Nevada Bob Gordon helping Chuck Berry strum while doing his famous duckwalk. (Statue across from Blueberry Hill night club where Berry often played.) |
Meanwhile everyone had stopped dancing and was just staring dumbfounded. Marty pauses to say, "I guess you guys aren't ready for that yet. But your kids are gonna love it."
Thanks to Hollywood, we now know how Chuck Berry found his inspiration.
In the year following this film the Voyager interstellar spacecraft was sent off to go where no man (or woman) has gone before. On board the Voyager were a variety of items from Earth to export to the stars. One of these was Chuck Berry's Johnny B. Goode.*
Here's the letter that was sent to Mr. Berry from Cornell University.
Mr. Chuck Berry
c/o Mr. Nick Miranda
12825 Four Winds Farm Drive
St. Louis, MO 63131
When they tell you your music will live forever, you can usually be sure they're exaggerating. But Johnny B. Goode is on the Voyager interstellar records attached to NASA's Voyager spacecraft now two billion miles from Earth and bound for the stars. These records will last a billion years or more.
Happy 60th birthday, with our admiration for the music you have given to this world...
Go Johnny, go.
Ann DruyanCarl SaganCornell UniversityIthaca, NYOn behalf of theVoyager InterstellarRecord Committee
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