On This Day in 1973, the World Lost One of Its Greatest Folk Musicians at Age 30

On Sep­tem­ber 20, 1973, the music world lost one of its great­est voic­es in folk music. Folk and soft rock musi­cian Jim Croce was trag­i­cal­ly killed on this very day in a plane crash at the age of only 30 years old.

Ear­li­er that fate­ful night, the “Bad, Bad Leroy Brown” singer had per­formed at North­west Col­lege. The con­cert was infa­mous­ly sparse and didn’t attract a big crowd. Bob­by Rig­gs and Bil­lie Jean King were per­form­ing a high­ly antic­i­pat­ed show dur­ing the same times­lot. Few got to wit­ness Croce’s final per­for­mance as a result.

After wrap­ping up the con­cert, Jim Croce and some of his fel­low musi­cians board­ed a plane. That plane soon crashed into a run­way after clip­ping a near­by tree. The acci­dent claimed the lives of six peo­ple, includ­ing Croce and his gui­tarist and close friend, Mau­ry Muehleisen.

Croce was already on the up-and-up as a musi­cian and had enjoyed a num­ber of chart­ing hits in the US. Sev­er­al months after his death, his posthu­mous song “Time In A Bot­tle” hit No. 1. And his posthu­mous album I Got A Name hit No. 2 on the Bill­board 200.

Jim Croce’s Lega­cy as One of the Finest Acts of the 1970s Lives On

Jim Croce’s pop­u­lar­i­ty didn’t cease for some time after his untime­ly death. After I Got A Name, the live album Jim Croce Live: The Final Tour was released in 1989, fol­low­ing years of demand from fans for unre­leased music. That par­tic­u­lar album was record­ed mere months before Croce passed, specif­i­cal­ly dur­ing the sum­mer of 1973. 

Addi­tion­al record­ings, name­ly demos, were released on the 2003 effort Home Record­ings: Amer­i­cana, along with a DVD full of live footage of Croce’s per­for­mances titled Have You Heard: Jim Croce Live. The Lost Record­ings was lat­er released in 2013, along with a laun­dry list of com­pi­la­tion albums from the mid-70s through the 2010s that fea­ture Croce. Croce’s wid­ow, Ingrid, wrote a book about him as well.

Jim Croce was beloved by many for his impec­ca­ble song­writ­ing. And, iron­i­cal­ly or pos­si­bly through some sort of cos­mic know­ing­ness, “Time In A Bot­tle” focused on themes of mor­tal­i­ty and wish­ing to have more time. Croce is still missed to this day, and I can only imag­ine how far he could have gone as a musi­cian if he had not passed on so young.