"Maybe Baby" by Buddy HollyCharles Hardin Holley ( September 7, 1936 February 3, 1959), better known as Buddy Holly was an American singer, songwriter, and a pioneer of Rock and Roll. Biography Holly was born in Lubbock, Texas. The Holleys were a musical family and as a young boy H
"Ain't That a Shame" by Fats DominoFats Domino born Antoine Dominique (born February 26 1928 in New Orleans, Louisiana), is a classic R&B singer. He was the best-selling African-American singer of the 1950s and early 1960s. Domino is also a fine pianist with an individualistic bluesy style
" Johnny B. GoodeJohnny B. Goode is a song written by Chuck Berry in 1955, and is considered one of the first rock and roll songs ever recorded. The song is the rock and roll version of the American dream a poor country boy from the backwoods has dreams of becoming a star" by Chuck Berry
"I Only Have Eyes for You" by The FlamingosThe Flamingos were a doo wop group, popular in the mid to late 1950s. Jake and Zeke Carey formed the group in Chicago, after meeting Paul Wilson and Johnny Carter at a black Jewish church. Earl Lewis soon joined, and after a series of name changes The Swa
"Get a Job" by The Silhouettes
"To the Aisle" by The Five Satins
"Do You Wanna Dance" by Bobby Freeman
"Party Doll" by Buddy Knox
"Come Go with Me" by The Del-Vikings
"You're Sixteen— You're Beautiful (and You're Mine)" by Johnny BurnetteJohnny Burnette was a Rockabilly pioneer born on March 25 , 1934 in Memphis, Tennessee. Along with his brother Dorsey Burnette and a friend, Paul Burlison, in the early 1950s he formed the Johnny Burnette Rock and Roll Trio. They are considered to be the
"Love Potion No. 9" by The Clovers
"Since I Don't Have You" by The SkylinersThe Skyliners were an American doo wop group from Pittsburgh, best known for their 1959 "Since I Don't Have You" (popular covers by Chuck Jackson and Don McLean have helped keep the song in the public consciousness). They had a few other minor hits, inclu
"Chantilly Lace" by The Big BopperJiles Perry Richardson, Jr. October 24, 1930 February 3, 1959), better known as The Big Bopper but called Jape by his friends and who wrote songs as J. Richardson was a disc jockey who parlayed a big voice and exuberant personality into a career as an ear
"Teen Angel" by Mark Dinning
"Crying in the Chapel" by Sonny Till & the Orioles