07/12/2013 1:10 pm  #1


Pete Moore has died.

Ken Barnes has sent the following tribute.

In a career spanning six decades,composer-arranger-conductor,Pete Moore’s music was and is known to millions the world over, but his name is less familiar to the average person. As a composer, he wrote themes for many TV commercials including such famous brands as Coca Cola and Lux Toilet Soap, numerous songs recorded by such artists as Bing Crosby, Peggy Lee, Frankie Laine and Fred Astaire. But it is his composition “Asteroid” – the famous theme for Pearl and Dean’s cinema advertisements – that remains his most familiar and most successful composition. Apart from being heard every day (for the last 45 years) on cinema screens in the U.K., it is constantly featured around the world in commercials and documentaries. For many people, the very sound of its “pa-papa-pa” fanfare spells “cinema.” It has also been “sampled” by modern-day pop artists and enjoyed chart success on more than one occasion.
 
But that is only a small portion of a career that saw him providing orchestrations and accompaniments for such artists as Fred Astaire, Bing Crosby, Peggy Lee, Ella Fitzgerald, Julie Andrews, Frankie Laine, Rosemary Clooney, Slim Whitman and Randy Crawford – to name but a few. His orchestrations can be found in the repertoires of such world famous musical units as the London Symphony Orchestra, the Boston Pops and the Rochester Symphony Orchestra – in addition to writing scores for such luminaries as Burt Bacharach, Marvin Hamlisch and Liberace.
 
A quiet,soft-spoken and unassuming man, cockney-raised and academy-trained, Pete Moore usually declined to do interviews because he was always “too busy.” In fact, it would seem that he never actively sought work, it just came to him. Which is why he was often referred to as “The Invisible Genius.” As a person and as a musician, he was liked and admired by everyone who knew him. While he may not be a household name, Pete Moore’s music remains alive and well. As it has for the past half-century.
 
His funeral takes place at 1.20 pm next Friday December 13th at Mortlake Crematorium, Kew Meadow Path, Townmead Road, London TW9 4EN
 
PETE MOORE (1924-2013)
 

Last edited by Malcolm Macfarlane (07/12/2013 1:22 pm)

 

07/12/2013 2:28 pm  #2


Re: Pete Moore has died.

A great loss. One of those who make a significant impact whilst remaining unrecognised by the general public.

Generations of British cinema goers are familiar with "Asteroid", mentioned by Ken Barnes in Malcolm's quote.




This version is extended, being significantly longer than the one usually heard.
And Crosby devotees will all be familiar with the work Pete Moore did with Ken Barnes as producer in a short period before Bing's death (and indeed after it.)
 
 

 

07/12/2013 11:40 pm  #3


Re: Pete Moore has died.

What a great talent Pete Moore was - a lost not only to the Bing Crosby community, but to the musical world in general. Rest in peace...

 

11/12/2013 5:58 pm  #4


Re: Pete Moore has died.

I am only familiar with his work on the "Latter Day Bing" albums, but I considered him a fabulous arranger/conductor. RIP.

Last edited by paulmock (11/12/2013 5:58 pm)


All the best,
Paul M. Mock
 

12/12/2013 5:34 pm  #5


Re: Pete Moore has died.

While I don't like all the arrangements on Bing's latter-day albums, many of Moore's arrangements are excellent. Didn't he also work with Fred Astaire and Johnny Mercer around the same time? It certainly is a sad day for music. R.I.P.

 

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