Showing posts sorted by relevance for query gary moore. Sort by date Show all posts
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Saturday, November 17, 2018

Honoring a Friend: Bob Daisley Talks ‘Moore Blues For Gary’







Gary Moore’s life was far too short, but his sonic artistry will live on forever.

This fact drove the creation of Moore Blues For Gary, a new all-star tribute album conceived and coordinated by Moore’s long-serving bandmate and dear friend Bob Daisley (Rainbow/Uriah Heep/Ozzy Osbourne/Black Sabbath/Mother’s Army/Widowmaker/Kahvas Jute/The Hoochie Coochie Men/Chicken Shack, etcetera).

Bolstered by a stellar production and an absolutely bulletproof track listing, the 13-song release celebrates Moore’s decades-long musical adventure (including, among other things, beautiful and downright tear-inducing nods to the man’s remarkable creative relationship with the late Phil Lynott) while showcasing the obvious influence he had on some of the greatest guitarists in Rock history – many of whom make appearances on the album itself. Those names – and the names of so many others who’ve contributed to Moore Blues For Gary - will not be listed here in this intro, as it is worth reading the interview with Bob below just to see these extraordinary players come up in conversation. Simply put, the level of musicianship displayed on this album is as jaw-dropping and exciting as the man who inspired it.

On a personal note, Bob is the musician I’ve interviewed the most in my career, and it’s always a joy to connect with him. The love and honor he brought to Moore Blues For Gary is undeniable, and the enthusiasm he expressed for the finished project in the following conversation was palpable. (For an extensive look inside Daisley’s career beyond his time with Gary Moore, click the article archive link at the end of this interview.)

I think the first time you mentioned this project to me was around two years ago.

I started this album at the beginning of 2015, and it was completed earlier this year. So, it took three years to do. Having said that, within that time, there were people who sort of messed us around and said, ‘Yep, I’ll do a track as long as you can wait.’ Then, we’d wait and they didn’t do it. We even had somebody who actually did a take and sent it to us. We edited it and started mixing and preparing the track, then they said, ‘Oh, the record company won’t let us release it,’ so I had to find someone else for that track. There are 13 tracks, and they have got different singers, keyboard players, drummers and guitarists. It was my project, so I’m the only common denominator in all of it.

One thing I find very interesting about this album is that it’s as much a history lesson on you as it is one on Gary. You have people like Jon Butler from Widowmaker, Tim Gaze from Kahvas Jute and Stab Webb from Chicken Shack on there. These are guys who go back with you a long, long time.

Yeah, that’s right, and there’s even some very early Gary Moore history with Brush Shiels. He was in Skid Row, Gary’s first band in Ireland. There’s some family history here!

Absolutely. Stan, Tim and Jon are people who had a major part in your history. What was it like to work with these guys again, and what do you think they each brought to the project that made it even more special?

With Tim Gaze, I suppose it was the familiarity. I’ve known Tim since the ’60s. As of late, we did that stuff with Jon Lord and The Hoochie Coochie Men and the live show at The Basement here in Sydney, which was on DVD. After that, we did a studio album called Danger: White Men Dancing, which was received very well. I think that came out in about 2007. A year or two later, I was talking to Jon Lord about doing another one. He loved Tim’s playing, and he loved working with me. Rob Grosser, the drummer from that project, is involved in the Gary Moore album as well. We all worked so well together. We had planned to do another studio album, and then Jon died. The first couple of basic tracks I sent off to people for Moore Blues For Gary were of Rob, Tim and myself. It was nice to have that little foundation to get the ball rolling.

I’ve kept in touch with Stan for the last 40-odd years. He’s a classic Blues player. When I joined Chicken Shack in early ’72 in London, Stan was a bit of an authority on Blues and the history of the Blues players. He was very knowledgeable with all that stuff, and he taught me a lot. When I joined Chicken Shack, I was soaking up that information like a sponge. I’d go to his house, and he’d pull out old 78s of Blues artists and play me stuff. He’d say, ‘This is where Jeff Beck got this from,’ or, ‘This is where Jimmy Page got this from.’ It was really fascinating for me.

I always liked Jon Butler’s voice. He was the second singer in Widowmaker after Steve Eliis was booted out for various reasons. Butler had that sort of warmth and feeling in his voice that I could relate to. I always rated him as a singer. I’ve kept in touch with Jon over the years, but we hadn’t done anything together for a long time. In the early ’80s, we talked about putting something together with Neil Carter when Neil and I were working with Gary Moore. Jon was in the circuit with Gary in the earlier days. He used to share dressing rooms and talk to Gary and all that, so there was a connection there. I think Jon’s done a great job of singing on those two tracks [‘Story Of The Blues,’ ‘That’s Why I Play The Blues’]. It was nice to have the opportunity to work with people I hadn’t worked with for such a long time.

I originally had the track that Stan played on [Torn Inside] in mind for Peter Green, but Peter had issues and problems and all that. It would have been nice to have him – and Stan – on the album. When Gary did that track and I played on it with him, it was a real tribute to early Fleetwood Mac and Peter Green; it had that vibe about it. I thought Peter would be good for it, but he was one of the guys who sort of said, ‘Yes, I’ll do a track, No, I won’t. Yes, I will. What track do you want me to do? Okay, well maybe if you wait around...’ He ended up not doing a track at all. It was disappointing, because Gary had done a whole album of Peter Green’s material and called it Blues For Greeny. I thought if anybody would do a track as a tribute and a thank you to Gary, it would have been Peter Green. But it didn’t happen, so there you go. Stan did a good job on it. I’m happy with the track, and it turned out really well.

Your daughter Rose also makes an appearance on the album.

Yeah! She’s got a nice voice and a very good ear for music. She’s been interested in music since her birth. She used to bop in front of my jukebox with her little nappy on when she was about 18 months. When Rob Grosser and I were going through all the stuff, we decided that ‘Empty Rooms’ and ‘Story Of The Blues’ needed a female voice. I thought, ‘Rose has got a good voice,’ so we got her in the studio. It worked out really well, and she was over the moon to be on the record with all these great people.





We’ve got to talk about Joe Lynn Turner, who is on fire on this record.

He did a great job on ‘The Blues Just Got Sadder,’ and that needs a good singer. I thought, ‘Who’s got a really good voice?’ I phoned Joe, and he said, ‘Yeah!’ ‘The Blues Just Got Sadder’ is a song I wrote with Dennis Wilson, who I’ve known since my Kahvas Jute days. Dennis and I wrote a few songs a few years ago, and I always thought, ‘This would be a good song for Gary Moore to do.’ I never got to play it for him before he passed away. Because of the title, ‘The Blues Just Got Sadder,’ it’s my personal tribute to Gary by saying, ‘The Blues is sadder now that you’ve gone.’ I’ve got Steve Lukather on that track; what a great player he is! There's a blinding amount of stuff that he’s done over the years. He’s Ringo’s guitarist at the moment, and he’s in Toto. He’s worked with all these other people, including all those huge albums with Michael Jackson and people like that. He was great; Steve Lukather is a lovely guy. He said, ‘I’m honored to play on this.’ That says a lot for Gary and me to get that sort of respect.

Joe also did ‘Power Of The Blues,’ and that’s with Jeff Watson on guitar. It’s almost like Mother’s Army pays tribute to Gary Moore, but with the drummer from the Gary Moore band, Darrin Mooney. It all sort of fell into place.

‘Parisienne Walkways,’ with Ricky Warwick, was another song we did on the album. It’s not really a Blues track, strictly speaking, but it’s a real trademark track for Gary. I thought, ‘That’s going to go there.’ When Steve Morse agreed to do it, I thought, ‘Wow! Perfect.’ Steve was another well-respected musician and guitarist who said he was honored to do it.

I’m looking at the track listing, and all of these songs are heavyweights. There’s not a weak one in the bunch here, but which songs did you enjoy recording the most?

I enjoyed them all for many reasons. One of the songs is the one that Glenn Hughes sang, ‘Nothing’s The Same [Without You].’ The first time I ever heard that when Gary recorded it, I thought, ‘What a great song!’ It was a really good song, and I felt very touched by it. At the time, my mom had recently died; it just rang that bell, you know? When I decided to do this tribute album for Gary, I thought, ‘That song is a must.’ It turned out really, really well. It’s a good version. When I began to do the material, I thought, ‘Well, I don’t want to re-create what Gary’s done. I don’t want to compete with Gary in any way and say, ‘This version’s better than yours or just as good as yours.’ It’s just my take on it.

Another song is ‘That’s Why I Play The Blues.’ I remember being in the studio with Gary in London at the end of 2003. I flew over there to do the Power Of The Blues album. All the tracks were done virtually live. It was just the band playing live in the studio and being recorded. The version of the song that we were doing in the studio at the time had keyboards and brass on it. Gary ended up not using the brass on that track, but I still have a recording of the version with the brass on it. It just sounds so authentic. But I remember just standing there playing with Gary and Darrin Mooney on drums and the keyboard player, the brass and all that. I thought, ‘I’m enjoying this so much! It just doesn’t get any better than this!’ I was savoring every second of it, and that really stuck in my mind.

‘The Loner’ is another one. We used to have fun playing that one on stage. It used to go on for like 20 minutes sometimes. The intro alone that Gary did was three or four minutes long sometimes, and there was an outro that could go on for another 10, 12 minutes – even longer. It wasn’t boring or self-indulgent. You could see that the audience loved it. That song had to go on there as well. It’s not really a Blues song as such, but it’s another great Gary Moore song that’s not out of context with all the Blues stuff. Doug Aldrich did such a lovely job of playing on that.

There’s another song on there that I co-wrote with Dennis Wilson called ‘This One’s For You.’ I thought it was a good song as another tribute to Gary, but with his sons on it. His son Gus sang it, and his other son Jack played guitar on it. Even though I wrote it with Dennis, I think it’s a nice little hats off to Gary with his sons there. I’m happy with every track.

I personally think some of these people’s finest performances ever are on this album.

Yeah! I mean, John Sykes…He was another one. I’d say he was influenced by Gary Moore. He sounded a bit like Gary at times, and John has always been a great guitarist. I don’t know if he went into hiding or didn’t want to do much, but he wasn’t really high profile for a while. So, when he agreed to do a track, I was really pleased. He did one of Gary’s real signature tunes, ‘Still Got The Blues For You.’ It’s just lovely what he did on the outro part.

Eric Singer certainly plays into your history as well.

Well, sure! He’s in my history with Black Sabbath; we did the album The Eternal Idol together. Then, it was my suggestion to Gary to get Eric in the band when we needed a drummer. We auditioned so many drummers, and I said, ‘You know, I’ve worked with Eric Singer. He’s great.’ They flew him over, and he ended up getting the gig. Eric’s with me in Gary’s band on the Live In Stockholm 1987 video. It’s a shame that hasn’t been re-released on DVD; it only ever came out on VHS at the time. I had to have Eric on there because he had been part of the Gary Moore band. I’ve got Don Airey on the album as well. His history with Gary goes way back.

How far back do those two songs you wrote with Dennis go?

There’s a Blues legend in America called Guitar Shorty. Jimi Hendrix used to go watch him when he was very young, and I think Guitar Shorty actually married Jimi Hendrix’s sister or something. His organization contacted me and said, ‘Shorty’s doing a new album. Would you be interested in writing a few tunes for him?’ So, I got together with Dennis; this is probably around 2005. We knocked off a few tunes, and two of them were ‘The Blues Just Got Sadder’ and ‘This One’s For You.’ He ended up not recording them; I think it had to do with the record company or the publishing company – yet again, probably something to do with money, control, percentages and all that stuff. But I always liked those songs. And everybody I played the demos to loved them.

When I listened to the album for the first time, I thought about how Gary clearly was somebody who earned the name “Guitar Hero.”

Oh, sure! The thing about Gary was that he wasn’t just a virtuoso. Over the years, there have been lots of virtuosos. They’re fast, and they can play complicated stuff with speed or whatever. But with Gary, it all came from the heart. He had so much emotion in his playing. He could play something slow or just a few notes, and it was very emotive.

Do you have any new musical endeavors planned for the not-too-distant future?

I do, actually. I’m working on some stuff with Rob Grosser. He and I have been knocking out some instrumental stuff. It’s almost bordering on being Surf music, but with a subtle, more modern and, in parts, almost a spacey Pink Floyd vibe. Some of it is in a category similar to ‘Albatross’ by Fleetwood Mac. I’m really pleased with it. It’s nice; it’s good listening stuff. You listen to some of the stuff and you think, ‘This would be great for a TV theme!’ or, ‘This would be good for a movie or advertisement.’ It’s got its own character and its own mood. Rob and I are going into the studio at the end of this month to mix some of the tracks. I find it enjoyable to do it; we’ve had fun doing it. I think when you have fun doing something and you really enjoy it, it comes out in the music.





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Sunday, February 6, 2011

In Memory of Gary Moore

Anyone serious about their Rock N' Roll has at least one true guitar hero. I lost mine this morning. 

In many ways, my love of Gary Moore's beautiful guitar playing - especially on Thin Lizzy's incomparable "Black Rose" album - gave me a career. If I never fell in love with that amazing work, I might not have ended up as a music book publisher. Some of the earliest independent writing I ever produced was about this man's work with Thin Lizzy. As I complete work on an upcoming book chapter devoted to "Black Rose," it shatters me to know I must now add this painful postscript.

My deepest condolences to Bob Daisley and other mutual friends who worked with Gary in creating the magic that went into a Gary Moore album and live performance. 

Listen to Gary Moore's music today, and let it move you. A special man's momentum has ceased, a legend has left our world.

Rest in peace, Gary. And thank you.

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Sunday, August 15, 2021

From Legend to Upstart: Veteran Bassist Bob Daisley Returns with New Music





Australian bassist and songwriter Bob Daisley has been around.

A professional musician since the late ’60s, he has written and performed on some of the most iconic songs in Hard Rock and Metal. Perhaps best known for his work with Ozzy Osbourne (which included his considerable songwriting contributions to the vast majority of the singer’s ’80s/’90s output), Daisley has worked with a who’s who of musical giants, including Rainbow, Gary Moore, Black Sabbath, Yngwie Malmsteen and many others. Now, he enters the next era of his storied career with the recently released eponymous debut from his latest project, The Upstarts.

A collaboration with multi-instrumentalist Rob Grosser, The Upstarts is unlike any band Daisley has ever graced, producing what may best be described as Psychedelic-tinged Surf music. Much closer to The Shadows than Black Sabbath, The Upstarts represents an intriguing full-circle experience for a bassist most affiliated with considerably heavier sounds.

“When I was 13, I cut my musical teeth on Surfing music. That was popular music in those days – The Shadows, The Ventures, The Chantays and all that sort of thing. All the young lads were learning guitar and would have little bands that played parties and barbeques and things like that. It was always Surfing music.”

Daisley’s history with Grosser dates back to the early 2000s, when the two played in the Australian Blues band The Hoochie Coochie Men alongside guitarist/singer Tim Gaze (who previously played with Daisley circa 1970-71 in the band Kahvas Jute) and a string of special guests that included Deep Purple’s Jon Lord and Ian Gillan. The two later worked together on Moore Blues for Gary, Daisley’s 2018 star-studded tribute album to the late Gary Moore.

“When Rob and I had finished doing the Gary Moore tribute album, Rob said, ‘I’ve got a couple of ideas. Will you play on one or two of them for me?’ I said, ‘Yeah, go on; let’s have a listen.’ It wasn’t strictly Surfing music as such; it was just kind of in that vein. We did more and more, and I was really enjoying it. It wasn’t really planned or premeditated; it just sort of happened. I think the spontaneity of it helped the general vibe of it, and you can hear that we’re enjoying it. Enjoyment always comes out in music when you’re having fun.”

With Grosser on guitar and drums and Daisley delivering another bulletproof performance on bass, The Upstarts presents 13 instrumentals that provide the perfect summer soundtrack. In fact, many of the album’s song titles were inspired by Daisley’s time relaxing by the sea. Eagle-eyed fans will spot some nice tongue-in-cheek wordplay – and more than a passing nod to the great Monty Python – with titles like “Seabird Flavour” (which features a guest bottleneck solo by guitarist Illya Szwec) and “Life of Brine,” while the album itself is sure to put them in a chilled-out mood.

“It’s very easy and pleasant listening, and some it’s a bit meditative. You can almost see the joint being passed.” (laughs)
So far, the Upstarts project has already yielded three albums’ worth of recorded material.

“Some of the stuff sounds like TV themes; I’ve heard that comment many times. If any of this stuff that we’ve already released gets used for a TV theme or music in a movie or whatever, they’re bound to say, ‘What else have you got?’ So, we want to have more stuff ready.”

Last month’s release of The Upstarts coincided with the 50th anniversary of Daisley’s 1971 arrival in London, an event that kickstarted a journey that began with stints in Chicken Shack and Mungo Jerry (perhaps best known for their 1970 hit “In The Summetime”) and eventually took him to contribute to some of the biggest albums in Metal history. However, he certainly had no clue what he was getting himself into when he packed up and moved thousands of miles away at just 21 years old. Originally, the plan was for him to relocate to London to rejoin his former bandmates in Kahvas Jute, who had moved there earlier but were having trouble finding a suitable bassist. Two days before he was about to leave, they phoned and said they had found someone else.

“I didn’t know what I was going to; I was shit scared, really.” (laughs) I was at the airport, and my mom and dad, sister and some of my friends were there. It was all sort of, ‘Have a nice time! Don’t forget to write!’ I got on the plane, it started going down the runway and I thought, ‘Oh, fuck! What have I done?!’ I was going 12,000 miles to the other side of the world.”

With 50 years and 40-plus albums album under his belt, Daisley has enjoyed longevity in an industry that isn’t known for producing many survivors.

“Some people have one band and do very well. They have a couple of albums or some singles that do very well, and that’s the highlight of their career. It seems to me that I’ve had about 20 highlights! (laughs) It’s just gone from one thing to another. Each time, it’s a step up or something of note, which I’m really pleased about. I think a lot of it came from my attitude of being professional and reliable, being into it all for the love of the music. You’ve got to get on with things, and you’ve got to be trustworthy and honest. I’ve always tried to be all those things. In the mid ’70s, I got involved with Buddhism, and I think that helped a lot to keep my feet on the ground and keep focused.”

Although Daisley’s body of work boasts plenty of undisputed heavy hitters, not every release to feature his name succeeded in capturing widespread attention. When asked to name one release that he felt deserved more listens, he was quick to point to Abominog, his excellent yet tragically overlooked 1982 album with Uriah Heep.

"It was released in England, and then it was released in America through Bronze Records. Abominog had started to make waves in America; we had a song on that album, ‘That’s The Way That It Is,’ that was getting airplay on MTV. It was getting recognition, and the album was starting to get some airplay. Geffen Records became very interested in it. David Geffen went to [Bronze Records owner] Gerry Bron and asked if he would release the Abominog album through Geffen Records. David loved the album, but Gerry Bron said, ‘Well, yeah, you can have Uriah Heep if you take Motörhead and Girlschool, too.’ David said, ‘No, I don’t want Motörhead and Girlschool. I want Uriah Heep; I want this album.’ Jerry said no, and that blew it for us, because David Geffen at that time had just had a huge hit with the John Lennon album [Double Fantasy]. Geffen Records was huge. He could have done all sorts of things for that album, but Gerry Bron blew that for us. A lot of people love that album, but it really didn’t get to see the bright light of day like it could have and should have.”

This lost momentum plagued Uriah Heep’s fortunes going into 1983’s Head First, after which Daisley left the band to return to the Osbourne camp in time to appear on Bark At The Moon later that year.

“To be honest with you, I didn’t really want to go back to Ozzy, but I kind of had to. Things weren’t taking off like I had hoped for with Uriah Heep, and it was down to really getting the record company behind it and doing something with it, which they didn’t. We passed them a really good ball, and they wouldn’t run with it.”

Although Daisley’s tenure in the band was short-lived, it gave him another chance to play alongside Blizzard Of Ozz/Diary Of A Madman-era Ozzy drummer Lee Kerslake, who had originally played with Uriah Heep from 1971 to 1979 and returned after his dismissal from the Osbourne camp in 1981. The two remained friends in the ensuing decades, even reuniting a third time in the mid-2000s as part of the supergroup Living Loud with singer Jimmy Barnes and Deep Purple/Dixie Dregs guitarist Steve Morse. Sadly, Kerslake died last year at 73 after a year-long cancer battle. The months that followed saw the posthumous release of the drummer’s first-ever solo album, the fantastic Eleventeen, and a 50th anniversary reissue of Orgasm, his sole album with the band Head Machine. Daisley finds comfort in knowing his old friend is finally at peace.

“To be honest, I was relieved when he went, because he was not having a good time. He was suffering; he was in pain – but what a soldier. What a brave man he was, because he was going through all that and still did a good album. That’s amazing, you know. It’s like, ‘Okay, I’ve got to leave and I’m going through shit, but I’m going to leave this for the world to have a listen to after I’m gone.’ That’s what he did, and it was great.

“Lee’s heart was in the right place, and he played from heart, too,” he adds. “You can have musicians who are great players and virtuosos, and they can be slick and impressive and all that, but playing from the heart is the most important thing. Lee was like that.”
As for the future, Daisley is looking forward to seeing where his current work with Grosser will lead him next. However, his time as a regularly touring live performer, which began slowing down as early as the mid ’90s, is nonexistent on his list of current career goals.

“There were rumors flying about that I had retired. No, I haven’t retired; I’ll probably never retire. I’ll never give up music; I’ll always write, record and create. I still get people coming to me to saying, ‘Will you play on a track?’ I’ll go to Rob’s studio and do it and send them the audio file. It’s just that I’m not going to do any live or road stuff anymore.”

Naturally, a 50-year run in the music business has put Daisley on stage and in the studio with more than a few people who sadly succumbed – either physically or mentally – to the typical excesses associated with the profession. At 71, he believes his ability to stay sane and move forward after so many years comes down to a commitment to keeping his head together every step of the way.

“Success can be detrimental to you; it can be destructive. People let their egos or self-importance get out of focus. They can get carried away with the fame and the money and whatever else. It’s really good to stay focused on what you’re in it for – and that’s the music and creating it for other people to hear. Always respect the people who are listening to it. Without them, it’s pointless doing it. What’s the use of making great music if no one’s going to listen or no one’s interested? You do it for them.”

The Upstarts is out now digitally on Apple Music via SSK Records. Vinyl and CD versions are in the works; watch Bob Daisley’s Facebook page for news and updates.





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