Anthony Moore
Anthony Moore (born August 1948) is a British composer, musician, and academic renowned for his contributions to experimental and avant-garde music, including co-founding the art rock band Slapp Happy in 1972 and providing lyrics for several tracks on Pink Floyd's 1987 album A Momentary Lapse of Reason, such as "Learning to Fly," "On the Turning Away," and "Yet Another Movie."[1][2][3] Moore's early career in the 1970s was marked by innovative recordings like the 1971 album Pieces from the Cloudland Ballroom and the 1972 album Secrets of the Blue Bag, which blended minimalist composition, musique concrète, and melodic songwriting, often in collaboration with filmmakers such as Dore O. and Werner Nekes.[1] He formed Slapp Happy in Hamburg with vocalist Dagmar Krause and guitarist Peter Blegvad, releasing influential albums that fused pop structures with experimental elements before the group's temporary dissolution in the mid-1970s; a reunion yielded the 1988 album Ça Va.[2][4] Following this, Moore collaborated with the progressive rock band Henry Cow and pursued solo projects, including the album Out, recorded in 1976 for Virgin Records but shelved until its 2020 release by Drag City, which featured avant-garde tracks like "Johnny's Dead."[5][6] In addition to his musical endeavors, Moore served as a professor of music, sound, and noise history at the Academy of Media Arts Cologne from 1996 to 2015, where he founded the music department and later held the position of rector from 2000 to 2004.[7] His academic work emphasized electroacoustic performance and the theory of sound, influencing a new generation of artists while he continued releasing albums on labels like Drag City and Touch, exploring ambient drone and scorched-earth cabaret styles.[1][8] Recent projects include the 2020 reissue of Out, the 2023 live album Live in Cologne May 2023, and the 2025 album On Beacon Hill (described as a scorched-earth cabaret), underscoring his enduring impact on experimental music.[6][9][10]Early Life
Childhood in London
Anthony Moore was born on 13 August 1948 in London, England.[2] Growing up in the city's post-war environment during the 1950s, he developed an early fascination with electronics and radio technology as a child of that era.[11] His toys often consisted of bakelite components, valves salvaged from old radios, and Meccano kits, while he frequently experimented with building crystal sets, drawn to the "magic of radio waves captured by natural materials" like germanium detectors and aerials.[11] The sensory experience of soldering—its distinctive smell and the process of assembly—further fueled his curiosity about sound transmission and rudimentary electronics.[11] Moore's initial exposure to music came through familial influences in his early years. His earliest recollection of sound was his grandmother's "voluminous contralto," described as a "great big wobbling jelly of sound" that captivated him around age two.[4] Family travels, prompted by his father's work, introduced him to international broadcasts via shortwave radio; in Cyprus during the 1950s, he tuned into the BBC World Service and encountered Arabic, Turkish, Armenian, and Greek music, while early 1960s visits to Africa expanded this to diverse African rhythms and melodies.[4] These experiences, mediated through radio's ethereal quality, shaped his nascent interest in sonic experimentation beyond conventional Western forms.[4] By his early teenage years in the late 1950s and early 1960s, still rooted in the London area, Moore began exploring music creation hands-on. Self-taught on the piano without formal instruction, he relished improvising short pieces, focusing on chord progressions, repetition, and resonant tones produced by striking keys with his forearms and sustaining the loud pedal.[11] This intuitive approach, unburdened by technical rules, laid the groundwork for his later avant-garde sensibilities, though his family's proximity to educational institutions in Hertfordshire—where his father taught—began connecting him to collaborative musical circles.[12]Musical Education and Early Influences
