Ian Moss
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Ian Moss | |
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Background information | |
Birth name | Ian Moss |
Born | March, 1955 |
Origin | Alice Springs, Australia |
Genre(s) | Rock Blues |
Occupation(s) | Musician Singer Songwriter |
Instrument(s) | Voice, Guitar |
Years active | 1973 - |
Label(s) | Liberation Music, Mushroom Records |
Associated acts | Cold Chisel Catfish |
Website | Official Site |
Ian Moss is an Australian rock musician, best known as the lead guitarist and occasional singer with Cold Chisel. In that group's initial ten year career, Moss recorded eight albums, three of which were #1 national hits. His solo career began with a #1 album and single and five ARIA Awards. Since then his career has been more low-key, interspersed with periodic tours and albums with a reformed Cold Chisel.
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[edit] Early life and Cold Chisel
Born in Alice Springs in March 1955, Moss originally took piano lessons but switched to guitar at age 11. After attending high school in Adelaide he met songwriter and organist Don Walker[1] and together they joined bass player Les Kaczmarek in a band called Orange. Within months the line-up also included drummer Steve Prestwich and singer Jim Barnes and the group's name became Cold Chisel. While Moss' main role in the band was as its guitarist, he would often be called upon to take on lead vocals as well when Barnes would quit, as he did on a regular basis[2]. After periods spent in Adelaide, Armidale and Melbourne, Cold Chisel settled in Sydney in mid-1977 and finally won a recording contract with WEA late that year. While Barnes remained the group's identifiable front man and lead vocalist, Moss also added lead vocal to several of the band's songs, the first of which was "One Long Day", the B-side of the "Khe Sanh" single and the closing track on side one of the debut album. His vocals feature on some of the band's best known songs, including the hits "My Baby", "When the War is Over" and "Saturday Night" and on "Bow River", which Moss wrote and the track that has since become his signature tune. "Bow River" was the only Cold Chisel song Moss performed when he returned to live work as a solo artist in 1988 and remains the only one he consistently performs to the present. Moss also sang lead on Cold Chisel's version of "Georgia" which became a staple of their live shows, although the only recording of this is on the 1984 album Barking Spiders Live: 1983.
Already established as a singer and musician, by late in the band's career Moss had also gained status as a songwriter, contributing "Never Before" for the East album, the track that was chosen as the first to be aired by Triple J when it swtiched from AM to FM in 1980. Songs on later albums included "Bow River" on Circus Animals and Twentieth Century's "Janelle". He also featured on recordings by other artists, playing a guitar solo on the track "Skin" from the album Icehouse by Sydney New Wave band Flowers and an uncredited appearance on Richard Clapton's The Great Escape, that also featured Jimmy Barnes.
[edit] Solo career
After Cold Chisel disbanded in 1983, Moss retired from the music industry for several years before launching a solo career in 1988. His first single, "Tucker's Daughter", co-written with Don Walker, was released on Mushroom Records in March 1989 and was a No. 1 hit. Another Walker composition, "Telephone Booth", also went Top 10. Matchbook, released in August, reached number one on the album charts, remaining at the peak spot for three weeks. Two further singles, "Out of the Fire" and "Mr. Rain" were also minor hits and at the ARIA Awards early the following year Moss won five awards including Best Male Artist and Album of the Year.
1991's Worlds Away featured the same style of commercial pop-rock as Matchbook but was less successful and Moss did not record another album of his own for five years. In the meantime, however, he played in Don Walker's Catfish, contributing to the Ruby album. He also made guest appearances on albums by The Black Sorrows and Richard Clapton, and made a cameo on Jimmy Barnes' Heat, the first time he had worked with Barnes in ten years.
His Petrolhead album from 1996 was an album of hard-edged raw blues and was followed a year later by a live album. Neither made an impact on the national chart, but during 1998, after fifteen years Cold Chisel reunited to record a new album, The Last Wave of Summer and perform live once again. The reunion was a huge success, resulting in sold out concerts with both the album and several singles becoming chart hits. Another Cold Chisel tour in 2003 proved to be just as successful.
During 2005, Moss was invited to record an album of acoustic songs for Liberation Music and Six Strings was the result. To support the release he undertook an extensive tour with former Noiseworks and INXS singer Jon Stevens. The same year he worked with Barnes again on Double Happiness.
Ian Moss' sixth album Let's All Get Together was released in 2007.
Ian performed live and sang from his album "Let's All Get Together" on ABC TV's "The Sideshow With Paul McDermott" on Saturday 1st September 2007
[edit] Discography
with Cold Chisel:
entire catalogue, see Cold Chisel
solo:
- Released: 1989
- Format: LP, Cassette, CD
- Label: Mushroom Records
- Chart position: 1
- Singles: "Tucker's Daughter", "Telephone Booth", "Out of the Fire", "Mr Rain"
Worlds Away
- Released: 1991
- Format: Cassette, CD
- Label: Mushroom
- Singles: "Slip Away", "Never Give Up"
Petrolhead
- Released: 1996
- Format: CD
- Label: Mushroom
Live
- Released: 1997
- Format: CD
- Label: Mushroom
Six Strings
- Released: 2005
- Format: CD
- Label: Liberation Music
Let's All Get Together
- Released: 2007
- Format: CD
- Chart position: 49
Other appearances:
- Flowers - Icehouse (1980)
- Richard Clapton - The Great Escape (1982)
- Catfish - Ruby (1991)
- The Black Sorrows - Better Times (1992)
- Jimmy Barnes - Heat (1993)
- Richard Clapton - Distant Thunder (1993)
- Don Walker - We're All Gonna Die (1995)
- Richard Clapton - Diamond Mine (2004)
- Jimmy Barnes - Double Happiness (2005)
[edit] References
- ^ http://www.abc.net.au/southwestwa/stories/s1242563.htm "Ian Moss from Cold Chisel to Solo Performer", ABC South West WA 12 November 2004
- ^ Creswell, Toby Jimmy Barnes: Too Much Ain't Enough (1993)
[edit] External links
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