View Full Version : Gary Moore has died!
Rosa Lichtenstein
6th February 2011, 20:32
One of my guitar heroes is dead!
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-12377862
aJVprlsokvc
The above song was written by Gary as a memorial to his friend, Phil Lynott, who died in January 1986. He was too upset to attend his friend's funeral, so he wrote this instead.
TjjpBb9q1PA
The above track introduced me to Thin Lizzy and Gary's playing more years ago than I care to remember.
ygpJ2tSRa9Q
Xx3yXUunEq8
xRzZP3N_BmY
lWp-Mazmf88
lqAuuIDU2sw
dGoYmRoBF4Q
K9n981iQz3w
Three out of the four players above are now dead. Cozy Powell, the drummer, died in a car crash in 1998. Phil Lynott, the singer, died as a result of long term drug abuse 25 years ago last month -- and now Gary has gone...
facGP8cIIbU
EPpq72suy8Y
Zanthorus
7th February 2011, 22:05
Does anyone know how he died? None of the news reports I've seen mention any specific causes, and it seems strange that he would just drop dead at age 58. Anyway, very sad occassion.
Dóchas
7th February 2011, 22:08
Ye heard about it on the radio today. very sad indeed :( .
I am also interested in how he died, the reports seem to to make a point of not saying. Either they dont know or wont tell us. Either way its very sad he was such a legend
Meridian
7th February 2011, 22:33
Not something I have listened to a lot before, but I enjoy the songs posted so far.
coda
7th February 2011, 22:41
very sad to hear. another great legend. One of my guitar heroes too. I was lucky to see him play The Chance Theatre, a great little live music venue in my neighborhood in New York in 1987. Most of my concert-recollections from that era are a stoned-out haze..ha, of course I was only about 5 yo (ahem) BUT, Gary Moore is one I vividly remember. He owned that stage and crowd! What a presence... A real bluesman. RIP GM, you will be missed.
Rosa Lichtenstein
8th February 2011, 03:06
I'm too sad to post anything else today.
LGdC4GBkcbM
v81daBThOos
NH1VvoTecwU
YzpMBscDNbM
72eOW8cW2Ps
The above is Gary's tribute to that other great guitarist, Randy Rhoads (http://www.google.co.uk/#hl=en&xhr=t&q=Randy+Rhoads&cp=6&pf=p&sclient=psy&aq=0&aqi=&aql=&oq=Randy+R&pbx=1&fp=b2f00b77efcdc69), who died in 1982.
Dóchas
8th February 2011, 16:32
Reports are saying he died of a heart attack
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-12391305
Rosa Lichtenstein
8th February 2011, 17:55
Here's his Obituary from today's Guardian:
http://anti-dialectics.co.uk/Gary-Moore-007.jpg
While the Belfast-born guitarist Gary Moore, who has died unexpectedly aged 58, won popular acclaim for his work with the band Thin Lizzy, the scope of his talents reached far beyond mainstream hard rock. He was a fine blues guitarist and adept in the complexities of jazz-rock, and, in a career that began in the late 1960s, he ran the gamut of musical styles in a variety of groups and a long list of solo albums. His most recent disc was Bad for You Baby, from 2008.
He grew up near the Stormont estate off the Upper Newtownards Road in east Belfast. His father ran the Queen's Hall ballroom in Holywood, a seaside resort 10 miles from the city, and took the young Gary to see the showbands who performed there regularly, playing pop cover versions and country and western tunes. He recalled how his father invited him to sing with one of the bands when he was six. "I sang a song called Sugar Time. That was it. I had the bug."
After his father bought him a guitar from one of the showband musicians, he began teaching himself Shadows and Beatles songs. At 11, he played with his first band, the Beat Boys, who wore pudding-basin haircuts and played Beatles hits. His first professional job was with the Dublin band Skid Row, originally a quartet featuring Phil Lynott on vocals, though Lynott was sacked within months of Moore's arrival.
In 1966 Skid Row supported Fleetwood Mac at Dublin's National Stadium, and Mac's guitarist Peter Green, whose guitar work with John Mayall's Bluesbreakers had been another formative influence on Moore, was impressed by Moore's playing. They struck up a friendship, and a few years later Green sold Moore his superb 1959 Gibson Les Paul guitar for £100.
Moore became frustrated with Skid Row's limitations and quit, though without a clear direction in mind. He made the solo album Grinding Stone (1973), but was happy to accept an offer to join Lynott's group Thin Lizzy, replacing the guitarist Eric Bell. "The pressure was off and I was having fun," Moore recalled, "but after a few months I was doing myself in, drinking and high on the whole thing."
Sensing that he needed a more disciplined environment, Moore then joined the jazz-fusion group Colosseum II, formed by the drummer Jon Hiseman. Moore recorded three albums with them, which achieved only limited success, and felt that he lacked the theoretical knowledge required.