Moore's formal musical education was limited and intertwined with his artistic pursuits. Born in August 1948, he attended Newcastle School of Art in 1969, following a brief stint at St Albans art school, where he began exploring sound experimentally rather than through traditional conservatory training. Largely self-taught, Moore started playing piano as a young teenager without lessons, focusing on chord progressions, repetition, and resonant textures over technical proficiency. He later studied Indian classical music under Viram Jasani, a prominent tabla and sitar composer, which introduced him to intricate rhythms and modal structures that influenced his compositional approach.[13][1][11] His early influences stemmed from a blend of technological curiosity and avant-garde experimentation. As a child, Moore was fascinated by radio waves, crystal sets, and construction kits like Meccano, sparking an interest in sound generation and manipulation. In his teens, he embraced rock 'n' roll for its raw energy and anarchy, experimenting with psychedelics that shaped his perceptual approach to music. Key artistic inspirations included American minimalists such as La Monte Young, Terry Riley, and Tony Conrad, whose sustained tones and repetitive patterns resonated with his own tape-based explorations. Additionally, global ethnic music collections from Folkways and UNESCO recordings broadened his palette, emphasizing non-Western scales and timbres.[11][14] A pivotal early experience came in 1969 when Moore composed the soundtrack for David Larcher's experimental film Mare's Tail, marking his first foray into professional sound design. Using magnetic tape machines like Brenells and Ferrographs, he pioneered techniques such as time/pitch shifting, layering, splicing, loops, and feedback, treating the medium as an instrument itself. This work, blending acoustic elements with electronic abstraction, laid the groundwork for his avant-garde style. During his school years at St Christopher School in Letchworth, Hertfordshire, Moore formed a rock band with Peter Blegvad and drummer Neil Murray, creating repetitive, guitar-driven pieces that foreshadowed their later collaboration. These formative years in the late 1960s, including travels to the Hebrides and Hamburg, solidified his shift from visual arts to sonic innovation.[13][1][11][14]Formation and Early Bands
Slapp Happy
Slapp Happy was formed in 1972 in Hamburg, Germany, by British composer and multi-instrumentalist Anthony Moore, who sought to create a more experimental outlet after growing frustrated with Polydor Records' insistence on commercializing his solo work. Moore, who had recently relocated to Hamburg, enlisted his then-girlfriend Dagmar Krause, a Hamburg native and veteran of the folk group City Preachers, as lead vocalist, and his longtime friend Peter Blegvad, an American expatriate guitarist and lyricist whom he had met during their art school days in London. The trio's formation marked a deliberate shift toward avant-pop, blending catchy melodies with surreal, subversive lyrics and cabaret influences, often evoking a Brechtian theatricality.[15][16][14] Moore served as the band's primary composer and keyboardist, contributing to the group's distinctive sound through minimalist arrangements and electronic textures, while Blegvad handled most lyrics and guitar duties, and Krause delivered her signature dramatic, emotive vocals. Their debut album, Sort Of, released later in 1972 on Polydor, featured the German experimental rock band Faust as the rhythm section and was produced by Uwe Nettelbeck, capturing the trio's raw, improvisational approach in tracks like "Just a Conversation" and "Paradise Express." The album's lo-fi aesthetic and witty, off-kilter songs established Slapp Happy's cult reputation for deconstructing pop conventions. The group recorded a follow-up album in 1973, again with Faust's support, but Polydor rejected it. After signing with Virgin Records in 1974 and relocating to London, they re-recorded much of the material for a more polished release titled Slapp Happy in 1975, produced at Virgin's Manor Studio with input from engineer John Wood. This version aimed for broader appeal while retaining the band's eccentric core, as heard in songs like "Casablanca Moon" and "Me and Parvati." The original 1973 recordings were later released in 1980 by Recommended Records as Acnalbasac Noom (Casablanca Moon spelled backwards). Moore's role evolved during this period to include additional production and arrangement duties, solidifying the group's avant-garde pop identity before their eventual integration with the progressive rock ensemble Henry Cow. The early Slapp Happy recordings remain influential for their innovative fusion of accessibility and experimentation, influencing later art-rock acts.[14][17][18])Henry Cow Collaboration
