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Gene Moles

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Gene Moles
Birth nameDenver Eugene Moles Sr.
Born(1928-06-01)June 1, 1928
Wetumka, Oklahoma
DiedApril 28, 2002(2002-04-28) (aged 73)
Bakersfield, California
GenresSurf rock; pop instrumentals
Occupation(s)musician; composer; luthier
Instrumentelectric guitar
LabelsChallenge
SpouseJoan Moles

Gene Moles (1928-2002) was an American guitarist, active in the pop and surf-music scene of the 1960s.

Early life

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Denver Eugene "Gene" Moles Sr., the sixth of seven children, was born on 1 June 1928 in Wetumka, Oklahoma, sixteen miles from Henryetta. His family moved to Selma, just south of Fresno, in 1936. Gene got his first guitar seven years later at age 15.[1]

Musical career

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In 1946, Moles joined the house band at the Paris Gardens nightclub in Selma, owned by a woman known as Texas Mom, where he was earning $3 a night. After three years, he moved to Bakersfield, in September 1949, and joined Tex Butler's band that featured pianist George French who were appearing at the Blackboard club. He was getting paid there $10 a night. The regionally successful "Jimmy Thomason Show" on television contributed to him becoming a local celebrity by 1953. By that time, he had acquired a "solid reputation," which led Capitol Records to engage him from 1959 onwards at their Hollywood studios to work as a session musician. Among the many tracks Moles played in was "Sweet Thing" by Buck Owens,[1] while he also played with Merle Haggard, Red Simpson, Tex Ritter, and many others.

In 1961, Moles and Nokie Edwards of The Ventures co-wrote "Night Run" that was recorded by them as The Marksmen, also it was recorded by The Mustangs. Moles and Edwards also composed "Scratch", recorded by The Ventures in 1962 and also recorded by The Surf Coasters, and "Sunny River" and "Gringo" recorded by The Ventures for their album "Twist with the Ventures" in 1961. Years later the album was reissued as "Dance". .[1]

Guitar expert

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Along with his work in music, Moles also worked as chief inspector in the Bakersfield small production-plant of Mosrite guitars. The Mosrites were used by people like Barbara Mandrell, Little Jimmy Dickens and Joe Maphis, as well as The Ventures who used a Mark-1 mode that Mosrite, in 1963, named "The Ventures Model."[note 1] The plant went out of business in 1969[note 2] and Moles opened a guitar-repair shop he named "Gene Moles - Doctor of Guitars" and, in 1991, moved to Niles Street. He operated the workshop until the end of his life.[1]

Personal life

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Gene and Joan Moles were married in 1956 and had four children: Daughters Kathryn Scheer, and Marisa Blomberg, and sons Eugene Jr. and Jody. Both sons became guitarists. Eugene Jr., who lives in Nashville, has played at the Grand Ole Opry and on Hee Haw.[1]

Death

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Gene Moles died Sunday 28 April 2002 from pulmonary fibrosis, a progressive lung disease, at his home in Bakersfield, California.[1]

Selected discography

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Singles

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Title[2] Artists Label Serial Number Year
Batmobile // Batusi[note 3] The Bats[note 4] Flame T4 km-5155 1961
Kaha Huna (Goddess of Surfing) // Maria (The Wind) Gene Moles & The Softwinds Garpax GP-44189 1963
Burning Rubber // Twin Pipes Gene Moles & The Softwinds Challenge GP-1107 1964

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ The Ventures first used Mosrites in the album The Ventures in Space.
  2. ^ After 1969, the plant area was developed into the Centennial Garden, and, eventually housed the Mechanics Bank Arena.
  3. ^ Both sides of the release are identical to the Challenge single "Burning Rubber"/"Twin Pipes"
  4. ^ Gene Moles and back-up musicians

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f "Gene Moles". Variety. 7 November 2002. Retrieved 21 January 2023.
  2. ^ Blair, John (1985). The Illustrated History of Surf Music 1961-1965. Pierian Press. ISBN 0876501749.

Further reading

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Bibliography

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