Bob Moore, whose unassuming bassline you have absolutely heard before on country music relics by George Jones, Loretta Lynn, and Tammy Wynette, was born in Nashville on this day in 1932.
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Moore’s musical genius developed early, and he was playing double bass on a tent show tour with a Grand Ole Opry musical group. At 18, he toured with Little Jimmy Dickens, and by 23, he was a regular member of the show band on Ozark Jubilee.
In a 2004 interview, Moore cited Jack Drake, the longest-serving member of Ernest Tubbs’ band, the Texas Troubadours, as his No. 1 influence.
“Jack took his time, and any time I’d ask him something about a bass, he would try to show me,” Moore recalled. “So I learned a lot from him … he took little bitty things and showed me, like how to pull a string right and make it get the best sound. There’s a lot of bass players even today that still don’t know how to do that.”
Another pivotal figure in Bob Moore’s career was Owen Bradley, whom he met as a 12-year-old when Bradley played trombone Nashville radio station WSM-AM’s staff band. This connection came in handy when Bradley took over the Nashville division of Decca Records and brought Moore on board as a session musician. And when it came time to form Nashville’s acclaimed “A-Team,” Bob Moore was a no-brainer to fill the bassist role.
Bob Moore Became a Nashville Mainstay
Hailed by The New York Times as “an architect of the Nashville Sound of the 1950s and ’60s,” Bob Moore played bass on just about every definitive country song you could think of. “He Stopped Loving Her Today?” Check. Tammy Wynette’s “Stand By Your Man?” Check. Loretta Lynn’s autobiographical hit “Coal Miner’s Daughter?” Yup, that one too.
Moore also created arrangements for Roy Orbison, landed a solo Top 10 pop hit with 1961’s “Mexico,” and featured on virtually every Patsy Cline song in the ’60s. And he didn’t only limit his expertise to country music, also accompanying Simon & Garfunkel, Bob Dylan, and Wayne Newton.
Bob Moore died on Sept. 22, 2021, at a Nashville hospital. He was 88.
Featured image by Elmer Williams via The New York Times








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