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Gary Moore - Irish guitarist Moore started out in the blues / rock outfit Skid Row in the late sixties. He later featured with Colosseum 2, G.Force and Thin Lizzy. His first solo album, "Grinding Stone", was released in 1973, and was a good show of things to come. Moore has consistently delivered the goods, whether he's playing the blues, fusion or hard rock, and his reputation as one of the world's best guitarists is certainly well deserved. He's recently released a new album called "Different Beat".
Gary Moore - Over the Hills
and Far Away, from "Wild
Frontier'', his 6th album,
released in 1988. Arguably one of
his best albums, released after
his excellent "Run for Cover"
album, and featuring Bob Daisley
on bass and Neil Carter on keys,
guitars and vocals. Gary Moore, as
everybody now knows, is equally at
home playing rock, blues or fusion
- he's one of the most versatile,
respected and best guitarists in
the world. His last couple of
albums weren't quite of the
standard and musical style that
one has come to expect from Gary
Moore, but he's back where he
belongs with his new album, " Back
to the Blues". Oh, by the way, he
turns 49 years old on 04 April.
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Biography by Greg Prato
One of rock's most underrated
guitarists (both from a
technical and compositional
point of view), Gary Moore
remains relatively unknown in
the U.S., while his solo work
has brought him substantial
acclaim and commercial success
in most other parts of the world
— especially in Europe. Born on
April 4, 1952, in Belfast,
Ireland, Moore became interested
in guitar during the '60s, upon
discovering such blues-rock
masters as Eric Clapton, Jimi
Hendrix, and perhaps his biggest
influence of all, Fleetwood
Mac's Peter Green. After
relocating to Dublin later in
the decade, Moore joined a local
rock group called Skid Row,
which featured a young singer by
the name of Phil Lynott, who
would soon after leave the group
to double up on bass and form
Thin Lizzy. Skid Row persevered,
however, eventually opening a
show for Moore's heroes, Peter
Green and Fleetwood Mac, and
making such an impression on the
veteran group that Green
personally requested their
manager help secure Skid Row a
recording contract with CBS (in
addition, Green sold Moore one
of his most-used guitars, a
maple 1959 Gibson Les Paul
Standard, which would become
Moore's primary instrument).
Skid Row would go on to issue
several singles and albums
(including 1970's Skid and
1971's 34 Hours), and although
the group mounted a few tours of
Europe and the U.S., it failed
to obtain breakthrough
commercial success, leading to
Moore's exit from the group in
1972. Moore then formed his own
outfit, the Gary Moore Band
(along with members drummer
Pearse Kelly and bassist John
Curtis), for which the guitarist
also served as vocalist. But
after the trio's debut album,
1973's Grinding Stone, sunk
without a trace, Moore hooked up
once more with ex-bandmate
Lynott in Thin Lizzy. Moore's
initial tenure in Lizzy proved
to be short-lived, however, as
his fiery playing was featured
on only a handful of tracks.
Moore then set his sights on
studio work (appearing on Eddie
Howell's 1975 release,
Gramaphone Record), before
joining up with a prog
rock/fusion outfit, Colosseum
II. But once more, Moore's
tenure in his latest outfit was
fleeting; he appeared on only
three recordings (1976's Strange
New Flesh, plus a pair in 1977,
Electric Savage and War Dance),
as Moore accepted an invitation
by his old buddy Lynott to fill
in for a Thin Lizzy U.S. tour,
playing arenas opening for
Queen.
Moore proved to be quite busy in
1978, as the guitarist appeared
on three other artists'
recordings — Andrew Lloyd
Webber's Variations, Rod
Argent's Moving Home, and Gary
Boyle's Electric Glide. The same
year, Moore issued his second
solo release (almost five years
after his solo debut), Back on
the Streets, which spawned a
surprise Top Ten U.K. hit in May
of 1979, the bluesy ballad
"Parisienne Walkways," and
featured vocal contributions by
Lynott. Moore joined forces with
his Lizzy mates once more in
1979, appearing on arguably the
finest studio album of their
career, Black Rose, which proved
to be a huge hit in the U.K.
(for a fine example of Moore's
exceptional guitar skills, check
out the album's epic title
track). But predictably, Moore
ultimately exited the group once
more (this time right in the
middle of a U.S. tour), as a
rift had developed between Moore
and Lynott. Undeterred, Moore
lent some guitar work to drummer
Cozy Powell's solo release, Over
the Top, in addition to forming
a new outfit, G Force, which
would only remain together for a
lone self-titled release in
1980.
During the early '80s, Moore
united with former ELP
guitarist/bassist/singer Greg
Lake, appearing on a pair of
Lake solo releases (1981's
self-titled release and 1983's
Manoeuvres), in addition to
guesting on another Cozy Powell
solo release, Octopuss. But it
was also during the '80s that
Moore finally got serious with
his solo career — issuing such
heavy metal-based works as
1982's Corridors of Power,
1983's Victims of the Future,
1984's Dirty Fingers and the
in-concert set We Want Moore!,
1985's Run for Cover, 1987's
Wild Frontier, plus 1989's After
the War — establishing a large
following in Europe, despite
remaining virtually unknown
stateside. The decade wasn't all
rosy for Moore, however —
although he was able to patch up
his friendship with Phil Lynott
(appearing with Lizzy for
several tracks on Life/Live, and
teaming with Lynott for a pair
of tracks in 1985, "Military
Man" and "Out in the Fields,"
the latter a U.K. hit), years of
hard living finally caught up
with Lynott, leading to his
passing in January of 1986.
Moore would subsequently
dedicate "Wild Frontier" to
Lynott, and honored Thin Lizzy's
former frontman on the track
"Blood of Emeralds" (from After
the War).
Fed up with the pressure to pen
hit singles and tired of his
metallic musical direction,
Moore returned to his blues
roots for 1990's Still Got the
Blues, the most renowned and
best-selling release of his
career, as the album featured
such special guests as Albert
Collins, Albert King, and George
Harrison. Moore continued in his
newly rediscovered blues style
on such subsequent releases as
1992's After Hours and 1993's
Blues Alive, before forming the
short-lived supergroup BBM along
with Cream's former rhythm
section — bassist Jack Bruce and
drummer Ginger Baker — which
lasted for a single album,
1994's Around the Next Dream. Up
next for Moore was a tribute
album for Peter Green, 1995's
Blues for Greeny, which saw him
put his own personal stamp on 11
tracks either penned or
performed at some point by
Green. Moore experimented with
different musical styles on his
next two solo releases, 1997's
Dark Days in Paradise and 1999's
A Different Beat, before
embracing the blues once more on
his first release of the 21st
century, 2001's Back to the
Blues.
Over the years, Gary Moore has
been the subject of countless
compilations, the best of the
bunch being 1998's
metal-oriented Collection and
2002's blues-based Best of the
Blues, as well as Out in the
Fields: The Very Best of Gary
Moore, which was split 50/50
between his metal and blues
excursions. Teaming with Skunk
Anansie bassist Cass Lewis and
Primal Fear drummer Darrin
Mooney, Moore started work on
much harder and
alternative-influenced rock in
the spring of 2002 and released
the results as Scars. The
powerful Live at Monsters of
Rock from 2003 proudly declared
"no overdubs used" while 2004's
raw Power of the Blues featured
nothing but the blues, as did
2006's Old New Ballads Blues on
Eagle Records.


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have any contribution to make to
this band or something to add,
email me - Japie Marais.


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