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Musician

Oscar Moore

Oscar Moore

born on 25/12/1916 in Austin, TX, United States

died on 8/10/1981 in Las Vegas, NV, United States

Oscar Moore

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Oscar Frederic Moore (December 25, 1915 – October 8, 1981)[1] was an American jazz guitarist who spent ten years with the Nat King Cole Trio.

Moore was born in Austin, Texas, but grew up in Los Angeles. During the 1930s he often worked with his brother, Johnny, who was also a guitarist. Beginning in 1937, he spent ten years with Nat King Cole in the guitar-bass-piano trio format that influenced Oscar Peterson, Art Tatum, and Ahmad Jamal. After he left Cole, he joined his brother in Johnny Moore's Three Blazers through the 1950s. He recorded two solo albums in 1954, then left the field of music. During the last decades of his life, he laid bricks and ran a gas station.[2] He died in Las Vegas, Nevada, in 1981.[1]

Barney Kessel said that Moore practically created the role of the jazz guitarist in small combos. He was voted top guitarist of 1945, 1946, and 1947 in the Down Beat magazine readers' poll.

Selected discography

As member of Nat King Cole Trio

  • The Complete Capitol Recordings of the Nat King Cole Trio (Mosaic, 1991)
  • Nat King Cole and the King Cole Trio (1938–1940) (Savoy Jazz, 1989)
  • The Complete Early Transcriptions of the King Cole Trio: 1938–1941 (Vintage Jazz Classic, 1991)
  • The King Cole Trio: The MacGregor Years, 1941–1945 (Music & Arts 1995)
  • King Cole Trio: Transcriptions (1946–1950) (Blue Note/EMI, 2005)

As member of Johnny Moore's Three Blazers

  • Charles BrownThe Chronological Charles Brown 1947–1948 (Classics, 2001) - note: includes tracks that Moore recorded with Charles Brown when they were members of Johnny Moore's Three Blazers
  • Johnny Moore's Three Blazers Featuring Oscar Moore – Los Angeles Blues: Complete RCA Recordings 1949–1950 (Westside, 1998)
  • Floyd Dixon – His Complete Aladdin Recordings (Capitol/EMI 1996) - note: includes all 21 tracks that Moore recorded with Floyd Dixon when they were members of Johnny Moore's Three Blazers

As leader

Singles

  • 1950: Oscar Moore's Rhythm Aces: Slow Train Thru Arkansas // You're Getting Tired (Columbia 30207)
  • 1954: Oscar Moore's Combo (vocal by Frank Ervin): Hot Rod // Bed Time (Blaze 103)
  • 1955: Dru Pegee with the Oscar Moore Trio: Why Did You Leave Me // Till The Sun Stops Shining (Blend 1001)

Albums

  • 1954: Oscar Moore Trio (AKA Galivantin' Guitar) (Skylark Records SKLP-19 [10" LP]; Tampa Records TP-22 [12" LP] reissue) - with Carl Perkins
  • 1955: Oscar Moore Quartet (AKA The Fabulous Oscar Moore Guitar) (Tampa Records TP-10 [12" LP]; Charlie Parker Records PLP-830 [12" LP] reissue)
    • both of these albums have been reissued on one CD by V.S.O.P. Records [722937342229] in 1995.
  • 1955: Swing Guitars (Norgran Records MGN-1033 [12" LP]; Verve Records MGV-8124 [12" LP] reissue) - note: Oscar's group shares this album with Tal Farlow's group, and Barney Kessel's group [4 tracks by each artist].
  • 1957: Presenting Oscar Moore (Omega Records/Omegatape ST-7012 [issued on reel-to-reel tape only])
  • 1957: Have You Met Inez Jones (Riverside Records RLP-12 819 [12" LP]) - note: Oscar and his group used as backing musicians for vocalist Inez Jones.
    • both of these albums have been reissued on one CD by Fresh Sound Records [8427328607285] in 2012.
  • 1965: We'll Remember You, Nat (Surrey Records SS-1013 [12" LP]) - with Gerald Wiggins, Joe Comfort

