Crickets Member and Country Songwriter Sonny Curtis Has Died

Few musicians can say they were there at the very formation of rock and roll, wrote some of the genre’s most foundational songs, toured with legends like Buddy Holly and Elvis Presley, along with influencing the world of country songwriting decades later to an award-winning capacity. This was the remarkable life of Rock & Roll Hall of Famer Sonny Curtis who’s being remembered in the wake of his passing at the age of 88.
The first association most people draw from the name Sonny Curtis is his important time playing in the backing band for Buddy Holly known as The Crickets. Curtis had played on some of the earlier hits for Holly before the official formation of The Crickets in 1957, but he wasn’t officially a Cricket until 1958. Right before Holly’s death on February 3rd, 1959 when the bespectacled rocker moved away from The Crickets as his backing band (and hired a young bass player named Waylon Jennings), Sonny Curtis assumed lead guitar and vocal duties for the legendary band.
The association of Sonny Curtis with The Crickets is what kept the world paying attention to him after the passing of Buddy Holly, but it was really Sonny’s songwriting where he contributed some of the most important moments to popular culture in the United States and beyond. Sonny’s original song “I Fought The Law” helped make The Crickets and important early rock band all on their own. The song later became a hit for the Bobby Fuller Four, and later bands like The Clash, Dead Kennedys, and Green Day would help make it an iconic song in American music history.
Sonny Curtis also wrote “Walk Right Back” for the Everly Brothers in 1961, and it would also go on to be a hit for Anne Murray in 1978. But it was another song called “A Beatle I Want To Be” that helped take Sonny Curtis in a slightly different direction in his career. It was a protest song of sorts about Beatlemania and the British invasion that was happening in popular music in 1964. The Beatles had actually drawn inspiration for their name from The Crickets since they were one of the very first true rock and roll bands.
Sonny’s semi-success with “A Beatle I Want To Be” is what in part inspired him to not just try to write hits, but songs that were either commentaries on popular culture, or contributed to it. He wrote the song “The Ballad of Batman” that The Camps turned into a single. This would eventually lead Sonny to writing jingles for companies such as Buick and Bell Telephone, and eventually one of his most lasting contributions to American culture, the song “Love Is All Around,” also known as the theme song to the Mary Tyler Moore Show.
But before you go concluding that the career of Sonny Curtis was colored with novelty hits and one-hit writing contributions for others, by the ’80s he was working with Nashville, writing songs that would be some of the best the genre ever heard. The best known, and probably the one that would eventually make him an inductee to the Nashville Songwriter’s Hall of Fame was “I’m No Stranger to the Rain.” Along with being the final living #1 for Keith Whitley in 1989, it would win the CMA’s Single of the Year, and arguably become Whitley’s signature song.
It was two years later that Sonny Curtis was inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame. In 2007, he would also be inducted into Nashville’s Musicians Hall of Fame. And then in 2012 after a special committee recommendation, Sonny Curtis was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a member of The Crickets.
Meadow, TX is a tiny town in the southern portion of the Texas Panhandle, and this is where Sonny Curtis was born on May 9th, 1937 in a dugout house during the depths of The Great Depression. Sonny’s extended family was musical. His uncles performed in a bluegrass group called the Mayfield Brothers. Sonny was teenage friends with Buddy Holly, and before the Crickets, they had a band together named The Three Tunes. Right in the mix of the formation of rock and roll and shortly after Buddy Holly’s death, Curtis was drafted and served in the US Army from 1960 to 1962.
The death of Sonny Curtis on September 19th after a brief illness was felt across popular American music. With the death of bass player Joe B. Maudlin in 2015, and drummer Jerry Allison in 2022, this colcludes the living legacy of The Crickets. Sonny Curtis was a skilled guitar player, a clever songwriter, and someone who left his fingerprints all across American culture in indelible ways.
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September 21, 2025 @ 12:03 am
I would not have guessed that he was still alive.
“I’m no stranger to the rain
But there’ll always be tomorrow
And I’ll beg, steal, or borrow a little sunshine
And I’ll put this cloud behind me
That’s how the man designed me
To ride the wind and dance in a hurricane
I’m no stranger to the rain”
His lyrics read like a poem. And he puts in those internal, mid-line rhymes.
