Eddie Cochran started his recording career playing lead guitar and singing harmony in a hilbilly duo. By the time he was 17, he had moved away from country music and, inspired by rock'n'roll, wrote and recorded some of the greatest songs of all time, including "Summertime Blues", "C'mon Everybody" and "Three Steps to Heaven". In 1960, he was a teen idol around the world and was on a tour of Britain. The tour ended in tragedy, though, when he died in a car accident aged only 21. This book features contributions from Cochrane's family, friends and fellow musicians, along with rare photographs.
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Eddie Cochran died in a car crash in April 1960, at the end of his only British tour. He was just 21 years-old, but already a rock'n'roll star, having recorded a handful of hits including C'Mon Everybody, Twenty Flight Rock, Summertime Blues, Cut Across Shorty and Somethin' Else. Cochran was also a brilliant guitarist, songwriter and producer: one of the true legends of 50s rock'n'roll, whose songs would later be covered by The Beatles, Rolling Stones, the Who, Rod Stewart and the Sex Pistols. Yet, incredibly, this is the first-ever biography. Don't Forget Me offers a thorough and engaging account of a teenager who had mastered country & western and the blues before he fell under the spell of rock'n'roll and embarked on a professional career that would last barely four years. It was while on tour with the late Gene Vincent that Cochran met his end. The two were received ecstatically on those 1960 UK dates--by, among others, Cliff Richard and George Harrison--and the authors are particularly good on these last few weeks of his life.
Cochran combined studio technique and guitar mastery with the rare ability to write really distinctive rock songs. Had he lived, he would surely have become a giant of popular music rather than merely a 50s footnote. Don't Forget Me goes some way to redressing the balance in our appreciation of the late, great Eddie Cochran. --Patrick Humphries
"'Eddie Cochran had the whole package. He was a songwriter, he was a guitar player - boy, was he one of the first guitar players - and he had a natural voice that just rocked, plus he was good-looking but cool too. When I first heard "Somethin' Else" it blew my socks off? It was the hardest rockin' song that I still think I have ever heard. And hard rock doesn't just have to be your guitar turned up to eleven, it's the attitude.' Brian Setzer 'Unless you were lucky enough to know him and be able to sit backstage in his dressing-room when he would pick up his guitar and play what he felt, you never got to hear Eddie Cochran really play the guitar. People are so amazed by what they've heard on record. If you could have heard him, it was a million times better than anything they ever got on record. He was phenomenally talented. It was mind-boggling how a boy that young could play like he did.' Sharon Sheely"
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