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Thread: Tiny Moore's mandolin

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    Site founder Scott Tichenor's Avatar
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    Default Tiny Moore's mandolin

    Not sure I know the story on this but seems I'd remembered that Tiny's original electric mandolin's whereabouts had been unknown at some point for a considerable amount of time. Maybe I'm not recalling that correctly. Anyone know the story?

    According to this discussion on a steel guitar forum (about half way down the page), it still exists and someone knows where it is and who owns it. Rumor has it an article about it may appear somewhere in the near future. Sorry, not on the Cafe though, although I wish it was .

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    Professional Dreamer journeybear's Avatar
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    Default Re: Tiny Moore's mandolin

    Geez, that's such an awful tease - Deke's, not yours. Did you try contacting him directly? He must be able to substantiate that statement, though possilby not willing.

    From another of his posts:

    Also, it's inexcusable that Tiny Moore is represented by one postage-stamp sized album cover photo from the 1970's. At the time, I didn't know where Tiny's mandolin was. I have since learned where it is, if I had known that I would have driven there and photographed it myself!

    Interesting mandolin discussion at Steel Guitar Forum here.
    Last edited by journeybear; May-30-2009 at 12:26pm. Reason: found interesting link
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    Site founder Scott Tichenor's Avatar
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    Default Re: Tiny Moore's mandolin

    No, have no wish to really. I'll admit to knowing a bit more about all this but it needs to remain as is until the article comes out. Just fishing around to see if others really know where it is and who owns it and if that's old news. No idea. I think it's terrific its whereabouts are known and that possibly we'll be able to see photos of it, I hope. I think it's an important part of musical history.

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    Professional Dreamer journeybear's Avatar
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    Default Re: Tiny Moore's mandolin

    Quote Originally Posted by Scott Tichenor View Post
    ... I think it's an important part of musical history.
    Absolutely! The first solidbody electric mandolin. It belongs in a museum - once its playing days are over, of course ...

    If I'm reading right, this was the only one such Paul Bigsby built. Copies of it were made by Jay Roberts, and sold by Tiny at his Sacramento store.
    But that's just my opinion. I could be wrong. - Dennis Miller

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    Default Re: Tiny Moore's mandolin

    I love Tiny and Jethro on Back to Back my favorite mandolin CD!

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    Registered User Jim MacDaniel's Avatar
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    Default Re: Tiny Moore's mandolin

    Funky looking mandolin, but it sure sounded sweet in Tiny's hands.
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    Moderator MikeEdgerton's Avatar
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    Default Re: Tiny Moore's mandolin

    Do any of the California Luthier's know Deke Dickerson? I'd never heard of before that article in the Fretboard Journal a while back. Michael, Rick or Paul may know him well enough to just ask the question. Then again, Tom or Darryl might simply know where it is.
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    Professional Dreamer journeybear's Avatar
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    Default Re: Tiny Moore's mandolin

    I'd seen the name before (it's a memorable name), but couldn't place it, until a lot of poking through his credits at his website turned up a production credit for a 1998 album by Big Sandy And The Fly-Rite Boys, whom I saw at a folk festival around that time. I assume I have that CD though surely it is right now in deep storage. I'll bet anything I don't remember the song he performed on the "Sideways" soundtrack, "Sad Songs," though I did see the movie. Judging by the number and variety of acts he has worked with, he's very much into the music and also well-respected.
    But that's just my opinion. I could be wrong. - Dennis Miller

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    Default Re: Tiny Moore's mandolin

    I witnessed a wonderful Tiny Moore moment.......when David Grisman was playing with Stephane Grappelli at the Great American Music Hall in SF, Tiny sat in on Satin Doll.........this is back about 1979. If I'm not mistaken that particular cut, from this show, made it onto the Grisman/Grappelli Live album. Tiny was thrilled to play with Grappelli. We all have our personal heros!

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    Registered User John Rosett's Avatar
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    Default Re: Tiny Moore's mandolin

    [QUOTE=journeybear;672616]
    If I'm reading right, this was the only one such Paul Bigsby built. Copies of it were made by Jay Roberts, and sold by Tiny at his Sacramento store.[/QUOTE

    I've heard rumors of other Bigsby mandolins, but I've never seen one. Grady Martin had a Bigsby doubleneck with a 5-string mandolin neck. I remember reading that Hank Garland borrowed it and used it some of his 50's recordings.
    I played a Roberts Tiny Moore mandolin in a band for 5 or 6 years, and it was the best electric mandolin I ever played. Here's a picture:
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    Default Re: Tiny Moore's mandolin


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    Registered User floyd floar's Avatar
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    Default Re: Tiny Moore's mandolin

    On my profile album there's a photo of a Roberts Tiny Moore I once owned- I wonder if a Cafe member owns it now.
    Last edited by floyd floar; Jun-01-2009 at 8:23am. Reason: Please pardon my bad grammar- she's in the State Pen now!
    Why does my dog stay in the room when Stephane Grappelli is on the stereo, and he leaves whenever I practice?

