Reverend Gatemouth Moore – After Twenty-One Years (1973)

User Rating: / 0
PoorBest 

Reverend Gatemouth Moore – After Twenty-One Years (1973)

Image could not be displayed. Check browser for compatibility.


A1 	The Conversion Of Gatemouth Moore & Shine On Me 	7:31
A2 	Prayer Song And Meditation 	6:19
	A2.1 	Oh How I Love Jesus 	
	A2.2 	Yes Jesus Loves Me 	
	A2.3 	A Prayer By Rev. Crenshaw 	
A3 	Glory To His Name 	3:36
A4 	He Walks With Me 	4:30
B1 	I Heard The Voice 	3:48
B2 	There Is Room At The Cross 	8:46
B3 	Just As I Am 	3:52
B4 	I Come To The Garden And I'm Going Through 	3:35

Gatemouth Moore – vocals, saxophone
Ben Branch – vocals
Wayne Bennett – guitar
Arvell M. Bradfield – organ
Richard Evans – bass
Morris Jennings – drums

 

Blues shouter and later gospel preacher, Gatemouth Moore got his start in Kansas City while still a teenager, singing for the bands of Bennie Moten and Walter Barnes. Graced with a smooth but powerful voice similar to Charles Brown, Moore spent the 1940s penning and recording songs, most notably "Have You Ever Loved a Woman," which would later be covered by B.B. King and the previously mentioned Charles Brown. Others would revisit Moore's songs, too, with Rufus Thomas covering Gatemouth's "Somebody's Got to Go" and Jimmy Witherspoon adopted "Christmas Blues." In 1949 Moore gave up secular singing for the gospel trail. He still sang and recorded -- but almost exclusively gospel material -- and spent most of the ensuing decades working in churches and promoting gospel music through radio programs that he hosted. In 2003, Moore appeared in director Richard Pearce's film Road to Memphis singing a latter-day song he wrote titled "Beale Street Ain't Beale Street No More." The following year, the singer dubbed Gatemouth because of his massive voice passed away from natural causes at the age of 90. ---Wade Kergan, Rovi

download (mp3 @320 kbs):

uploaded yandex 4shared mega mediafire solidfiles zalivalka cloudmailru oboom

 

back