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Michael Moore

Michael Moore

born on 16/5/1945 in Glen Este, OH, United States

Michael Moore (bassist)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Michael Moore (born May 16, 1945, Glen Este, Ohio) is an American jazz bassist.

Moore started on bass at age 15, at Withrow High School in Cincinnati, where he performed in various ensembles as well as the Presentation Orchestra in George G. "Smittie" Smith's famed The Withrow Minstrels. He played with his father in nightclubs in Cincinnati. He attended the Cincinnati College Conservatory, playing with Cal Collins and Woody Evans locally. He toured Africa and Europe with Woody Herman in 1966, and recorded with Dusko Goykovich while in Belgrade.

In the 1970s he worked with Marian McPartland, Freddie Hubbard, Jim Hall, Jimmy Raney, Bill Evans, Benny Goodman, Jake Hanna, Warren Vache, Herb Ellis, Zoot Sims, Ruby Braff, George Barnes, Chet Baker, and Lee Konitz. In 1978, he auditioned and was hired by Bill Evans after longtime bassist, Eddie Gomez had left the group and Evans was in transition with drummer, Philly Jo Jones. Moore however, left after 5 months due to dissatisfaction with the group. Late in the decade he began working with Gene Bertoncini, with whom he would play into the 1990s. In the 1980s he worked with Sims again as well as with Kenny Barron and Michael Urbaniak.

Moore was a member of the Dave Brubeck Quartet from 2008 until Brubeck's death in 2012.

Discography

As leader

  • Plays Gershwin (1995)
  • The Intimacy of the Bass (with Rufus Reid) (Double-Time Records, 1999)
  • The History of Jazz, Vol. 1 (Arbors Records, 2000)
  • The History of Jazz, Vol. 2 (Arbors, 2002)
  • Live at Carnegie Hall - 40th Anniversary Concert, Benny Goodman - 1978

As sideman

With Kenny Barron

  • 1+1+1 (1984)

With Art Farmer and Jim Hall

  • Big Blues (CTI, 1978)

With Jimmy Raney and Doug Raney

  • Stolen Moments (Steeplechase, 1979)

With Bill Evans

  • Getting Sentimental (rec. live at the Village Vanguard, 1978)

With Dave Brubeck

  • London Flat, London Sharp

References

This page was last modified 30.11.2013 23:29:05

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