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    Default Re: Tiny Moore's mandolin

    Tiny told me that he had his original Bigsby 5-string electric mandolin built in 1952. Though I sat with Tiny various times as he played that mandolin, I don't know and would love to hear more of the specifics on the instrument.

    In about 1976 I bought one of the Roberts knockoffs from Tiny. For the time they sounded pretty good but they really weren't very well made instruments.

    Tiny Moore, in addition to being an amazing hero of a musician, was one of the nicest people I've ever met. Here's a photo of him with a Roberts 5-string.

    Let's all give Tiny a listen...

    Paul Glasse
    Austin Texas
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    Brentrup Evangelist Larry S Sherman's Avatar
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    Default Re: Tiny Moore's mandolin

    Quote Originally Posted by pglasse View Post
    Let's all give Tiny a listen...Paul Glasse
    I agree. There's a wonderful live recording that is a must-hear. The label says "Live at Larry Blake's, Berkeley, CA 12-20-1980".

    Larry

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    Default Re: Tiny Moore's mandolin

    Larry Blake's was right on Telegraph Ave, a few blocks from the Cal campus. I never saw Tiny there but saw saw some good music over the years, but I think it went Punk/New wave to stay "hip". Found this info:

    Blakes on Telegraph is more than a restaurant, bar and nightclub - it is an East Bay entertainment mecca. The club was initially called Larry Blake's and was founded in 1940 by Larry Blake himself, who manned the helm for the better part of three decades. Having earned a reputation for providing good food in a comfortable, friendly atmosphere, Larry sold the business to a group of employees who envisioned expanding the occasional music venue into a full-fledged nightclub.

    Blakes initially booked talented local jazz acts such as Ed Kelly, Pete and Sheila Escovedo and Kitty Margolis alongside national acts like the great Cal Tjader, Mose Allison, and Joaquin Lievano. Eventually blues was incorporated into the mix, and within a short period of time, Blakes became the premiere blues club in the entire Bay Area.

    The list of blues luminaries who have enjoyed a run at Blakes includes some of the most talented artists in blues history: John Lee Hooker, Etta James, Lowell Fulson, Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown, Otis Rush, Johnny Heartsman, Brownie McGee, Irma Thomas, and Johnny Adams. We've seen some impressive shoes walk through these doors.

    World-famous blues guitarist Robert Cray, immediately recognized by then booking agent Tim Kaihatsu as a tremendous talent, was fostered throughout the years by Blakes. When the great Charles Brown decided to step back into the music world, his first comeback performance was at Blakes. Charlie Musselwhite, Lady Bianca, Tracy Nelson, Joe Louis Walker, Roy Rogers, Buckwheat Zydeco, Little Charlie and the Nightcats, Norton Buffalo, Rory Block, John Hammond, Boz Skaggs, Alvin Youngblood Hart, Amos Garrett, Maria Muldaur, Roomful of Blues, Elvin Bishop, and Greg Allman have all graced our stage and entertained our customers. For nearly four decades, Blakes was THE blues hotspot in the East Bay.

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    Notary Sojac Paul Kotapish's Avatar
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    Default Re: Tiny Moore's mandolin

    I don't know what happened to that mandolin, but I have a wonderful memory of Tiny playing his Bigsby (don't know if it was the "original" original or not) at a big dance late one night at the fiddle contest over in Weiser, Idaho, in 1977 (or maybe '78).

    There was a great string swing band comprising a jaw-dropping array of incredible fiddlers, guitarists, et al, who were playing mostly Texas-swing-style dance numbers of all sorts. On one of the waltzes there was a fabulous new sound coming from somewhere far from the bandstand, and the sound wove its way through the dance floor.

    Suddenly, right there beside me and my dance partner (my old friend and flame, Cyd Smith), was Tiny Moore with his Bigsby plugged into a battery-powered Pignose amp on a strap slung over his shoulder. He was waltzing around the floor and serenading every couple with the loveliest and coolest mandolin lines ever. He had a huge smile on his face and he moved gracefully around the room without missing a note.

    That was a dance to remember.
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    wood butcher Spruce's Avatar
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    Default Re: Tiny Moore's mandolin

    Quote Originally Posted by Paul Kotapish View Post

    That was a dance to remember.
    That was my first Weiser, and it was indeed a memorable week...

