Demo Day is next week Tuesday at the Austin Music Hall. Register to attend here and I hope to see you there.

Austin Startup Blogs & Press

With the tremendous influx of innovators, talent, and capital to Austin’s startup community, I’m increasingly asked how/where to keep tabs on what’s going on. That is, as someone new or moving to Austin, or as an outsider wondering what all the hubbub is about, where does one turn to keep a pulse on things?

Let’s distinguish between the traditional media sources, Austin’s startup press, and those working from within (us bloggers).

Austin Startup Bloggers

I hope you’ll do me the honor of following me on twitter here and I think you’ll enjoy my more popular thoughts about Austin (Where Tech Comes to Life, A Prius in Austin, Texas, and Home of the Social Intelligence Industry).  I don’t think I need to dive into myself more than that since you’re already on my site so here are the other startup blogs I love:

Austin Startup Press

Since the original publication let’s add

I hope it goes without saying that I’m sure I’m missing someone. If you have a recommendation for the list, please let me know below and we’ll keep this, and my layout of the Austin startup community, fresh.

Getting Into Coworking

Those of us working in the coworking community know, that per capita, Austin, Texas is the hotbed of the movement. According to Google Search Trends and reported by DeskMag, Austin leads the US market in search queries (demand) related to coworking; it’s no surprise Austin is home to the Global Coworking Unconference. For that reason, it came as no surprise to hear that Whoosh Traffic founder, Erica Douglass, was opening a coworking space here in Austin; but knowing that she was involved in the coworking movement from the very beginning and then learning that she was opening an East Austin space in a house, we had to catch up with Erica and share her story.

I first got interested in coworking when I attended the first-ever
“coworking” meetup in 2006, where Hat Factory [now closed] and Citizen Space started,” remarked Douglass. “I started the first coworking space in San Jose, since that’s where I lived and worked at the time, in 2006.”

By 2007, popularity in the Simpli Hosting office space had captured the imagination of early entrepreneurs, hungry for coworking before it really even caught on, and the office couldn’t maintain the coworking feel that makes such work environments so appealing. Erica’s first venture into shared work space wasn’t as much of the “coworking” she had desired anymore and the office was sublet-ted to another company.

Don’t wait for opportunity to knock, prepare for it

As is the case with the best of entrepreneurs, a dream, blended with the search for the right opportunity, prompted Douglass to grab the name she knew she would one day fulfill. Later that year, she picked up opportunityspace.net, knowing that when opportunity struck, Opportunity Space would be born. With the lessons learned from her experience in San Jose, the dream seeking an opportunity was that of a coworking space in a house. It’s a dream many have had and continue to have today; why are we only converting office spaces and commercial or retail property into coworking spaces? Homes are far more comfortable. Working toward that dream, Erika and some friends in the Bay Area crunched and recrunched the numbers but couldn’t make the math work on a house with dedicated desks. Opportunity knocked and as Erika sold Simpli Hosting and shelved her dream of coworking, those friends went on to open Silicon Valley’s Hacker Dojo.

Career and life moved Douglass from N. California to San Diego, and from there, in 2011, to Austin, Texas.

I arrived in Austin and again began scouting for space–this time just for my own business, Whoosh Traffic, as I didn’t know very many people in the tech community here,” shared Douglass. “That turned in to us scavenging some extra office space Joshua Baer and Jason Cohen had with OtherInbox and WP Engine (their companies) on the 8th floor of the Omni building in downtown Austin.”

Baer recognized the demand among startups to have a space to meet each other and work together in downtown Austin, and in March 2012, ironed out a deal for a new vision, Capital Factory, on the 16th floor of the Omni building downtown. Cospace had the pleasure of working with the team to develop and launch the space and, along with OtherInbox and WP Engine, Whoosh Traffic was one of the first companies to move in.

Capital Factory is an amazing space, and I have nothing but respect for Josh and the many others who have brought it to Austin. However, some part of me just wouldn’t let my dream go,” added Douglass. “I had a ‘backorder’ set on opportunityspace.com (in case the original owner decided not to renew the name, I’d be the first in line to get it when it became available again.) In March 2012, the original owner let the domain go, and opportunityspace.com was mine!”

Austin Entrepreneur Opens Opportunity Space

Idly flipping through real estate listings on craigslist, January 23, 2013 marks the date opportunity knocked. The perfect space, the perfect house, in east Austin, was there. With some personal risk, signing up for the space from her savings, and the goal of finally having an entire space where she could lease out dedicated desks to other startup companies, Opportunity Space was born.

In Austin though? Where there are easily more coworking spaces per capita than anywhere else in the United States, and possibly the world; can the market support more? With demand for coworking expected continue to grow at exceptional rates, those of us in the know know that traditional office space will continue to die. We’re experiencing not so much of an increase in coworking properties but a transition of traditional work environments to shared work spaces. As home to many of the most innovative entrepreneurs in the world, where better than Austin to continue to evolve work space in creative ways?

I’ve always had, in my mind’s eye, my space being a house I could work out of with others,” shares Douglass. “And, as a startup owner, I know there are two things on our minds: 1) We don’t want to mess with Internet access or jammed printers or broken coffee machines, and 2) We want our own space where we can shut the door, talk amongst ourselves, set up desktops, bring in family pictures, and really make the space our own–while still being engaged in and working with other startups in the space.”

There is an ever increasing demand and desire in all communities for startups to have their own space and while coworking provides the shared environment that fosters collaboration the likes of which we’ve never seen before, as startups grow, they need something more formal – the 2 year lease on an office isn’t the solution, Opportunity Space is the opportunity. And, for Erika, this represents a personal achievement nearly 7 years in the making.