He rejoined Thin Lizzy in 1978, replacing an injured Brian Robertson for an imminent American tour with Queen. After playing on Lizzy's album Black Rose: A Rock Legend, Moore resumed his solo career with the album Back On the Streets, with assistance from Lynott. This contained Moore's best-known solo hit, Parisienne Walkways, a UK top 10 hit in April 1979. He set up camp in Los Angeles, and formed the band G-Force. The outfit made one album, which flopped. Once again, Lynott lured him back into the Lizzy fold, but Lynott was becoming increasingly dependent on drink and drugs, and the band was subsiding into chaos. Moore played on Lizzy's album Life/Live (1983), then quit again. A string of solo albums around this time included Corridors of Power (1982), Victims of the Future (1983) and Run for Cover (1985). The latter included the top five single Out in the Fields. This was his last collaboration with Lynott, who died in January 1986.
Wild Frontier (1987) was Moore's homage to traditional Irish music, and was partially prompted by the Self-Aid benefit concert for Ireland's unemployed. After that he veered back towards hard rock with After the War (1989), his record company and management having convinced him that this was the way to achieve better sales in the US. But in the midst of touring the new material, it dawned on Moore that his real love was the blues. "I didn't want to end up in Hollywood having facelifts and my hair dyed blond so I could appear on my own album cover," as he put it.
The upshot was Still Got the Blues (1990), which featured seasoned bluesmen Albert Collins and Albert King as well as George Harrison. It became regarded as perhaps Moore's most artistically successful solo effort. In 1992 he released a follow-up, After Hours, which again featured Collins as well as a cameo appearance by BB King on Since I Met You Baby.
"He was the nicest guy I ever worked with," Moore commented of BB King. "There was no ego trip. It's inspiring to be around people like that."
In 1994, Moore combined with former Cream musicians Ginger Baker and Jack Bruce in BBM, Moore standing in Eric Clapton's place in the Cream lineup. They released the album Around the Next Dream. The following year, he took yet another look back at the blues influences from his past with Blues for Greeny, a collection of cover versions of songs written by or associated with Green. By this time, Green had long since vanished from the music industry and was living the life of a recluse. "Peter's style of playing is just as important as Eric [Clapton]'s or Jeff [Beck]'s, but because he wasn't around to promote himself, he was forgotten," said Moore. "The restraint and the emotional content was far above anything else at that time."
Subsequent releases such as Back to the Blues, Power of the Blues and Old New Ballads Blues continued to display Moore's rediscovered passion for the blues. Close As You Get (2007), another blues collection, found Moore reunited with former Thin Lizzy drummer Brian Downey, while Bad for You Baby (2008)mixed original Moore compositions with blues standards.
Moore was found dead in his room at a hotel in Estepona, on the Spanish coast to the west of Marbella. Bob Geldof commented that Moore was "without question one of the great Irish bluesmen. His playing was exceptional and beautiful. We won't see his like again." Thin Lizzy's Scott Gorham added that "playing with Gary during the Black Rose era was a great experience. He was a great player and a great guy."
Moore is survived by his sons Jack and Gus from his first marriage, and his daughter Lilly from a recent relationship.
• Robert William Gary Moore, guitarist and singer, born 4 April 1952; died 6 February 2011
http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2011/feb/07/gary-moore-obituary?INTCMP=SRCH
coda
12th February 2011, 18:15
Whiskey in a Jar (from One Night in Dublin: a tribute to Phil Lynott)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DgJnqAx5N9Y&NR=1&feature=fvwp
The Boys are Back in Town (from One Night in Dublin)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=97DM-xFBj48&feature=channel
On 20 August 2005, on what would have been his 56th birthday, a statue of Phil Lynott was unveiled in Dublin's Grafton Street by his mother. There to witness the event were members of Thin Lizzy from throughout the band's career. Later that evening they joined forces under the leadership of Gary Moore for a concert that paid tribute to Phil Lynott's memory. The core band of Moore, Jethro Tull bass player Jonathan Noyce and Thin Lizzy's one and only drummer Brian Downey were joined by the stellar guitar talents of Brian Robertson, Scott Gorham and Eric Bell for a set of Lizzy and Gary Moore classics.
Rosa Lichtenstein
13th February 2011, 16:38
Yes, they keep showing that concert on Sky Arts One. I hope they now put up a statue of Gary.
coda
14th February 2011, 20:41
He was snubbed last night during the memoria part of the corporat- sponsored Grammy Awards. :( He's highly underrated and under-appreciated.
Here's a young (26) on-fire Gary solo with Phil, Thin Lizzy at the Sydney Harbour, 1978
Me and the Boys (7th song of the set)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=92CH7vNN9WI&feature=related
Thin Lizzy Sydney Opera House, 1978
Jailbreak
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SpOxjOj0zhk&feature=related
Bad Reputation
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3THPGl-LC6k&feature=related
Cowboy song
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AgST27FIzNg
The Boys are back in town
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1f_LHzkwKuU&feature=related
Waitin' for an alibi
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=01uEIE47UZE&feature=related
Are you ready?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C4UfeCKdTx0&NR=1
Me and the Boys
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=92CH7vNN9WI&feature=related
Baby Drive me Crazy
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=17W6bvNyAQ4
Powered by vBulletin® Version 4.2.5 Copyright © 2020 vBulletin Solutions Inc. All rights reserved.