
It was 1961 or so. I was 12 or so. Mom and Dad had just bought me a turntable. And it would play 33 LP records! That is, 12-inch (30 cm) vinyl discs that spun at 33 1/3 revolutions per minute – a long play album that would hold about 25 minutes of music on each side.
This kid didn’t care about the technical stuff. He wanted to play Buddy Holly in his bedroom. Buddy was my hero … but he had died in a plane crash and my young sorrow was deep. I would never see him in concert.
“That’ll Be The Day” hummed in my soul but still took second place to the immortal “Peggy Sue”.
Being an independent young man, and offered delightful moments of freedom by my parents, I got on my local Toronto bus which took me to the Eglinton Subway Station. I was whisked away to the Dundas Street Station downtown. And then a brisk walk on Yonge Street towards music mecca: the Sam The Record Man store.
I was on a mission. I knew how to find Buddy amid the racks of musicians. And there it came to my hands – The Buddy Holly Story. I bought my first record album!
Back home, I zoomed upstairs to my room for a first listen. Oh, joy! Oh, delight! Buddy wailing, lifting me way up high.
Later, I snuck down to mom’s kitchen, for I knew that one drawer contained a … microphone! Here’s what it looked like:

In the hidden recesses of my home, right above the living room, I belted out the lyrics I loved …
If you knew Peggy Sue
Then you’d know why I feel blue
Without Peggy, my Peggy Sue
Oh well I love you gal, yes, I love you Peggy Sue
Peggy Sue, Peggy Sue
Pretty, pretty, pretty, pretty Peggy Sue
Oh Peggy, my Peggy Sue
Oh well I love you gal, and I need you Peggy Sue
I remember loving the four pretties in a row. Actually, I don’t need to remember. I’m loving them right now.
***
And now, please journey back with me to the days of yesteryear
Take a listen …
https://music.youtube.com/watch?v=Zpni8tmIzaM&si=tkdWBdyhi_FmJd5S










