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Bob Moore



Bob Moore
 

Born: Nov 30, 1932 in Nashville, TN


The expression "he's played on a million country records" is barely an exaggeration if said in description of this bassist, arguably one of the most recorded instrumentalists in music history. He has all the positive attributes possible for a musician identified with studio sessions, including involvement with many historic recordings, a list of which cuts a swath across nearly half a dozen genres. Country, of course, is one of the strongest aspects of the Moore discography. He was born in Nashville and took a liking to the local music specialty while still in diapers, starting with an addiction to broadcasts from the Grand Ol' Opry. The history of his professional career seems to begin when he reached the ripe age of ten, at which point he was already actually performing as both a singer and guitarist on the sophisticated WSIX program entitled Goober and the Kentuckians.

Listeners seeking a more artsy side to Moore may want to check out his involvement with sessions such as experimental rock guitarist Harvey Mandel's Cristo Redentor or the Sir Douglas Quintet's 1+1+1=4. Some of his most impressive playing is on live recordings with fiddle virtuoso Scotty Stoneman circa the mid-'70s, a taste of wildly progressive bluegrass if there ever was one. He worked regularly with Elvis Presley and recorded several albums with Bob Dylan. Moore shows up with equal aplomb on projects by much more obscure artists of great quality such as the cynical country songwriter and singer Henson Cargill. The roots of such virtuosity include hustling a shoeshine stand outside the Opry as a child and at 15 hitting the road with blackface tent show band, Jamup & Honey.

From here he graduated to Western swing with bandleader Paul Howard. For Moore, the decade of the '50s was a period of intense touring with a variety of country performers, including Little Jimmy Dickens, Flatt & Scruggs, and the comedian Andy Griffith. Moore developed a close relationship with producer Owen Bradley and was soon so experienced that his contributions to sessions went well beyond thumping out basslines, as important as that is in itself. Lists of names become irrelevant as more and more top performers were drawn to Nashville looking for a hit combination. It would perhaps be more interesting to figure out who Moore hasn't played with — perhaps that would be a good job for his son, composer and multi-instrumentalist R. Stevie Moore, providing he feels like taking a break from putting out his own new records every day. The best-known recording Bob Moore did under his own name was an instrumental entitled "Mexico," a huge hit for the Monument label in 1961.


Eugene Chadbourne


Discography:


Lyrics: Bob Moore

 

 


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