In 1974, Anthony Moore's band Slapp Happy relocated from Germany to England, where they merged with the avant-rock ensemble Henry Cow, both acts being stablemates on Virgin Records. This partnership emerged organically, as Slapp Happy—consisting of Moore on keyboards and electronics, Peter Blegvad on guitar, and Dagmar Krause on vocals—sought a fuller rhythm section, akin to their earlier recordings with Faust members in Germany. The collaboration allowed Henry Cow's advanced improvisational and compositional skills to complement Slapp Happy's concise, literate songcraft, fostering an experimental fusion of pop, jazz, and rock elements.[5] The merger's debut release was Desperate Straights in March 1975, recorded at Virgin's Manor Studio and issued on the label (V 2024). Moore co-wrote most tracks with Blegvad, shifting his focus to piano-based compositions that emphasized brevity and wit, such as "Some Questions About Hats" and "Bad Alchemy." Henry Cow members, including Fred Frith on guitar, Chris Cutler on drums, John Greaves on bass, and Lindsay Cooper on woodwinds, provided dynamic arrangements, transforming Slapp Happy's structured songs into more fluid, performed pieces. Krause's vocals added a dramatic, Weill-inspired edge, creating an album of apocalyptic and ironic vignettes that highlighted the groups' stylistic synergy.[19][5] The collaboration continued with In Praise of Learning, released in May 1975, also on Virgin Records, and recorded at The Manor in February and March. This album featured Moore more prominently on keyboards and backing vocals, alongside contributions from Blegvad and Krause, integrated into Henry Cow's core lineup of Frith, Cutler, Greaves, Cooper, and Tim Hodgkinson. Tracks like "War" and "Living in the Heart of the Beast" exemplified the blend, with Moore and Blegvad's literary, politically charged lyrics set against complex, angular instrumentation drawing from Brechtian theater and modernist jazz. The result was a denser, more politically infused work that pushed avant-garde boundaries further than its predecessor.[20][21] Despite yielding two innovative albums that introduced fresh, interdisciplinary elements to both bands, the union dissolved by mid-1975 due to irreconcilable creative visions. Moore later reflected that the partnership brought "something new and interesting" to each group but was viable only for a limited duration, leading to Slapp Happy's breakup. Krause joined Henry Cow full-time, while Moore pursued solo endeavors, releasing his debut album Out shortly thereafter.[5][19]Solo Career
Debut and Mid-1970s Work
Anthony Moore's solo career began with the release of his debut album, Pieces from the Cloudland Ballroom, in 1971 on Polydor Records. Produced by Uwe Nettlebeck, who had previously worked with Can and would later produce Slapp Happy's early albums, the record was recorded in the fall of 1971 at Wumme Studios in Germany. The album features minimalist experimentation blending elements of free jazz, folk, and experimental rock, with influences echoing composers like Moondog and Richard Youngs' Advent, bridging British art-rock and German krautrock. Moore performed on a variety of acoustic and electric instruments, including guitar, bass, piano, organ, cello, flute, clarinet, violin, drums, and percussion, while guest vocalists Ulf Kenklies, Glyn Davenport, and Gieske Hof-Helmers contributed, alongside hi-hat from Faust drummer Werner 'Zappa' Diermeier.[22] His second solo effort, Secrets of the Blue Bag, followed in 1972, also on Polydor, but was recorded earlier in the fall of 1971 in Hamburg, shortly before Moore formed Slapp Happy with backing from Faust. This album adopts a more classical orientation, comprising three extended pieces structured around a recurring five-note melody for strings and voice, emphasizing repetitive and conversant lines that evoke post-minimalist textures. Performers included soprano Geeske Hof-Helmers, violinists Toni Sen and Patrick Strub, cellist Rolf Braun, and bassoonist Wolf Schreiber, with Moore overseeing the arrangements. The work's chamber-like intimacy marked a subtle evolution from the broader instrumental palette of his debut, further solidifying his early experimental voice.[23] By the mid-1970s, Moore shifted toward a more accessible pop sensibility with Out, recorded in 1976 for Virgin Records but ultimately shelved before its planned release, despite the label assigning a catalog number and preparing artwork. Emerging after the dissolution of Slapp Happy and his collaborations with Henry Cow, the album draws on proto-new wave and Britprog influences, reminiscent of Brian Eno, Robert Wyatt, Kevin Ayers, and John Cale, while incorporating subversive art-rock elements from Moore's underground roots. Tracks like "Stitch in Time" and "The River" showcase his songwriting in a concise, chart-oriented format, representing a pivotal turn from pure experimentation to melodic pop structures. The record remained unreleased until a 2020 reissue by Drag City, highlighting its status as a lost artifact of mid-1970s British music.[24][25]1980s and 1990s Albums