Opportunity Space is now live and located close to downtown, Opportunity Space benefits from one of the most precious of resources for coworking spaces – dedicated parking; as well as, fast Internet, full kitchens on both floors, and room for you to grow. If you’re a startup owner in Austin who wants your own dedicated space for 3+ people, book a tour now. If you’re a solo-entrepreneur in need of only a single desk, go take a look, this is the start of a great opportunity.

Learn more about the space here.

10 Entrepreneur Friendly Coffee Shops in Austin

In the incredibly eclectic and entrepreneurial community that is Austin, TX, trying to create a list of the ideal coffee houses for entrepreneurs is next to impossible and undoubtedly most will disagree with me about at least one or two here.  After all, entrepreneurship is so woven into the DNA of Austin, it’s probably safe to say there are more independently owned coffee shops here than there are startups in Silicon Valley.

In no particular order, because well, come on…

  • Bouldin Creek Coffeehouse: One of Austin’s artsy coffee shops with just the right mix of indoor and outdoor seating, Bouldin Creek is minutes from downtown on South First Street.   Undoubtedly drawing entrepreneurs to work here out of their desire to build community while preserving the character of a once sleepy college town in the midst of growth and development.
  • Bennu Coffee: Admittedly, Clarke the Intern queued this one up for me; as a part time entrepreneur and part time father, I haven’t seen the inside of a 24 hour coffee shop in nearly a decade.  Indeed, making Bennu special is the fact that it’s the place to work at 3 in the morning.
  • Every year, in the weeks following SXSWi, Austin sees a spike in startups relocating to Austin; undoubtedly due to one place. Mozart’s Coffee Roasters gives those visiting Austin a taste of what it’s really like to leave here, and it isn’t the partying on 6th street.  If the turtles chilling out in Lake Austin don’t give you that moment of Zen, the idyllic, local kayaking found just beyond the dam you’ll see from Mozart’s, at Red Bud Isle, would make any entrepreneur pick up and move.  Imagine working here.
  • It’s been suggested that Flightpath is home to the incredibly comfortable, “living room” style coffee house atmosphere that’s become so popular.  The Flightpath is guaranteed to be a quiet place to come and study, work, or “simply get your taxes done.” A neighborhood coffee shop without live music (in Austin?! sacrilege!), they are your home office away from home.
  • Down the road a bit from Flightpath is Epoch, Austin’s second great 24 hours spot.  They sum it up best themselves, “We wanted to create a different kind of coffee bar. A lounge where it felt like you were in someone’s living room instead of just another business.”  It goes without saying that you won’t ever find yourself here with a developer or two building some incredible software.
  • When I moved to Austin a couple years ago, Dominican Joe was practically home to me.  Nestled in among Whale Shark Media and Freebirds World Burrito, Dominican always felt most conveniently located to downtown.  Though I now spend most of my time in north and west Austin, this will always hold a special place for me in Austin as the coffee house where I found my way in town, and met a few entrepreneurs along the way.
  • In my list of locally owned, comfortable, coffee houses, this one may catch you off guard.  Starbucks, at the Arboretum, which is constantly packed with people working.  No list of entrepreneurial workplaces would be complete without this venue which draws not just the young hacker but Austin’s finest in technology, media & advertising, and venture capital.  On any given day, you’re bound to see someone here who keeps Austin humming.
  • Austin Java is a bit of a cheat on this list as I can’t possibly just leave it to one.  Barton Springs hosts Austin Java next to an Uncle Billy’s Barbecue and puts Zilker Park within walking distance.  12th and Lamar brings a tight but popular Austin Java to those just north of the city.  And for those way out west, WAY out, around Lake Travis, Austin Java has opened at The Oasis and though smaller, usually has two or three people working through the day before catching the best little sunset in Texas.
  •  The West Lake community heads up 360, to meet those coming down, at 360 Uno and the convenience of this great wine bar and cafe, which yes, makes the list as a coffee house too, draws the angel and venture community of Austin.  Spend a day or two here and you’re also likely to run into someone from Austin’s later stage success stories like Bazaarvoice or Solarwinds.
  • Playing no small role in the redevelopment of east Austin is Progress Coffee; for around this hallowed space march the denizens of our friends at Conjunctured.  The view from the patio out front leaves a bit to be desired but, on occasion, I’d argue there is no better outdoor seating in Austin.  Progress has a unique feel that just demands that you cook up a new idea.
  • South and west you’re going to find yourself at Lola Savannah, in the words of the great Marc Mapes, “A networking haven for those looking to meet people in Austin. They also happen to have the best coffee in Austin (in my opinion), incredibly friendly staff and awesome breakfast tacos. I’ve spent many hours there working in comfort and have made more than a few valuable connections. The Grove next door also has great food for lunch and dinner. Try the pizzas and wine flights. Great place.”
  • As a locally owned and operated business, Houndstooth Coffee seeks to be an integral pattern in the fabric of the Central Austin community and indeed it is.  Coffee, great tea, or just a place to relax in the afternoon, Houndstooth is right in the middle of it all.

Was that 10?  You know, with this much caffeine in me, I confess I’m not counting straight.

I hope, you’ll disagree with me.  Genuinely!  The only way we’re going to find the great spaces is to put them out there and compare notes.  If you enjoy, or disagree with, a coffee shop on my list above, click through the link and let us know what you think with your own review.  If, perish the thought, I’ve neglected a great spot, let us know in the comments below.


Revised to add
Thanks to some thoughts from our friends on Facebook, Strange Brew in S. Austin and The Steeping Room at The Domain join the list! What do you think? Great places to work? Add your review.

And by the way… have you been to Caffe Medici lately?

A Prius in Austin, TX

Having been in Austin for about 6 months now, there’s one irrefutable fact that everyone in Austin acknowledges with a cock-eyed smile; Californians love Austin, perhaps too much. More than that, Steiner Ranch (the neighborhood in which we settled) seems to be the magnet for relocations from the Sunshine State. One of those transplants myself, I’d love to get to the root of the migration and the passion we have for Steiner Ranch. Perhaps, in defense of our history as Californians; certainly, because we’re now Texans.

