Numa Smith "Pee Wee" Moore (b. March 5, 1928, Raleigh, North Carolina, d. April 13, 2009) was an American jazz saxophonist.[1]
Moore attended the Hampton Institute in Virginia as a pre-med student where he switched his major to music after one semester. He joined the Royal Hamptonians and toured on a USO circuit. While traveling back to Hampton from New York, Pee Wee, while asleep in the backseat of his friend’s car, lost his left eye in an accident.[2]
Moore played with Lucky Millinder and Louis Jordan in 1951, and played with R&B musicians such as Wynonie Harris early in the decade. He worked with Illinois Jacquet in 1952 and James Moody in 1954-56, then played with Dizzy Gillespie in 1957, recording with him on several albums for Verve Records. He also worked with Mary Lou Williams in 1957 and Bill Doggett in 1965.[2]
Moore moved from New York back to Raleigh in the 1970s to care for his mother and recover from alcohol addiction. There, he earned a living as a handyman while playing regularly at a variety of venues in the Raleigh-Durham area.[2]
Moore has often been confused with Sol Moore, also called "Pee Wee", who also played with Dizzy Gillespie. This Pee Wee Moore played with the Jeter-Pillars Orchestra, recorded with Floyd Ray late in the 1930s, and worked with Gillespie in the Les Hite big band in 1939-42 before recording with Gilliespie's ensemble in 1946-47.[2]
Year | Album | Album Artist |
---|---|---|
1950 | Bebop Singers [1999] | Various Artists |
1950 | Dizzy's Diamonds: The Best of Verve Years | Dizzy Gillespie |
1952 | Moodsville | James Moody |
1954 | Moody's Workshop | James Moody |
1954 | Moody's Mood | James Moody |
1954 | Moody | James Moody |
1954 | Compact Jazz: Dizzy Gillespie | Dizzy Gillespie |
1955 | James Moody and His Band | James Moody |
1955 | Hi Fi Party | James Moody |
1955 | Wail, Moody, Wail | James Moody |
1955 | Moody's Mood for Blues | James Moody |
1956 | Return from Overbrook | James Moody |
1956 | Flute 'N Blues | James Moody |
1957 | Live At Newport, 1957 | Dizzy Gillespie |