Scotty Moore, Elvis Presley's longtime guitarist and a Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee, died Tuesday at his home in Nashville, the Commercial Appeal reports.
No cause of death was provided, but Moore had been in poor health in
recent months. He was 84. Karen Fontana, the wife of Presley drummer
D.J. Fontana, also confirmed Moore's death to Rolling Stone.
“It’s with great sadness we say goodbye to Scotty Moore, my first
inspiration," Keith Richards said in a statement. "The work he performed
on those incredible early Elvis tracks stays with me forever. Farewell
old friend."
"We lost one of the finest people I have ever met today," Sun Studio engineer Matt Ross-Spang wrote on Instagram.
"I was lucky to call you a friend and I'm very glad I got to see you
just a few days ago. The guitarist that changed the world ... especially
mine; I hope you don't mind if I keep stealing your licks. Love you
Scotty."
Born in Gadsden, Tennessee, Moore began playing guitar at the age of
eight, and after a stint in the U.S. Navy in the early Fifties, moved to
Memphis and formed the Starlite Wrangers with bassist Bill Black. In
1954, Sun Records impresario Sam Phillips paired Moore with a teenaged
Elvis Presley. Together, along with Black, they would record Presley's
first single, "That's All Right (Mama)." The recording session was only
meant to be an audition; instead, the trio made music history.
"I heard that Sam Phillips had a little studio and record label and I went to see him about getting a record out," Moore told Rolling Stone
in 2010. "I knew that if we could make a record, we'd get more places
to play around town. Sam agreed to record us and he and I became good
friends. Then one day we were having coffee, and his secretary actually
brought up Elvis' name. He had dropped by the studio with the hope of
recording something. So Sam said, 'Call this guy up and get him to go
over to your house and see what you think of him.' So he came to my
house on the Fourth of July. It was kind of a pre-audition."
Moore, Black and drummer D.J. Fontana would soon form the Blue Moon
Boys, a union that would back Presley on dozens of legendary rock &
roll songs over the next decade, including "Heartbreak Hotel," "Mystery
Train," "Blue Suede Shoes," "Hound Dog," "Jailhouse Rock" and "(You're
the) Devil in Disguise."
Moore, with the Blue Moon Boys, would also appear in four of Presley's films – Jailhouse Rock, Loving You, King Creole and G.I. Blues. In 1964, Phillips fired Moore after he recorded a solo album; however, Presley reunited with the guitarist for his '68 Comeback Special; Black died in 1965.
Moore's unique style – played on a Gibson Super 400 – on those iconic
Presley singles inspired generations of future guitar players. "When I
heard 'Heartbreak Hotel,' I knew what I wanted to do in life. It was as
plain as day. All I wanted to do in the world was to be able to play and
sound like that," Keith Richards once said. "Everyone else wanted to be
Elvis, I wanted to be Scotty."
In addition to Presley, Moore worked with artists like Richards,
Ringo Starr, Carl Perkins, Jeff Beck, Levon Helm, Ronnie Wood and
more. Moore was also named to Rolling Stone's 100 Greatest Guitarists list.
Moore was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2000 as
part of the inaugural class celebrating sidemen, a category that honored
"those musicians who have spent their careers out of the spotlight,
performing as backup musicians for major artists on recording sessions
and in concert."