Following the shelving of Out, Moore released Flying Doesn't Help in 1979 on Quango Records. This album continued his exploration of experimental pop, featuring collaborations with former Slapp Happy members and blending art rock with more structured song forms. In the early 1980s, Anthony Moore continued his solo career with the release of World Service in 1981 on the independent label Do-It Records.[26] This album marked a shift toward more accessible art rock and new wave influences, featuring sharp, memorable songs with witty lyrics and a distinctive guitar sound blending elements reminiscent of John Cale's collaborators like Chris Spedding and Robert Fripp's solo work.[27] Produced at Sunrise Studios in Switzerland and the Workhouse in London, it includes tracks such as the title song "World Service," "Run Right Back," and "Flame Failure (The Argument)."[28] The clean, modern production highlighted Moore's sober, deep vocals and intelligent songcraft, earning praise for its edge without excessive cleverness, though it received limited commercial attention at the time. The track "No Parlez" would later gain wider recognition through Paul Young's 1983 cover.[27][29] Moore's next solo effort, The Only Choice, arrived in 1984 on Parlophone Records, serving as his final solo album for over two decades.[30] Collaborating with guitarist Jimmy O'Neill (formerly of Fingerprintz) and backing vocals from Dagmar Krause, the record adopted a more commercial pop-rock orientation while retaining Moore's quirky sensibility.[31] Produced by Laurie Latham, it features rousing anthems like the title track and romantic explorations in "Humana" and "No Parlez," with polished arrangements designed for broader appeal.[31][32] Critics noted its catchy hooks and lighter mood compared to prior works, positioning it as the culmination of Moore's 1979–1984 trilogy of solo releases, though it too struggled for mainstream breakthrough.[27][31] Following The Only Choice, Moore did not release any further solo albums during the 1990s, instead focusing on lyric writing for other artists, including contributions to Pink Floyd's A Momentary Lapse of Reason (1987) and Richard Wright's Broken China (1996).[33] This period reflected a pivot away from performing and recording under his own name, emphasizing collaborative and behind-the-scenes roles in the music industry.[3]Major Collaborations
Pink Floyd Contributions
Anthony Moore's collaboration with Pink Floyd began in the mid-1980s, introduced to David Gilmour through mutual friends around 1984 or 1985. He contributed to the band's creative process during the development of their 1987 album A Momentary Lapse of Reason, providing conceptual ideas, field recordings, and structural input alongside Gilmour, producer Bob Ezrin, Richard Wright, and Nick Mason. Moore worked daily at the band's floating studio on the River Thames, utilizing early Akai samplers to bring in samples on floppy discs, which helped shape the album's sonic landscape.[3] Moore's primary role was as a lyricist, co-writing words for several key tracks on A Momentary Lapse of Reason. He penned the lyrics for "Learning to Fly," developed from a 1986 demo by Jon Carin, with music by Gilmour, Carin, and Ezrin. For "On the Turning Away," Moore provided the initial lyrics, which addressed themes of social apathy and empathy toward the downtrodden, though Gilmour revised the final verse; the song became a staple of the band's 1987–1989 live tours. He also co-wrote the lyrics for "The Dogs of War," a satirical commentary on mercenaries and conflict, inspired by a phrase from William Shakespeare's Julius Caesar. These contributions marked Moore's integration into Pink Floyd's post-Roger Waters era, emphasizing introspective and socially conscious themes.[3][34][35][36] Moore continued his involvement with Pink Floyd on their 1994 album The Division Bell, co-writing the lyrics for "Wearing the Inside Out," performed by Richard Wright, which explored themes of emotional vulnerability and introspection. This track featured Wright on lead vocals and piano, with Moore's words complementing the album's overarching motif of communication and self-reflection. Beyond songwriting, Moore provided a brief keyboard fragment for The Endless River (2014), a primarily instrumental album compiled from 1993–1994 sessions, included as a tribute to Wright following his death in 2008. His work with Pink Floyd highlighted a shift toward collaborative lyricism, influencing the band's output during a period of transition and renewal.[37][3]Other Artists and Projects