As sideman

With Lionel Hampton

  • The Chronological Lionel Hampton & His Orchestra 1939-1940 (Classics #562, 1996) CD - note: includes the first session that Oscar (and Nat King Cole) recorded with Hampton for RCA Victor in 1940: House Of Morgan, I'd Be Lost Without You, Central Avenue Breakdown, Jack The Bellboy.
  • The Chronological Lionel Hampton & His Orchestra 1940-1941 (Classics #624, 1996) CD - note: includes the second session that Oscar (and Nat King Cole) recorded with Hampton for RCA Victor in 1940: Dough-Ra-Me, Jivin' With Jarvis, Blue (Because Of You), I Don't Stand A Ghost Of A Chance With You.

With Art Tatum

  • The Chronological Art Tatum 1940-1944 (Classics #800, 1996) CD - note: includes the 4 tracks that Oscar recorded with Tatum & His Band (featuring vocals by Big Joe Turner) for Decca in 1941: Lucille, Rock Me Mama, Corrine Corrina, Lonesome Graveyard Blues.

With The Capitol International Jazzmen

With Anita O'Day

  • The Complete Recordings 1949-1950 (Baldwin Street Music #BJH-302, 1998) CD - includes the 5 tracks that Oscar (and Nat King Cole) recorded with O'Day for the C.P. MacGregor Transcription Service in 1945: Ain't Misbehavin', Penthouse Serenade (When We're Alone), Lonesome Road, I Can't Give You Anything But Love, Rosetta.

With Lester Young

  • The Lester Young–Buddy Rich Trio With Nat King Cole (American Jazz Classics #AJC-144546, 2014) CD - note: includes the two live tracks Oscar recorded with this group at the AFRS Jubilee (#184) in Hollywood on March 20, 1946: These Foolish Things (Remind Me Of You), Lester Leaps In.

With Benny Carter

  • A Jumpin' Jubilee: The Jam Sessions 1945-1946 (Storyville #2054, 2002) CD - note: includes the 3 live tracks Oscar recorded with this group (Benny Carter, Willie Smith, Charlie Parker, Nat King Cole, Buddy Rich) at the AFRS Jubilee (#186) in Hollywood during April 1946: Tea For Two, Body And Soul, Cherokee.

With Ray Charles

  • The Complete Swing Time And Down Beat Recordings 1949-1952 (Night Train International #2001, 1997) 2CD - note: includes the 4 tracks that Oscar recorded with Charles for Swing Time in 1950: I Wonder Who's Kissing Her Now, All To Myself, Lonely Boy, Baby Let Me Hold Your Hand.

With Illinois Jacquet

  • The Chronological Illinois Jacquet 1951-1952 (Classics #1376, 2004) CD - note: includes 3 of the 4 tracks that Oscar recorded with Jacquet for Clef/Verve in 1951: Lazy Blues, Pastel, All Of Me. The fourth song, Speedliner is found on The Chronological Illinois Jacquet 1947-1951 (Classics #1254, 2002).

With Sonny Criss

  • note: Oscar recorded 4 tracks with Criss when they were both members of Billy Hadnott's Orchestra (actually a sextet) for Federal in 1952: Ooh Chica b/w My Ideal (Federal 12084), and Junk Wagon b/w Limehouse Blues (Federal 12096).

References

  1. ^ a b Eagle, Bob; LeBlanc, Eric S. (2013). Blues - A Regional Experience. Santa Barbara: Praeger Publishers. p. 370. ISBN 978-0313344237. 
  2. ^ Yanow, Scott (2013). The Great Jazz Guitarists. San Francisco: Backbeat. p. 142. ISBN 978-1-61713-023-6. 
This page was last modified 06.02.2018 14:13:02

This article uses material from the article Oscar Moore from the free encyclopedia Wikipedia and it is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.