Most might find it interesting that of the dozens of transplants that I’ve gotten to know in Austin, NONE are originally Californian. Therein strikes me as to the root of our love of Austin; we’re not really Californian, at least not in the sense that those less than thrilled with all of the relocation from California consider us. I grew up in Michigan and frankly, California wasn’t the best fit for me. That begs my question, what are the differences between Austin and California?

Austin v. California

As far back as I’ve bothered to search, Austin has been questioning the pros and cons of the migration from California. An amazingly still relevant 1995 Chronicle article explored the very question.

“Over the past year or so, as rents and home prices have risen, and Austin traffic has grown more crowded and snarled, many of us have asked: Who are all these new people driving our roads and keeping the housing vacancy rate low, and where did they come from?” wrote Rob Patterson, “The answer in many cases is: They’re former Californians”

Then Chamber of Commerce Vice President of Communication Crispin Ruiz pointed out that some 40-50% of the requests for residential and business “relocation kits” came from California. Amusingly, she added, “The number goes up any time they have a natural disaster.”

The debate rages today with Austinites evaluating everything from the companies coming to town to the immigration of certain cultures.

california_mapTo contrast Austin to California, one really has to compare Austin to Northern and Southern California separately. The two ends of the state are as distinct as sun and snow (almost literally) and no evaluation of our differences would be served without considering them both.

Let’s take a quick look at the following considerations, if I’m missing one, please join our conversation below: entrepreneurship, weather, commute, cost of living, lifestyle, politics, education, and community. In fairness, that last one has to be rather opinionated but I’ll try to remain transparent about my perspective.

Entrepreneurship

No one can argue that S. California is home to America’s entertainment industry while N. California plays that role for the tech and internet scene. If you want to make it big in either field, your chances are probably better there. But California is certainly NOT an entrepreneurial state and Silicon Valley, known for its startups, is an anomaly in that regard.

What draws people from California to Texas? It’s that the cost of starting a business in California is so burdensome that you have to be crazy to consider doing so. Worse, the litigious nature of the people and the laws in place in California make navigating the considerations involved with working for oneself almost too great to bother. Rest assured, if you start a business in California, you’ve neglected some license, requirement, fee, or process. While California is home to those behemoths of their respective industry, Austin fosters new business. Austin isn’t the live music capital of the world because it’s difficult to make it as a musician. And while the venture community of N. California makes finding a substantial amount of capital to start a company feasible, seemingly everyone in Austin runs their own business – because they can.

California seeds dreams; head west to the Pacific, many aspire while growing up. The idea of living on the beach and following our movie and internet icons is appealing. They have the money to foster companies but they also have the expenses to make starting one difficult. California offers an exceptional pool of talent; but those experienced professionals, designers, developers, artists, musicians, and entrepreneurs are hardly exclusive to California – once perhaps, but certainly no longer.

On the other hand, Austin practically expects you to start a business for yourself. What I find subtly very attractive about Austin (and Texas in general) is that teenagers excel, happily, at the same jobs that were common place amongst teens throughout the country decades ago: waiting tables, mowing lawns, coffee shops, mall retailers; not in California, you’re more likely to be served by a surly adult than a teen learning what it means to work for a living. Here you can thrive in a band, start a restaurant (or a trailer!), follow your dream as an artist, start an iPhone app company, grow your own small business, or start an online empire (heck, start 3). What Silicon Valley is to “startups,” Austin is to entrepreneurs and that makes Austin far more inviting, exciting, and encouraging.

Weather

Weather? Seems a strange comparison to make but I consider it one of the most important. Here, the win, for the most part, goes to S. California. Sorry Austin but you have to admit (even I’m admitting and I love the heat) that an average of 78 degrees throughout the entire year is awfully attractive. But that’s where my win for California ends.

Have you ever lived in San Francisco? Better, have you ever visited during those 8 months out of the year when it’s actually quite cold? As a long-time, former, resident of the Bay Area, I can share that I was one of those locals who would relish with amusement at the most popular item for sale in the shops along Fisherman’s Wharf: the SF Fleece. How to spot a tourist in San Francisco? While the weather in N. California is generally beautiful, unless you grew up in Minnesota, you’re going to find California shockingly cold – not the warm beach front property that we dreamed of as kids. The ocean and beaches around the Bay Area are usually freezing and while the lure of Santa Cruz draw families by the thousands to its beaches throughout the summer, you might find yourself digging holes in the sand to escape the cool breeze. Don’t get me wrong, for a few months in the summer, N. California is spectacular, and it is those few months when Austin is blisteringly hot, but it is only a few months.

Aside from the sun and seasons, there is that question of natural disasters proffered by the Chronicle so long ago. Crispin Ruiz was right in appreciating that the natural disasters of Calfornia leave more to be desired than those of Texas and Austin. The earthquakes of California are occasionally fun but more often than not deadly and disastrously dangerous. While Texas has welcomed its share of horrendous tornadoes and floods, the natural weather of Austin is so much more attractive as to be inviting. From the torrential rain to lightening storms, even Austin’s hail adds an element of excitement to living here. Besides, the weather in Austin makes for our amazing caves, rivers, and waterfalls.

Of course, there is an exception to my criticism of the cold of N. California. Tahoe. Easily some of the BEST skiing in the world (and yes, I meant to put BEST in all caps). That said, let’s consider the question of commute.

Commute

As we considered our move to Austin, the greatest criticism anyone had for the city was the terrible commute. My wife and I would smile and look to one another thinking, “is that all?” Yes Austin’s traffic needs some work and I’m a tremendous fan of the propositions for commuter rails but consider it with respect to California.

