Eddie Cochran recorded 'Three Steps to Heaven' just weeks before his fatal car crash in 1960. Released posthumously, it became a #1 hit in the UK.
Eddie Cochran's Haunting Final Hit: Three Steps to Heaven
Eddie Cochran was just 21 years old when he recorded 'Three Steps to Heaven' in early 1960. Weeks later, he would be dead—and the song would climb to the top of the UK charts without him there to see it.
The timing feels almost supernatural. Here was a young rock and roll star, singing about ascending to paradise, completely unaware that he was recording what would become his musical epitaph.
The Crash That Shocked Rock and Roll
On April 17, 1960, Cochran was traveling through Chippenham, England, after a wildly successful UK tour. He was in a taxi with fellow rocker Gene Vincent and Cochran's fiancée, Sharon Sheeley, when the car's tire blew out.
The taxi slammed into a lamppost. Vincent and Sheeley survived with injuries. Cochran was thrown from the vehicle and died the next day from severe head trauma at St. Martin's Hospital in Bath.
A Posthumous Number One
Liberty Records released 'Three Steps to Heaven' just weeks after the accident. British fans, still reeling from the loss, sent it straight to #1 on the UK Singles Chart. In America, it reached a more modest #8 on the Billboard Hot 100.
The song's simple premise—that heaven is just three steps away—took on an eerie resonance. Lyrics about finding paradise felt less like pop songwriting and more like prophecy.
The Legend He Left Behind
Eddie Cochran packed an extraordinary amount of influence into his brief career:
- 'Summertime Blues' (1958) — A teenage anthem that's been covered by everyone from The Who to Alan Jackson
- 'C'mon Everybody' (1958) — A raw, energetic track that presaged punk rock by two decades
- 'Somethin' Else' (1959) — Co-written with Sharon Sheeley, who was in the car when he died
Cochran wasn't just a singer—he was a studio innovator. He experimented with overdubbing, layered his own guitar parts, and essentially functioned as a one-man band before that was common practice. His technical wizardry influenced countless musicians who came after him.
The British Connection
While Cochran achieved modest success in America, the UK absolutely adored him. His 1960 tour was a sensation. The Beatles, still years away from fame, idolized him. Paul McCartney has cited Cochran as a major influence, and the Fab Four covered 'Three Steps to Heaven' during their early performances.
There's something poignant about how the British embraced Cochran's final single. He had toured their country, won their hearts, and died on their roads. 'Three Steps to Heaven' reaching #1 there felt less like chart success and more like a national memorial.
Forever 21
Eddie Cochran joins that tragic club of musicians who died impossibly young—Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens, and the Big Bopper had died in a plane crash just fourteen months earlier. Rock and roll was barely a decade old, and it kept losing its brightest stars.
But perhaps there's comfort in the song itself. Three steps to heaven: find a girl, fall in love, get married. Cochran was engaged to Sharon Sheeley when he died. He'd completed two of his own steps. The third, tragically, would never come.