Major labels listen to Dallas Moore's sound
By Larry Nager
With 10 Cammy Awards and two nominations for 2003, the Dallas Moore Band is the
all-time Cammy champ. Today, Moore lead guitarist Chuck Morpurgo, bassist Bob
Rutherford and drummer Bobby Lee will be part of the Nominee Showcase at
Jillian's, trying to convince judges they should give them another Country Band
Cammy and another Country Instrumentalist statuette (for Morpurgo).
The group also is talking to several major Nashville labels on the strength
of its latest CD, High on the Hog. "It's cool," says Moore, the
high-energy singer/guitarist. "We've been doin' our own thing for a long
time, and usually, (from the major labels), right off the bat we'd get `Oh, this
is too hard.'"
One reason for the majors' confidence is what the band has been doing with
its hard-edged, good-time country rock. Playing about five shows a week, the
band has sold more than 12,000 copies of its new CD.
"I think the biggest thing it comes down to is we're selling so much and
we've already got a big tour base," Moore says. "I think they've just
got to find something they can get on modern country radio with us. Our stuff is
so much farther over the edge than most of that."
Last year, the band did its biggest crossover, taking part in the Inclusion
Network's Hidden Treasures King Records tribute with a duet with Sweet
Alice Hoskins on the R&B/rockabilly raveup, "Good Rockin'
Tonight."
This year, the band again will tour with one of Nashville's edgier
country-rock bands, Montgomery Gentry, and has shows planned with country outlaw
David Allan Coe.
Despite that workaholic schedule and his hell-raising reputation, Moore has
found time to write 14 new songs, some of which the band will debut at the
Showcase.
While he and the band - together since 1999 - revel in the local acclaim,
they're excited about all the national interest, which Moore chalks up to the
band's resilience. "We've continued to grow and just kinda done it old
school and grassroots, just getting out and playin' our (butts) off ... whether
it's local or on the road, just tryin' to really work hard."
Should the major-label deals fall through, the guys have a fall back:
panties. "They're a hot item," Moore says about the one-size-fits-all
black thongs, emblazoned with the band's name in hot pink ($10).
He says the panties will be at their merchandise table today at Jillian's.
"The cool thing about it is, it was my wife, Mary's, idea," he adds.
(She said) `As many chicks follow y'all around, you need to sell panties; they
would buy 'em like crazy.' Now, they can't keep them in stock."
The Cincinnati Enquirer
cammy Lately, they have been playing for higher stakes. The band has been
meeting with legendary Muscle Shoals producer Barry Beckett (Bob Dylan, Dire
Straits, Hank Williams Jr., Etta James, Phish) concerning a production deal at
Beckett's expense.
• What: Cammy Nominee Showcase
• Where: Jillian's (522 W. 12th St., Covington; 859-491-5388)
• When: 2-11 p.m. today
• Tickets: $3
• Performing: 2 p.m. Carol Walker Project; 2:30, Semi-Automatic; 3,
Sonny Moorman Group; 3:30, Deceiving Ralph; 4, Pavilion Music Co.; 4:30,
Wild Blue Yonder; 5, Messerly & Ewing; 5:30, Amy McFarland & the
Gamut; 6, Venus Mission; 6:30, Prizoner; 7, Abiyah; 7:30, Premium; 8, P.
Ann Everson-Price; 8:30, Dallas Moore Band; 9, Triage; 9:30 Andrew
Geonetta; 10, Dave Purcell.