Live and work in N. California and expect to commute, on average, 45 minutes each way, every day. I think that’s a fair read; we lived throughout most of the Bay Area and, at best, my commute was down to about 20 minutes. At its worst (in to San Francisco) it was up to an hour and a half.

That’s one way. Public transportation is a mess of disparate rail systems, exorbitant cab fares, and questionable bus schedules so you can expect to spend almost 2 hours of your day in the car. While I never lived in the Los Angeles area, it’s well known that the same can be said of S. California.

I’m amused that people who have lived in Austin for an extended time still consider our home here in Steiner Ranch to be remote. Sure, we’re in the hills from downtown Austin but the 20 minutes into the city, I’d argue, makes Steiner Ranch (or the surrounding area, to give it credit) the most appealing place to live in the country. Minutes away from fantastic culture, live music, restaurants, and the urban life in downtown Austin are the lakes, rivers, and hills that are hours from a home in California.

Wait… is that last statement really accurate? Are you really hours from things in California? California is praised for its outdoor lifestyle. Certainly I must have misspoke. Hardly.

What most don’t consider when they think of commutes is the amount of time you spend in the car on adventures. In that regard, Austin wins by a landslide. While Texas is a much larger state, with the population density in the eastern part of Texas and the central location of Austin, everything (essentially) is within 1 hour or 3. Think about it. Lake Travis, Hamilton Pool, caves to explores, hills to ride, the up and coming east side of Austin to South Congress, Georgetown’s beautiful town square to Bee Caves’ The Backyard, the city of San Antonio with Sea World, the Alamo, the River Walk, Six Flags,Schlitterbahn, and the Spurs; everything is within an hour. Well no, not everything, but only about 3 hours away and you’ve got Dallas, Houston, and the Gulf of Mexico (warm water!). Contrast that with California who’s two major cities are on opposite ends of the state; about 8 hours from one another. Oh sure, living in N. California puts Tahoe about 4 hours away – when the weather is good.

Cost of Living

Do I really need to go here? We’ll keep this section brief. Expect to pay $1,000,000 for a home in California. I’m vastly simplifying the question for the sake of the debate so bear with me. When the housing market went bust and people had to move, hundreds of thousands of dollars were lost in California homes. Roughly, the cost of the same home in Austin.

The lack of income tax in Austin fosters that entrepreneurial spirit while shifting the costs in to property taxes makes all the sense in the world to most: you pay for what you consume, not how hard you work.

Lifestyle

I think the great secret of Austin is that it really is one of the most outdoor friendly communities in the country. What draws many to California, is in fact far superior here. Save the couple months in the summer when the heat is too unbearable to be outside, Austinites live outside and in the water. From fantastic hiking to exceptional biking, everything found in California is here in Texas to a greater extent. Well, except skiing. I miss snow skiing.

More important for most than that outdoor lifestyle though is the social atmosphere of Austin. This might be where my thoughts here receive the most criticism… my read on the distinction between Austin and California is that Californians generally socialize professionally while people in Austin socialize personally. I hope my caveat “generally” mitigates too much criticism but for the most part I think it’s a fair assessment. Austin’s coffee houses and ice cream shops are full of teens dating and families spending time together; bars and clubs are crowded almost every night; neighborhoods are full of block parties and front porches where neighbors gather to live. Don’t get me wrong, parties and card games amongst friends are as common in California as anywhere; the differences are subtle: happy hour after work is rare, the ice cream parlor is too small to hang out, neighbors aren’t as, well, neighborly… people generally can’t afford to go out to the extent that you can in Austin, so they don’t, unless there is another motivation (usually professionally) to do so.

Part of what might drive that social phenomenon in California is that while it is the state known for its acceptance of everyone, it’s a very exclusive environment. Republicans in California rarely bother talking about their views because the debate is so exhausting and onslaught from the opposing views so prevalent. Forget about sharing your religious beliefs; while you are welcome to them, keep them quiet. There is a running gag amongst some in California (mostly those who aren’t originally from California) that you are welcome to believe and have any viewpoint that you want, as long as it’s their viewpoint. I hope I’m fair in saying that Texas is much more of a “to each his own” culture; combined with the very friendly attitude everyone has, it creates a culture where different points of view are not only welcome but encouraged – they make life interesting.

Living in Texas is just comfortable.  It’s friendly.

Before we move on, one strike against Texas, and here because I don’t have a better place to share this perspective, are the bugs. They say everything is bigger in Texas. They mean it. I’ve started minor wars in my house to combat the fire ants, grubs, and wasps the size of my fist. (good thing I’m not in California, I’d have protesters at my door).

Politics

As we left California we were met with incredulous claims about the liberal nature of Austin, “Why would you leave San Francisco for Austin??” people would point out, “It’s just as liberal.”

What makes Austin amazing is that it’s a liberal city in a sea of conservatism. So you know where I’m coming from, I don’t mind sharing that I lean right and Republican but I’m fairly middle of the road. I think the folks on the far left are nuts and the fanatics on the far right are fruitcakes. What you have to realize about California is that it is very liberal and Democrat. Only if you’re an extremist does that environment work for you; truly, even if you are Democrat, I can’t believe that you are in support of the massive debt, taxation, and welfare programs at work in California – it’s an economy that MUST be supported by the massive industries we discussed above as it would otherwise be crushed under its own weight.

Amazing about Austin is not just that it’s a blend of personally liberal attitudes and conservative government but that your taxes serve your own community to a much greater extent. While your money allocated to the government in California goes to support people hours away from you; in Texas, most of your money is spent outside your door. Politicians really work for you.