Throughout his career, Anthony Moore has engaged in numerous production and collaborative efforts with prominent musicians outside his core band affiliations. In the late 1970s, he produced This Heat's self-titled debut album at The Workhouse Studio in London, utilizing innovative techniques such as a 24-track loop involving band members Charles Bullen, Charles Hayward, and Gareth Williams, with assistance from engineer David Cunningham.[38] Similarly, Moore produced Manfred Mann’s Earth Band's Angel Station during this period, recording at a studio in Noel Redding’s apple orchard near Cork, Ireland, and highlighting the band's meticulous approach led by Manfred Mann.[38] Moore's production work extended to Kevin Ayers, for whom he helmed the 1978 album Rainbow Takeaway at The Workhouse Studio alongside engineer Laurie Latham, contributing to Ayers' Canterbury scene sound with its eclectic blend of rock and experimental elements.[38] In the early 1980s, he collaborated with Dieter Meier of Yello on underground movie soundtracks in Switzerland, following Meier's departure from the band Quango, marking Moore's foray into electronic and film-oriented projects.[3] During the 1980s, Moore co-led the project World Service with Swiss musicians Henry Vogel on guitar and Robert "Orb" Vogel on drums, recording the album live in a Zurich studio before mixing it in Berlin and London; it featured contributions like bowed double bass from jazz bassist Hans Hartmann, though some elements were omitted from the final release.[3] He also wrote the title track "No Parlez" for Paul Young's debut album of the same name, released in 1983, showcasing his songwriting in a more commercial pop context.[3] That decade, Moore released The Only Choice in 1984, a collaborative effort involving bassist and programmer Matt Irving, co-producer/mixer Laurie Latham, and harmonica player Marc Feltham, recorded in a London warehouse and emphasizing rhythmic experimentation like the track "Industrial Drums (in 5 time)."[3] In 1996, Moore co-wrote and co-produced Richard Wright's solo album Broken China, contributing lyrics to all tracks and collaborating over 18 months in the South of France and London, exploring themes of emotional recovery and introspection.[3] In more recent years, Moore has pursued experimental group projects. In 1999, he composed Moving Sounds, a 40-minute multi-channel piece commissioned by WDR that explored spatial audio movement.[11] His 2021 release The April Sessions on Sub Rosa involved collaborators Dirk Specht, Tobias Grewenig, and Svann E. Langguth, focusing on improvised and textural soundscapes.[11][39] This built on earlier group work like Ore Talks and The Present is Missing, both featuring Specht, Grewenig, Langguth, sound artist Martin Rumori, and members of Therapeutische Hörgruppe Köln, emphasizing collective improvisation and sonic exploration.[11] In 2024, Moore released Live in Cologne May 2023 with The Missing Present Band, documenting improvisational live performances. As of November 2025, he announced On Beacon Hill with AKA & Friends, a collaborative album in scorched-earth cabaret style, with singles released in October 2025.[9][10]Later Career
Teaching and Academia
In 1996, Anthony Moore was appointed professor of music, sound, and noise at the Academy of Media Arts Cologne (Kunsthochschule für Medien Köln, or KHM), where he founded the institution's Music Department within the Art and Media Sciences division.[13][40] The position came after he presented a manifesto on the history of sound during an interview process, leading to his selection over competitive candidates to develop a new curriculum from scratch.[40] He served in this role until 2015, spanning nearly two decades of academic engagement.[8][11] Moore's teaching focused on the history, theory, and anthropology of sound, noise, and music, incorporating technical aspects such as sound perception, recording history, the shift from orality to literacy, and relationships between sound and numerical systems.[41][8] He delivered seminars, lectures, and workshops that emphasized exploratory learning, describing the experience as a "voyage of discovery" with minimal repetition across his tenure.[40] As part of his contributions, Moore initiated and served as art director for sound events including “per→SON” and “Nocturnes Cologne,” which ran until 2015 and integrated academic inquiry with public performance.[13] During his time at KHM, Moore was elected rector of the academy, holding the position from 2000 to 2004 and overseeing broader institutional developments in media arts education.[13][41] His academic work influenced a shift in his own creative practice, moving from studio-based composition toward live collaboration and spontaneity through interactions in workshops and teaching.[11]Reunions and Recent Releases