He must have made a ton of money for the “Mary Tyler Moore” song. That show was in the top 10 for years. Per Wiki, Sonny Curtis was the only writer on that song and he also sang it.
RIP.
September 21, 2025 @ 9:53 am
Awesome tune 👏
September 21, 2025 @ 4:47 am
He also managed to score five country top 40
Hits as well with his highest being “Good Ol’ Girls” at #15 in 1981.
September 21, 2025 @ 5:49 am
Another legend is gone, R I P Sonny!
September 21, 2025 @ 5:51 am
The rockabilly community also mourns the loss of Sonny.
The Crickets are true rockabilly originals. As I see it, these bands are all foundational to the genre:
The Blue Moon Boys – Elvis early band
The Crickets Buddy Holly’s band
The Comets- Bill Haleys band
The Tennessee Three- Johnny Cashs original band
The Blue Cats- Gene Vincents band.
Also of note to rockabilly:
The Rock and Roll Trio- Johnny Burnettes band
The Wink Westerners- Roy Orbisons early band
The Little Green Men: Billy Lee Rileys band
The Pacers: Sonny Burgess band.
Sonny Curtis importance to Rock and Roll, Rockabilly and Country music should not be overlooked, he may not be a household name but his contributions are monumental. Rip SC.
September 21, 2025 @ 8:51 am
Did not know he wrote I Fought The Law (one of my all time favorite 45’s) but I always thought The Bobby Fuller Four sounded a helluva lot like Buddy Holly and The Crickets.
September 21, 2025 @ 9:52 am
Not sure if this recording or its parent album was discussed here, but Steve Earle did a pretty cool cover of ”I Fought the Law” on the 2024 benefit album Better Than Jail.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r04Zkrt79HA
September 21, 2025 @ 10:35 am
He also had a pretty decent-sized hit with this one in the late ’60s:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b_BSGxzgfRU
September 21, 2025 @ 12:30 pm
Sad news, but what a life and career–from Buddy Holly to Keith Whitley and beyond.
Another big song that Sonny co-wrote for The Crickets was “More Than I Can Say,” which was also later a hit for multiple artists in multiple decades and, in the country world, was covered in more recent times by Sammy Kershaw.
I had the honor of sitting next to Sonny and his daughter at a Country Music Hall of Fame event a few years back. He was the real deal and leaves an untouchable legacy.
September 21, 2025 @ 1:54 pm
“I Fought the Law” was the first thing I thought of — Nanci Griffith recorded a cover with him and the Crickets in 1997:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6uVe47N83vk
She would tackle “Walk Right Back” the following year (on ‘Other Voices, Too’):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9XIdRRzC0KE&list=RD9XIdRRzC0KE&start_radio=1
RIP Sonny! 🙁
September 21, 2025 @ 3:27 pm
Didn’t read or hear of his death,but was Mr. Curtis the last Cricket? RIP,Mr. Curtis !!!
September 21, 2025 @ 5:08 pm
Gordon Payne and Glen D. Hardin are still alive, but I’m not sure if Glen D. was a full member or not.
September 22, 2025 @ 6:06 am
Sonny’s biggest payday likely came from his Mary Tyler Moore Show theme song, “Love Is All Around.” When the show execs told him that they wanted his song but had another singer in mind to perform it, Sonny told them that they could not use his song unless HE sang it. A rather bold move that paid off.
But even better for Sonny he retained the right to publish the song with his own company. Rather than a one-time payout he opted for royalties AND residuals. As the sole writer what an incredible and well-earned payday in all areas. That one song delivered a significant income stream that provided substantial financial returns for most of his life.
Too often you hear sad stories about writers & singers that were screwed out of a significant portion of the value of their work. Great to know that Sonny was able to beat a system that is too often stacked against the creators.
Here is Sonny’s original 1970 recording of the song released on Ovation Records. Note that the lyrics differ from those in the MTM show theme.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Euqa71pXwWo
RIP Sonny
September 22, 2025 @ 3:56 pm
A lot of great accomplishments, but “Love Is All Around” may be the most widely known. He re-recorded the song for every season of the show.
September 23, 2025 @ 6:50 am
Sonny talks about and performs “I Fought the Law” in this interview.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7cr-v5BExWw
September 26, 2025 @ 8:48 am
Bobby Fuller had a great cut on this also growing up in California we saw him before he died. RIP Sonny