Finally, I mentioned above the impact of the litigious nature of California. The experiences in which you’ll find this most prominent are in the public and business properties on which you spend your time. California is heavily laden-ed with rules and regulations impacting everything such as the scenic parks and views obstructed by fences and gates (if accessible at all).

Still amazing to me is that in Austin you can usually bring in food (and alcohol) to public facilities.

Education

Nowhere is the impact of those views and politics more prominent than in the public schools. While in Texas kids say the Pledge of Allegiance to both the United States and Texas, in California it often isn’t said at all. Want to have a Christmas party in California schools? Forget about it, you can’t even mention Santa Claus or a Christmas Tree.

I actually broke out in a sweat when my daughter mentioned the Easter Bunny at a school party shortly after we moved to Texas; I was worried someone would admonish her!  Imagine my shock when a first grader gave a presentation to his class about the creation.  In Texas, it’s welcomed alongside the questions from kids who don’t believe in God, the open discussion between the kids about whether God created cars and the response that he created the possibility of them was brilliant!  In California such a discussion is unfathomable. In one school we toured in California, they didn’t spend time studying Benjamin Franklin because the time was needed to ensure they studied people of every ethnicity. Don’t get me wrong, I was thrilled to see a diverse review of our history and the impact of various cultures on our country, but it rubbed me the wrong way to see heavily influential historical figures ignored for the sake of diversity.  Education in California isn’t just broken fiscally, it’s just broken.

By and large, in California, your kids are going to be in private school (if you can afford it) to attain the same standard that they receive publicly in Texas.  Your taxes in Texas go to your school so parents are more likely to be involved and teachers are held accountable.

Community

or Why do Californians Love Steiner Ranch?

I’ve heard and agree with just about every theory out there from the similarities, between California and Austin’s Steiner Ranch neighborhood, to the differences. Our homes among the hills are reminiscent of the most prime real estate in California and yet our community, the neighborhood we’ve created here, is really hard to come by in California.

I can’t imagine how I can sum it up more concisely than I’ve done above. Sorry about that length but the reasons people from California love Austin so much are extensive, complex, and important. Frankly, it’s probably easier to summarize the reasons California is so much better than Austin… let’s see… bugs, two months in the summer, skiing (snow skiing that is), and Mickey Mouse (though Austin has Bevo).

Personally, what draws me to Steiner Ranch is that it’s the best of everything: entrepreneurship, weather, commute, cost of living, lifestyle, politics, education, and community. Having spent a bit of time on this post, I’m going head home, sit out front with my neighbors, run around with the kids, share the latest stout my neighbor brewed, BBQ some brisket, and smack mosquitoes as only I can in Texas.

Buddy Holly – Rave On

First published in 1996-ish to accompany an article I had written about the lyrics to Don McLean’s American Pie for the first website I created in 1996, The Octopus’s Garden. Republished here for the sake of an archive of that article.

FEBRUARY 3, 1959: “Clear Lake, Iowa (UPI)- Following an appearance before 1000 fans at Clear Lake last night, they chartered a plane at the Mason City Airport…and took off at 1:50 AM for Fargo, North Dakota. Their four-seat single engine plane crashed minutes later…”

The following was taken from “BUDDY HOLLY…A Biography in Words, Photographs and Music” by Elizabeth and Ralph Peer, II. 1972

SEPTEMBER 7, 1936: Lubbock, Texas – Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Holley announce the birth of their fourth child, Charles Hardin. They nickname him Buddy. Buddy Holley. Buddy Holly.

For 30 months of your life, you knew him: between 1957 and 1959, static-y portables jived with his unique vocal style. You sauntered down the street trying to imitate that now legendary hiccup, wordless singing, and painless stretching of one syllable over several notes.

For 30 months of your life, you waited to view one of his famous (to some, infamous) gyrating live sessions. Buddy Holly got it on. Without powerful Dylanesque lyrics, without bizarre electronic devices, Buddy Holly touched his fans – often with a gentle, melodic hand – sometimes with a scorchingly vital guitar flash.

All that ended in a tragedy which has been eulogized by musicians from Don McLean to the deeply entrenched Everly Brothers. All that started 22 years before in Texas.

Buddy’s early years are of interest – not so much for what they reveal about him but for what they reveal about the taproots of American Rock. These early years are characterized by Buddy’s seemingly innate interest in and talent for music.

His parents moved to Lubbock, Texas in the early 20’s. They raised their three older children, Lawrence, Travis and Patricia, during the worst years of the depression. Mr. Holley found work as both a carpenter and a tailor in this Texas panhandle town of 70,000 where cotton storage sheds are still the only buildings visible above the dusty, flat countryside. The Holley home was a supportive one, where honesty and hard work were valued. This was a religious Baptist family who attended church regularly. Early exposure to religious music undoubtedly influenced young Buddy. And his household was a musical one.

Although far from wealthy, the Holleys made sure there was money enough for a fiddle, guitar or accordion for their children. Family singing was frequent, with Mrs. Ella Holley playing piano accompaniment.

Larry, Buddy’s older brother, remembers when the three brothers entered a local music contest. Larry (fiddle) and Travis (accordion) had some skill…but five-year old Buddy was just learning to play his own small violin. Still, they let Buddy “play” along – after carefully greasing his bow to prevent the screeching that might ruin their chances of winning.

What the future would offer Buddy Holley could have been predicted that day. He walked away with the five-dollar prize.

By the time he was eight, Buddy was studying piano and violin. He played piano for about nine months, then switched to steel guitar. But his heart was really captured by the acoustic guitar. After twenty steel guitar lessons, Buddy changed to the acoustic…at last he came to his instrument. Larry says the acoustic guitar was a “natural” for Buddy. He played it by ear, often memorizing a difficult song after only hearing it once. Although his formal music education was short,Buddy was familiar with many kinds of music. He was thoroughly imbued with the blues and country sounds he heard on the radio.

