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October 31, 2008

Bob Moore, R. Stevie Moore, Llynda Moore + More

Calamity Jane, Columbia Records, Nashville 1982
I've Just Seen A Face
produced by Billy Sherill

C A L A M I T Y J A N E
4-woman country pop vocal group:

Columbia FC37626 (1982)
Linda Moore, Mary Ann Kennedy, Pam Rose, Mary Fielder
produced by Billy Sherrill (



Linda Moore (blonde) is the sister of R. Stevie Moore. She is currently here: http://www.moregendel.com

and from this awesome monument to internet craunch:

Ambition, depth of character and ingenuity are the unique combination of trademarks that make up the soul of artist, LLYNDA MORE.

As a child, Llynda was exposed to some of the finest artists America has produced through her father, Bob Moore, who is one of the world’s leading and most recorded bass players. Growing up to the sounds and freshly made recordings of Roy Orbison, Elvis Presley and Brenda Lee, among others, was as natural to Llynda as her proven leadership, competitive and performance skills as cheerleader captain and student body vice president throughout her school years.

These unique traits developed into her being chosen Miss Nashville, Miss Tennessee and eventually a Miss America finalist.

Llynda has gone on to refine her unique artistic talents and the results have been most noteworthy. As a recording artist and vocalist, Llynda has recorded for CBS/Sony Records, national commercials, film and television. As an exceptionally gifted songwriter, she has written for Warner Music under exclusive contract and recorded multi full-length albums in her studio where she actively arranges and produces her insightful and provocative original material. Llynda chose New York City’s most demanding venues as her training ground to be a live performer. Within weeks of her first performance, she became a regularly featured artist in music and trade publications receiving the highest accolades and critical acclaim from some of the world’s most demanding critics.


I wish to thank you for your brilliant performance on New Year’s Eve at Pierchic. All the guests I spoke to were delighted with the high quality music you performed on that night. Having worked for almost twenty years in hotels and most of the time in food and beverage, I can say confidently that your attitude has been exemplary, which is not always the case with artists! We hope to be able to work again in the future. I remain in the meantime,

With best personal regards
Christophe Schnyder, General Manager
Al Qasr & Dar Al Masyaf,
Madinat Jumeirah
The Arabian Resort Dubai
Dubai, UAE

*****************************************




R. Stevie Moore - Garbage State




YouTube MeR.Stevie

Welcome to my tribute website of legendary Nashville bassist,
Bob Loyce Moore (who happens to be my father). Here you will find a large archive of musical information, rare photographs and memorabilia, and collected data relating to over 50 years of historic recordings and performances.




boogie woogie country man
bob moore's lap
The Killer on a memorable episode of "Nashville Now" in late 1985 doing "Boogie Woogie Country Man" with yellow glasses and gloves on. He also did "CC Rider" and "Why You Been Gone So Long".




If one copy of every record on which he performed were placed end to end, they would line both sidewalks of the one-mile stretch between Owen Bradley Park and Belmont College along 16th Avenue, Nashville's famed Music Row.

The musician holding this distinction is bass player extraordinaire Mr. Bob L. Moore, who, with over 17,000 recording sessions to his credit, may well have played on more recordings than any other musician in the world. Bob's talents are heard on literally hundreds of million selling records that feature some of the greatest legends in music history. Life Magazine (special edition September 1, 1994) named Bob Moore as the number one "Country Bassist" of all time but many recognize Bob Moore as the being the best "all around" Bassist of all time. His musical experiences are as diverse as having worked on a Big Band for twenty years, performing by invitation at the Newport Jazz Festival and recording with Arthur Feidler and The Boston Pops. Bobby Moore has performed as top studio instrumentalist for decades having worked with such legendary artists as Elvis Presley, Frank Sinatra, Wayne Newton, Sammi Davis Jr., Quincy Jones, Andy Williams, Sister Rosetta Tharpe, Johnny Halliday, Roy Orbison, Connie Frances, Burl Ives, Julie Andrews and Bob Dylan. His bold, distinctive, bass lines have graced many timeless recordings such as "Crazy" as performed by Patsy Cline, "He Stopped Loving Her Today" by George Jones and "Rainy Night In Georgia," Brook Benton.





From: gbcan
"The Battle of New Orleans" is the name of a song written by Jimmie Driftwood. The song details the 1815 Battle of New Orleans from the perspective of an American fighting alongside Andrew Jackson against British forces, but the tone is lighthearted. It has been recorded by many artists, but the one most often associated with this song is Johnny Horton. His version, released as a single in 1959, topped the Billboard Hot 100.




tammy and loretty: your good girl's gonna go bad: