Dave Moore (singer-songwriter)

Dave Moore (born Cedar Rapids, IA, July 5, 1951) is a folksinger, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist who lives in Iowa City, IA. He is accomplished on the guitar, harmonica, button accordion, pan pipes, and more. He performed regularly on A Prairie Home Companion between 1986 and 2014.[1] His ninth album, Breaking Down to 3, was the subject of an interview-feature on NPR’s All Things Considered,.[2] In 1985, he won a National Endowment for the Arts grant to study Conjunto accordion with Fred Zimmerle in Texas; he had previously "spent the bulk of the '70s traveling through Latin America and the American South and West, soaking in a wide range of musical influences along the way,"[3] and studying with folk musicians in San Cristobal de las Casas and Chiapas.

Partial Discography: Albums with Red House Records

  • Jukejoints and Cantinas (rec. 1984; released 1985, Red House Records) with Paul Cunliffe and Dough Thomson

As a sideman he has recorded with many musicians, including Greg Brown (folk musician).

gollark: I should switch to that.
gollark: Oh, it does? Cool.
gollark: > tries to process gold and silver at the same time> lots of wonderful ELECTRUM
gollark: Didn't know about the less-energy thing. Does that still apply if you consider the cost of sand?
gollark: I get slag via a dedicated system for it, because rockwool is cool.

References

  1. "Dave Moore," Prairie Home Companion artists page, URL=http://prairiehome.org/guests/dave-moore/ Archived 2016-08-17 at the Wayback Machine
  2. All Things Considered, Sept. 24, 1999, URL=https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=1064511
  3. No Depression, "Dave Moore - Nine years later, but better late than never," April 30, 1999, URL=http://nodepression.com/article/dave-moore-nine-years-later-better-late-never
  4. No Depression, "Dave Moore - Nine years later, but better late than never," April 30, 1999, URL=http://nodepression.com/article/dave-moore-nine-years-later-better-late-never
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.