Early morning school bus rides would find Buddy singing “Love sick Blues”in the Hank Williams style, Mrs. Holley recalls. Years later, Buddy said, “In the old days, I remember hearing records of Hank Williams and Jimmie Rodgers. Those fellows were a great inspiration for the whole country field.” Bob Willis and Hank Thompson were also favorites.

In the fall of 1949 Buddy met Bob Montgomery, a fellow seventh-grader at Hutchison Jr. High, who also played guitar and sang country songs. They began playing together, patterning themselves after other country harmony groups like Johnny and Jack, the Louvin Brothers and Jim and Jesse. Billing themselves as “Buddy and Bob,” they played junior high assemblies and local radio shows. Their sets were basically country, beefed up by harmonies and their own guitar accompaniment.

Their classmates (including Jerry Allison, who later became one of the original Crickets) remember with childish glee one particular assembly. With Buddy on mandolin and Bob on guitar, they sang “Too Old to Cut the Mustard,” – which they dedicated to an elderly spinster teacher at their school.

As they grew up so did their music. Bob’s interest in bluegrass made Flatt and Scruggs important to their development. And their radio was a window to the music outside Texas. The boys often listened to rhythm and blues shows such as those of Sam Lewis from Louisiana and Gabe Mouth Page from Arkansas. They seldom missed their country favorite son “WSM’s Grand Ole Opry” or “The Louisiana Hayride.”

Buddy and Bob became Lubbock’s leading performers. Between1950 and 1952, they performed at local clubs and high school talent shows,sometimes adding a bass and, less frequently, drums. Harmony duets still predominated their style, with Bob usually singing lead. When Buddy occasionally would sing lead, you’d hear a more upbeat tempo, a less country sound…and another forecast of things to come.

By the time Buddy and Bob entered high school, they were widening their audience by appearing at youth clubs and centers as far away as Carlsbad,New Mexico and Amarillo, Texas. Lubbock’s “Cotton Club” and “Bambaloo Club,” the Union Hall in Carlsbad and Amarillo’s “Clover Club” all featured “Buddy and Bob” performing music they now dubbed as “Western and Bop.”

Local radio stations also gave impetus to Buddy and Bob’s career. KDAV, the nation’s first all-country radio station, held a weekly “Sunday Party,” patterned after the highly successful “National Dance Barn” show on Chicago’s WLS. Buddy and Bob were frequent guests. In fact, their popularity grew so much they were given their own half-hour program each Sunday.

Their repertoire remained basically country with Bob Montgomery still singing lead. But as 1954 progressed, Buddy began to sing more blues and “bop” numbers on the show. Although Montgomery was the principal composer during their partnership, Buddy also began to write.

Two of these three songs were “Heartbeat” and “Love’s Made a Fool of You,” both recorded several years later.

At every opportunity, meaning whenever they had saved up enough money,the boys would cut demonstration records. They used Nessman Studios in Wichita Falls, Texas, Jim Beck’s Studios in Dallas, and later Nor VaJak Studios in Clovis , New Mexico. Generally, they invited local musicians, including Larry Welborn (bass) and Sonny Curtis (guitar), to join them during these sessions.

They sent their “demos” to record companies, hoping they’d be offered a recording contract. “We thought if you got a record contract, “Montgomery remembers, “you were automatically rich. We had seen the country artists come through here in their Cadillacs with Tennessee license plates and we thought all you had to do was get on a record and you had it made.”

But it wasn’t a keen-earned record company that brought Buddy his first real break. It was that good old local radio station, KDAV. In addition to airing the “Sunday Party,” KDAV also sponsored live country and early rock ‘n’ roll concerts in Lubbock. The station often chose the “western and bop” duo to open the shows, which headlined stars like Ferlin Husky, Marty Robbins, Porter Wagoner…even Elvis. And Buddy met them all. One of these performances played a crucial role inthe advancement of Buddy’s career.

On October 14, 1955, Bill Haley and the Comets starred in a show at the Fair Park Auditorium with Jimmie Rodgers, Hank Snow and “Lubbock’s own Buddy, Bob, and Larry.” Eddie Crandall, Marty Robbins’ manager, booked the show.

Crandall was impressed by Buddy’s performance. He spoke to Pappy Dave Stone, the owner of KDAV, and asked for some of Holley’s demos. The records ended up in the hands of Paul Cohen, head of Decca Records’ Specialty Division. And from those hands came the contract offer. In January of 1956, Buddy received it…made out to BUDDY HOLLY. Bob Montgomery was not included; Buddy didn’t want to sign. Montgomery himself talked Buddy into taking advantage of his opportunity. Heeven traveled to Buddy’s first Nashville session…but he never played or sang.

Holly did three sessions in Nashville during 1956 (January, July and November). Buddy’s backup men varied during these sessions. Larry Welborn no longer played with Buddy so Don Guess, another Lubbock boy, played bass. Drummer Allison, still in high school, sat in for only one session. The first two sessions had Sonny Curtis playing lead guitar and Grady Martin on rhythm. Martin and Boots Randolph, who also played on some tracks, were two of Nashville’s most respected session men. But they were not Holly’s own backup group.

At just about that time, RCA Victor Records bought Elvis Presley’s contract from Sun, his original label. Decca, looking for their own Elvis,thought it best for Holly to begin recording with professional session men – not his own group. In fact, not even Holly was to play. Buddy was to cut only vocals.

From the first two sessions, Decca released only one single – “Blue Days Black Nights/Love Me.” Reviewed favorably in the trade press,the record did not do well in the marketplace. The disc did not succeed partially because Holly and the Decca-selected backup group could not create the tightness inherent in the union of Holly’s voice, his guitar and his own group of musicians.