    I also met Jay Roberts at Weiser one year, and he was lugging some electrics that he made as I remember...

    Really nice guy, and as I understand it, has also disappeared a bit into the mists of time??
    Anybody know whatever happened to Jay...?

    Did he also go by "JC"?

  18. #18

    Default Re: Tiny Moore's mandolin

    I sold a D-28 and bought an Eastman Mandolin at Skip's Music in Sacramento a couple of years ago, and Skip and I were talking Mandolins. He has quite a collection of vintage instruments. He took me in a back room and showed me a guitar once used by Bob Wills and an electric mandolin that Tiny Moore used (Skip used to help out Tiny and Bob at their music school when they were on tour). The mandolin I got to hold was a bigsby with the familiar bigsby headstock and was blonde or cream colored, if I remember correctly. I don't know if it was Tiny's original, but it was pretty cool to see it.

    Sacramento is a bit of a backwater for acoustic music, so it was really fun to find out about a little of its musical history.

  19. #19

    Default Re: Tiny Moore's mandolin

    Quote Originally Posted by Paul Kotapish View Post
    Suddenly, right there beside me and my dance partner (my old friend and flame, Cyd Smith), was Tiny Moore with his Bigsby plugged into a battery-powered Pignose amp on a strap slung over his shoulder. He was waltzing around the floor and serenading every couple with the loveliest and coolest mandolin lines ever. He had a huge smile on his face and he moved gracefully around the room without missing a note.

    That was a dance to remember.
    That is an image of Tiny Moore that I can totally envision! When I hear his music I can hear his good humor shining through. I hear Stephane Grapelli's charming Gallic wit in his playing too. These guys put the play in playing music.

  20. #20
    Registered User Jon Hall's Avatar
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    Default Re: Tiny Moore's mandolin

    Paul Buskirk said that he had Paul Bigsby make him a solid body, twin neck mandolin / mandola. He also said that Bigsby got really mad when he found out he had sold the instrument. Does anyone know if this instrument still exists?

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    Default Re: Tiny Moore's mandolin

    I kind of remember hearing there was another Bigsby like Tiny's, with the addition of the Bigsby vibrato arm...possibly an eight-string as well.

    As usual, Paul Glasse and I "went to different schools together.."---I too had a Roberts five string
    which I purchased directly from Tiny. I mention this so as to echo Paul's sentiments--Tiny was the greatest, nicest guy, in addition to his renowned artistry. Along with my mandolin he sent a cassette of himself jamming on standards which kept me busy for quite a while. When Merle Haggard came to town I went back to say hi to Tiny, who introduced me to Merle, who said "I thought I heard someone cheering after every mandolin solo, that must have been you!" In actuality, it was the whole crowd---this was the early days of video screens at large concerts, and whenever Tiny stood up to solo, he was on the screen, where his spirit and swing were easy to behold. From the first two or three notes of every solo, the place went nuts!

    For those of you new to Tiny's work, besides Back to Back on Acoustic Disc there's Tiny Moore Music on Kaleidescope which may be hard to find, and Merle Haggard's "A Tribute to the Best Damn Fiddler in the World", originally on Capitol, now on Koch as a CD. It was that one, made about 1972 I think, that got me digging Tiny's playing. The Bob Wills "Tiffany Transcriptions" re-issues came a little later, and luckily a friend had some of the Wills 78's like Osage Stomp..

    I'm not sure if Dix Bruce has any copies left, but I know he did a great piece on Tiny for Mandolin World News. I think it's high time for an updated retrospective. Paul, do you have any transcriptions lying around??

    Another legend I heard was that a young Glen Campbell, not knowing that Tiny was using an electric mandolin on the Wills recordings, memorized his solos and could play them on his guitar. That would be a chops developer if true!

    I always loved how the mandolin concept always shone through in Tiny's playing, and how his playing was always energized, cheerful, hot, and swinging.

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    Registered User mtucker's Avatar
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    Default Re: Tiny Moore's mandolin

    Gotta love some of Bigsby's creations and historical contribution.
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    Default Re: Tiny Moore's mandolin

    Is it true that Tiny passed away at a gig.....on stage......soloing?
    If so.........what a way to swing on outta here.......

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    Registered User Jim MacDaniel's Avatar
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    Default Re: Tiny Moore's mandolin

    BTW, anyone know how Tiny tuned that thing? CGDAE perhaps, or did he do something different with the lowest string (e.g., DGDAE, to avoid sloppy C syndrome, or to aid in chording)?
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    ISO TEKNO delsbrother's Avatar
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    Default Re: Tiny Moore's mandolin

    Get this book. Lots of pix.

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