New Gary Moore live album announced
Provogue are thrilled to announce the release of ‘Gary Moore Live – From Baloise Session’ on May 23. The album will be released on CD/Blu-Ray, 2LP blue and also marble yellow flame (web exclusive) as well as being available digitally. Check out the live video for “Since I Met You Baby” as a first taster.
We didn’t know it then, but when Moore took the stage for the Baloise Session on November 13, 2008, he was less than three years away from his untimely passing at the age of 58. Yet this very special performance – captured for the Live From Baloise Session reminds us that the guitarist played with untouchable skill and molten soul, right to the end.
It’s hard to imagine a finer showcase for Moore’s cask-seasoned talent than Baloise Session. Far from the mud and melee of a traditional festival, the event held in Basel, Switzerland – formerly known as AVO Session – is an intimate encounter with A-list artists, where discerning music-lovers sit at lamp-lit tables modelled on the vintage after-hours clubs of New York, soaking up the set with no distractions.
From Ray Charles and James Brown to Elton John and Eric Clapton, an invitation to the Baloise Session is the stamp of an all-time musical great – and there’s no doubt that Moore belongs in that number.
Gary Moore at full throttle was simply the greatest spectacle in rock ‘n’ roll. From his formative years out on the boards of late-’60s Dublin with Skid Row, through his ’70s gunslinger shifts for Thin Lizzy – onto an ever-evolving solo career that rewrote the book for blues, rock, metal and more – the Irishman attacked every show like it was both his first and last, shrugging off his hallowed reputation and earning his place amongst the greats all over again.
One setlist could never contain it all. Live From Baloise Session, however, is a fist-tight, fat-trimmed distillation of everything that made Moore the blues master, hitting all the marks you’d hope to see from a late-period live set by this deathless artist.
With no fuss or fanfare, the bandleader – flanked by Pete Rees on bass, Vic Martin on keys and fabled Thin Lizzy drummer Brian Downey – walks from the wings, plugs his Les Paul into twin Marshall stacks and fires up Oh, Pretty Woman (the fiery Albert King cover that was a highlight of Still Got The Blues). As a statement of intent, it’s stinging, and as Moore soothes and strangles his first solo of the night, you’re reminded of Joe Bonamassa’s sage observation: “Gary’s approach to soloing was like placing a brick on a car’s gas pedal — the brick would go down, and he would never stop!”
Strapping on a Gibson ES335, Moore then tears into his own Since I Met You Baby (a spring-heeled groove from 1992’s After Hours, whose studio version featured a guesting B.B. King).
This vintage Baloise Session performance serves as a reminder of all the Irishman did in his lifetime to leave his beloved genre in the best health. The likes of Gary Moore will not come again, but while this deathless music plays, he still walks amongst us, his power undimmed.
TRACK LIST
- Oh, Pretty Woman
- Since I Met You Baby
- Thirty Days (To Come Back Home)
- I Love You More Than You’ll Ever Know
- Don’t Believe a Word
- Still Got the Blues
- Walking by Myself
- The Blues Is Alright
Wow. What a player! He has it all: swing, tempo, dynamics, texture, and “feel” to burn.
Was blessed to see Gary Moore Live 7 times, he was just brilliant..
Miss him..
Gary Moore disciple here.
This is spectacular, that at my age now, a new release from the maestro, will shortly be a reality.
It will be in my collection on 05/23/2025.
Gary’s extended guitar solo on “I Love You More Than You’ll Ever Know” from this show is my favorite guitar solo ever.
There is nothing Moore us humans can say about Garry !
i carnt wait for it to be released i just wish they would release seperate ways the full version from blues alive on cd
Saw Gary Moore Live twice first time was Monsters Of Rock in Sheffield, England (not the greatest performance but he filmed it for a later DVD Release) and the second time I saw him was just a couple weeks before he passed away at HMV Picturehouse in Edinburgh, Scotland. He was immense top of his game that night. been a fan of his since late 80s/early 90s.
A collosal loss, not just for the blues but music!