On the last Nashville session, Holly’s own group, The Three Tunes, did play but they were “green,” according to Curtis. “We didn’t understand a thing about recording.” The seventeen and eighteen-year-old kids did upset Cohen on more than one occasion. None too happy with the group, the boys recall, “Decca would turn on the knob and let us have a couple of tries at it.”

After the last Nashville session, Decca released “Modern Don Juan/You Are My One Desire.” The trades loved this one too but again the public wasn’t buying. By then, Buddy’s relationship with Paul Cohen was less than amicable. He knew Decca would not renew his contract. As Jerry Allison puts it, “I think everybody just dropped it. It was the ‘I won’t call if you won’t call me approach.’”

Buddy went home with no recording contract, but leaving a large number of unreleased cuts including “Rock Around with Ollie Vee,” “Ting-A-Ling,” “Baby, Won’t You Come Out Tonight,” and “That’ll Be The Day.” Discouraged,but dedicated, he continued to record with amateur equipment in his garage.

He continued to cut demos, this time in Clovis, New Mexico at Nor VaJak Studios, owned and operated by Norman Petty. An independent producer and artist in his own right, Petty already had several pop hits to his credit, including “Lisbon Antiqua” and “Almost Paradise.” Although Petty’s musical orientation was toward pop, he made studios available to rock ‘n’ roll artists. Buddy Knox recorded the well known “Party Doll” in those studios.

Buddy Holly re-recorded the classic “That’ll Be The Day” in those studios,too. The demo emerged from a complicated, somewhat haphazard meeting of several performers gathered at Petty’s studio to cut demos with Gary Tollet, a young, unknown artist.

Tollet happened, incidentally, to have pretty solid connections at Roulette Records. Promises in the wind? Jerry Allison wasn’t sure, but when he was offered the session’s drum spot, he made sure Buddy Holly was on guitar. After Tollet’s session, “That’ll Be The Day” and “Lookin’ for Someone to Love” were waxed with Holly on guitar, Don Guess on bass and Allison on drums. Tollet even sang background vocals for Holly. Promises in the wind? Not this time.

These tapes were sent to Roulette. The company liked Holly’s songs but not his group. They felt they didn’t need another artist like their current rock ‘n’ roll stars, Buddy Knox and Jimmy Bowen. They were interested in Knox recording “That’ll Be The Day,” and Bowen cutting “Lookin’ for Someone to Love.”

But Buddy Holly wanted to record his own songs with his own group, now called the Crickets.

Petty suggested sending the demos to Peer-Southern, a New York publishing house where he’d placed some of his own compositions. This time,the wind was heavy with promises.

Peer-Southern gave the demo to Bob Thiele at Brunswick Records, a subsidiary of Decca. Thiele liked what he heard – so much that Brunswick decided to use it as a master. “That’ll Be The Day,” recorded by The Crickets,was released in June, 1957. By September, rock ‘n’ roll addicts from America to Britain knew all the words.

Hit singles always need a little help from their friends. Petty and the promotional staffs at Peer-Southern and Brunswick helped. But all the help in the world doesn’t make it a hit. Buddy Holly and the Crickets made that record.

This unique sound was created by the simplest of recording techniques,double tracking. Double tracking uses two tape recorders. The basic cut is laid on one tape. That tape is then played back while a second recorder picks up the first tape plus any studio additions. Double tracking allowed Holly to sing harmony to his own lead vocals and also play both lead and rhythm guitar. The current reign of the 16-,even 32-track tape, renders the layered Holly sound particularly remarkable.

“Words of Love,” by Buddy Holly, was released as a single on Coral Records,another subsidiary of Decca, at about the same time. The decision to release Holly as a solo artist was Petty’s. He saw in Holly a potential for super stardom. The strategic attempt at double exposure paid off later, although Buddy’s first solo effort failed. The song was quite successfully covered by The Diamonds, fresh from slot one with “Little Darlin’.” It was later recorded again by a little-known British group…The Beatles.

Meanwhile, “That’ll Be The Day” was making history. Audiences begged for a first-eye look at the group that made it. During the fall of 1957, The Crickets were part of an 80-day tour that included Fats Domino and the Everly Brothers. Jerry Allison explains, “We weren’t interested in money or percentages at the time. We wanted to go on the road and pick.”

The previous spring and summer found Holly and The Crickets, now Jerry Allison (drums), Joe B. Mauldin (bass), who replaced Don Guess soon after the second waxing of “That’ll Be The Day,” and Niki Sullivan (rhythm guitar),back in Petty’s studios. While on tour they also recorded with Petty(now their personal manager) at Tanner Air Force Base in Oklahoma City. These sessions, recorded for their first album, “The Chirping Crickets,”produced innumerable now-classic cuts.

Their songs were often modified during session – improvisation was a key to the Holly sound. “Oh Boy!,” Holly’s second hit with The Crickets,was originally titled “All My Love.” At the session, it became “Oh Boy!.” The lyrics were also changed, considerably altering the meaning of the song. “Peggy Sue,” Holly’s first solo success released on Coral, was cut at the same sessions. Originally titled “Cindy Lou,” it became “Peggy Sue” because Peggy Sue was Allison’s girl.

By December, 1957, both “Oh Boy!” and “Peggy Sue” ruled the charts. Two guest appearances on the Ed Sullivan Show followed. Allison remembers best a phase of the Crickets’ career that came between these two shows. “The most exciting time for me was the New York Paramount Show. The Everly Brothers took us out to get outfitted in fancy clothes. They said, ‘Hey now you’ve got to quit wearing those funny clothes….So we shucked our t-shirts and moccasins.”

