Jump to content

John Moore (British musician): Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
Tycobbuk (talk | contribs)
Line 74: Line 74:
==External links==
==External links==
*[http://www.john-moore.net/ Official website]
*[http://www.john-moore.net/ Official website]
*[http://www.facebook.com/pages/The-John-Moore-Rock-And-Roll-Trio-featuring-The-Loose-Moorelles/251825362054?ref=ts/ John Moore on Facebook]


{{The Jesus and Mary Chain}}
{{The Jesus and Mary Chain}}

Revision as of 13:14, 17 July 2011

John Moore

John Moore (born 23 December 1964)[1] is a British musician, best known for his work as the drummer in The Jesus and Mary Chain and as a member of Black Box Recorder.

Biography

John Moore joined the Jesus and Mary Chain in 1986, succeeding Bobby Gillespie on drum duties, later moving to guitar.[1] When he left the Jesus and Mary Chain in 1988, he formed John Moore & The Expressway,[1] releasing two albums.[2] He later formed a new band called Revolution 9.[2] who released several singles, and one album You Might As Well Live.

Moore is also renowned for his saw playing; he has played saw on both Art Brut albums, namely the 2007 single "Direct Hit".[3] Moore also occasionally plays saw at Luke Haines' gigs.

In 1997 John Moore formed Black Box Recorder with Luke Haines and Sarah Nixey. The band released three studio albums: England Made Me, The Facts of Life and Passionoia, as well as a compilation The Worst of Black Box Recorder. The single "The Facts of Life" reached number 20 in the UK chart and the band appeared on Top Of The Pops.

In 2005, he released an album, Half Awake on his own The Germ Organization label.[2]


Following a 2007 collaboration with Art Brut and an appearance at the Nick Sanderson (Earl Brutus) tribute concert in October 2008, it was announced that Black Box Recorder would perform their first headlining gigs in five years during February 2009.

Moore has also contributed articles to British newspaper The Guardian,[4] and also releases his own music through his Myspace page.[5]

Moore was married to Black Box Recorder vocalist Sarah Nixey from 2001 until 2006, with whom he has one child.

Discography

With the Jesus & Mary Chain

  • "April Skies" (1987), Blanco y Negro
  • "Happy When It Rains" (1987), Blanco y Negro

Solo/John Moore & the Expressway

  • Expressway Rising LP/CD (1989), Polydor
  • "Friends" 7-inch single (1989), Polydor
  • "Out of My Mind" 12-inch single (1989), Polydor
  • "Something About You Girl" single (1989), Polydor - UK #77[6]
  • Distortion LP/CD (1990), Polydor
  • "Meltdown" 12-inch/CD (1990), Polydor
  • Half Awake (2005), The Germ Organization
  • Floral Tributes (2008)

With Revolution 9

  • "You Don't Know What Love Is" (1994), Acuarela Discos
  • You Might as well Live (1994), Habana Productions
  • "Living With You" (1995), Clawfist

With Black Box Recorder

See Black Box Recorder#Discography

With The Black Arts

  • "Christmas Number One" (2007), Fantastic Plastic

References

  1. ^ a b c Strong, Martin C. (2003) The Great Indie Discography, Canongate, ISBN 1-84195-335-0, p. 383 Cite error: The named reference "Strong" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  2. ^ a b c John Moore – Biography
  3. ^ Art Brut, It's a Bit Complicated album liner notes
  4. ^ Moore, John (2007-06-18). "A second coming". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 2010-05-07.
  5. ^ MySpace.com - John Moore - UK - Chansons populaires mélodramatiques / Post-punk / Rock - www.myspace.com/johnmoore23
  6. ^ "John Moore And The Expressway", Chart Stats, retrieved 2010-10-09

Template:Persondata