Sneha Girap (Editor)

Nick Moss

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Years active
  
1990–present

Labels
  
Blue Bella Records


Name
  
Nick Moss

Role
  
Record producer

Nick Moss Nick Moss In Chicago verwurzelt Schppinger

Genres
  
Chicago blues, electric blues

Occupation(s)
  
Guitarist, harmonicist, singer, songwriter, record producer

Instruments
  
Guitar, bass, harmonica, vocals

Associated acts
  
Buddy Scott Jimmy Dawkins Jimmy Rogers Gerry Hundt The Legendary Blues Band

Albums
  
Here I Am, Privileged, Time Ain't Free

Profiles

Nick moss born leader from privileged at buddy guy s legends


Nick Moss (born December 15, 1969, Chicago, Illinois, United States) is an American Chicago blues and electric blues musician. He has released ten albums to date, all on his own label, Blue Bella Records label. He has played with Buddy Scott, Jimmy Dawkins, Jimmy Rogers and the Legendary Blues Band. More recently he has performed fronting his own group, Nick Moss and the Flip Tops until 2008 and then shortening the name in 2009 to Nick Moss Band. The music journalist Bill Dahl stated that Moss possesses "mastery of the classic Chicago sound."

Contents

Nick Moss httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

09 nick moss band sugar ray jason ricci


Biography

Nick Moss Nick Moss and The Flip Tops The Shed Barbeque amp Blues Joint

Moss originally learned to play the bass guitar. He joined Buddy Scott's backing band when he was in his late teens. He played for Scott for two years. After that he played with Jimmy Dawkins. By 1993, he had joined the Legendary Blues Band and played bass on their final album, Money Talks. The band's frontman, Willie "Big Eyes" Smith, suggested Moss should switch to lead guitar, and he spent over two years there before they split up.

Nick Moss Big Joe Stomp Box Company Nick Moss

Moss moved on to play guitar in the Jimmy Rogers band for three years, before he turned to a solo career. His debut album, First Offence (re-released in 2003), billed as by Nick Moss and the Flip Tops, included a guest appearance by the harmonica player Lynwood Slim. His next albums, Got a New Plan (2001), Count Your Blessings (2003), Sadie Mae (2005) and Live at Chan's (2006), were each nominated for a W. C. Handy Award.

Nick Moss and the Flip Tops recorded two live albums at Chan's, a Rhode Island club, the second of which included the harp playing of Gerry Hundt. Moss and the Flip Tops played at Memphis in May and the Ottawa Blues Festival in 2008. The same year Moss produced Magic Slim's album Midnight Blues. Moss later changed the name of his group, which became the Nick Moss Band.

Moss' band line-up has gone through many changes in the last decade. The current line-up includes Michael Ledbetter (vocals and rhythm guitar), Patrick Seals (drums), Nick Fane (bass and backup vocals), and Taylor Streiff (piano and organ).

Moss's ninth album, Here I Am, was released on November 22, 2011. It was nominated for a Blues Music Award in 2013 in the category Rock Blues Album.

His 10th album, Time Ain't Free, was released in March 2014 and was voted by the editors at Guitar World magazine as One of the Top 50 Albums of 2014.

The band released Live and Luscious on Blue Bella Records on October 30, 2015. It was their 11th album released after a successful European tour in April that year. Live and Luscious featured live versions of unreleased songs that will be introduced in the following studio album.

The 12th album is set for release on May 20, 2016 on Blue Bella Records. It will be 27 tracks in length and is a double disc studio album titled From the Root to the Fruit.

Discography

  • First Offense (1998; re-released 2003)
  • Got a New Plan (2001)
  • Count Your Blessings (2003)
  • Sadie Mae (2005)
  • Live at Chan's (2006)
  • Play It 'Til Tomorrow (2007)
  • Live at Chan's, Combo Platter No. 2 (2009)
  • Privileged (2010)
  • Here I Am (2011)
  • Time Ain't Free (2014)
  • Live & Luscious (2015)
  • From the Root to the Fruit (2016)
  • References

    Nick Moss Wikipedia