With millions of records selling overseas, large audiences awaited Buddy Holly and The Crickets. In early February they joined Paul Anka and Jerry Lee Lewis for a short Australian tour. The show was a smash. In March, Buddy Holly and The Crickets hit England for a 25-day tour, booked as part of a variety show. Again, the tour was a tremendous success. Melody Maker, England’s well known music publication, praised The Crickets delivery: “Country and Western fans need look no further than the best selling “Peggy Sue” – and Buddy Holly is every bit as good on the disc. And for the rock ‘n’ rollers “That’ll Be The Day,” “Oh Boy,” “Rip It Up” and soon are given plenty of punch.

During their English tour, Brunswick released “Maybe Baby.” “Oh Boy,” “Maybe Baby,” and “Think It Over” were all chart-makers for The Crickets while “Rave On,” by Holly, was his second hit of four releases as a solo artist for Coral.

After the English trip, The Crickets continued to tour the U.S., leaving a string of hits in their wake. “Early in the Morning” (Bobby Darin) and “It’s So Easy” were among many. Although not released until late spring of ‘58, most of these cuts had been recorded between December 1957and February 1958. Sullivan having left the group, Buddy asked Tommy Allsup to play guitar at his sessions. Allsup proved an excellent addition so Holly stopped over-dubbing his own lead. By June of 1958, Allsup was touring with the group.

After a tour in 1958, the group played New York’s Brooklyn Paramount. Buddy took the opportunity to meet with his publishers, the Peer-Southern Organization. He met someone else, too: Maria Elena Santiago, a pretty, young Puerto Rican girl who worked for the publishing house. The whirlwind romance led to their marriage in Lubbock two weeks later.

Maria Elena recalls, “After our second date, he asked me to marry him. It was unbelievable to me that all of a sudden he asked me to get married.”

After careful consideration and discussion with her aunt, who warned her of the peripatetic lifestyle of a performer, Maria Elena accepted. Buddy’s parents came to New York to meet her. They all returned to Lubbock in early August.

The young couple was wed in the Holley home on August 15, 1958, in a simple ceremony performed by Buddy’s minister, the pastor of the First Baptist Church of Lubbock.

After their honeymoon in Acapulco, Buddy and Maria moved to an apartment near New York City’s fabled Greenwich Village. Buddy felt that remaining in the city was best for his career.

Although he continued to perform and record with The Crickets, relationships changed. The group no longer traveled together.

Although marriage did not change Buddy fundamentally, it did instill in him a certain seriousness, a greater sense of responsibility. He became displeased by the group’s behavior. And The Crickets admit they were “sort of out of hand.” Allison recollects: “We’d get drunk in the morning and stay drunk all day, ’cause in Texas you didn’t get to drink – it was dry at the time. Finally, Buddy said, ‘Now guys, we’re getting a little older; we got to take this more seriously. You guys drink too much. It’s obnoxious and I hate it.’”

That wasn’t the end…not yet. The group agreed to cut out the drinking, even move to New York City. They’d work it out, they decided.

Meanwhile, Holly’s relationship with Norman Petty grew strained. Their association was a close one. In fact, Petty often contributed lyrics and bridges to Holly’s original material, as well as producing his records.

But Petty was not happy about Buddy’s marriage. He feared that it would cause Holly to lose female fans, should they find out about it. So Petty suggested that Maria Elena be known as the group’s secretary. As September and October passed, the relationship worsened. However Holly and Petty continued to work together.

They recorded “Reminiscing” and “Come Back Baby” in Clovis with the late King Curtis on tenor sax. “Moondreams” and “True Love Ways”were recorded with the Dick Jacobs Orchestra in New York – the first time The Crickets incorporated strings. But the association between The Crickets and Petty continued to degenerate.

In mid-October, after a mid-western tour, the group decided to terminate their association with Petty. Allison and Maudlin arrived in Lubbock several days before Buddy. After meeting with Petty they decided instead to continue working with him and let Holly go solo. Buddy wanted independence. He told The Crickets they were welcome to rejoin him if they changed their minds.

Holly was not happy with the turn of events…but he was confident that the decision was right. He and Maria Elena returned to New York. No more tours until the turn of the year was his plan. Far from idle, he continued to write and record. “Raining in My Heart” (Felice and Boudleaux Bryant) and “It Doesn’t Matter Anymore” (Paul Anka) emerged during this period of semi-hermitage.

Buddy was full of ideas and plans for the future, including an album of Ray Charles material and a trip to England. He also wanted to help other young artists, among them Waylon Jennings, who accompanied him on his last tour, and Lou Gardino, a young artist who recorded Holly’s”Stay Close to Me,” one of his last songs.

In late January, Buddy began a General Artists’ Corporation tour, “The Biggest Show of Stars of 1959.” He asked Jennings, Allsup and drummer Charles Bunch to accompany him. Maria was expecting (she later lost the baby) and she did not join Buddy.

The show included Ritchie Valens, the 17-year old Mexican-American whose song “Donna” was the nation’s biggest; J.P. (The Big Bopper) Richardson,a 27-year-old ex-Texas D.J., whose “Chantilly Lace” was a top chart contender;and Dion and the Belmonts. The entire group traveled by bus under conditions far from comfortable.

On Monday, February 2, the show played Clear Lake, Iowa. Buddy chartered a small plane for himself, Allsup and Jennings instead of riding the bus to the next stop in Moorehead, Minnesota. They hoped to arrive early enough to have their suits cleaned. Plans were changed at the last minute when Richardson and Valens took Jennings’ and Allsup’s places.

Allsup remembers: “I was the one who chartered the plane, but I flipped a coin with Ritchie Valens – he kept bugging me all night that he’d never flown in a little plane. He won the toss.” When the Big Bopper came down with the flu, Jennings gave his seat to him.

Tragic irony touched Holly’s death. On the night of the crash, Allison and Mauldin were trying to reach him, hoping they could get back together as a group.

Ever hear Don McLean’s American Pie?? If you find this interesting, you’ll be shocked to find out what that song is all about.