In the late 1990s, Anthony Moore reunited with former Slapp Happy bandmates Peter Blegvad and Dagmar Krause to record the album Ça Va, a collection of avant-pop songs that revisited the group's early experimental style while incorporating more mature lyrical themes. The album, produced in London during the summer of 1997 and released in 1998 by V2 Records, featured contributions from musicians such as Andy Partridge of XTC on guitar and John Greaves on bass, marking a significant return to collaborative songwriting for Moore after years focused on solo and production work.[42] This reunion extended into the early 2000s with the creation of the opera Camera, initially commissioned by the BBC in 1991 but fully realized and performed during a Japanese tour in 2000.[43] The project, with music by Moore and Blegvad and libretto by Krause, explored themes of voyeurism and perception through a multimedia format; its soundtrack was released in 2000 under the group name Slapp Happy, though credited variably in some editions. Live performances from the tour, including dates in Tokyo, captured the trio's chemistry and were documented on the album Live in Japan.[44] Slapp Happy convened for further reunion shows in 2016 and 2017, performing alongside Faust at the Week-End Festival in Cologne and embarking on a European tour that concluded in Brussels.[45] These appearances, the group's first major live outings since 2000, emphasized reinterpreted classics from their 1970s catalog and drew sold-out crowds, highlighting enduring interest in their avant-garde legacy.[46] Moore's recent solo output includes the 2020 release of Out, a long-lost album of pop-oriented songs recorded in 1976 shortly after his departure from Henry Cow but shelved by Virgin Records until its excavation and issuance by Drag City.[47] The record blends art-rock melodies with electronic elements, featuring tracks like "The River" and "Please Go" that showcase Moore's knack for concise, radio-friendly structures amid experimental undertones.[24] In 2022, Drag City reissued Moore's 1979 solo album Flying Doesn't Help in a remastered edition, restoring its punk-inflected new wave energy and including bonus material that underscores its influence on post-punk aesthetics.[48] This was followed by Home of the Demo in October 2024, an archival collection of early 1980s home recordings that includes demos for songs later recorded by artists like Pink Floyd ("Learning to Fly") and Sinéad O'Connor, offering insight into Moore's songwriting process during a transitional period.[49] In 2021, Moore collaborated with Dirk Specht and Tobias Grewenig on The April Sessions, an improvisational work of drones and acousmatic soundscapes recorded in a Brussels hotel, continuing his exploration of experimental electronics in a trio format rooted in collaborations dating back to the 2000s.[50][39] In April 2025, he released CSound & Violin, an album delving into algorithmic composition using the CSound software alongside violin improvisation.[51] Later that year, as of November 2025, Moore prepared the release of On Beacon Hill with AKA & Friends, scheduled for November 21 on Drag City, featuring tracks in his signature scorched-earth cabaret style with long-toned arrangements and contributions from collaborators.[10][52]Discography
Band and Group Albums
Anthony Moore's involvement in band and group albums centers on his foundational role in the avant-pop ensemble Slapp Happy, formed in 1972 in Hamburg, Germany, where he served as keyboardist, composer, and producer. The group's early recordings, backed by the experimental rock band Faust, captured Moore's innovative approach to song structure and electronics, blending pop sensibilities with avant-garde elements. Slapp Happy's brief merger with the progressive rock group Henry Cow in 1975 led to two landmark collaborative albums, on which Moore contributed piano, electronics, and compositional input, expanding the sonic palette with tape manipulations and rhythmic complexity. A 1990s reunion yielded one additional full-length release, reaffirming the band's enduring influence in experimental music circles.[45][17][20] The following table summarizes Moore's key band and group albums, focusing on studio releases where he held a core creative role:| Album Title | Year | Band/Group | Label | Moore's Role |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sort Of | 1972 | Slapp Happy (with Faust) | Polydor | Keyboards, composer, vocals |
| Casablanca Moon | 1974 | Slapp Happy | Virgin | Keyboards, composer, producer[53] |
| Desperate Straights | 1975 | Slapp Happy / Henry Cow | Virgin | Piano, electronics, tapes, composer[19] |
| In Praise of Learning | 1975 | Henry Cow / Slapp Happy | Virgin | Piano, electronics, tapes, composer[20] |
| Ça Va | 1998 | Slapp Happy | V2 | Keyboards, composer |
Solo Albums
Anthony Moore's solo discography reflects his evolution from experimental and minimalist works in the early 1970s to art rock and experimental pop in the late 1970s and early 1980s, and later to ambient, electronic, and archival explorations. His early solo releases emphasized innovative composition blending musique concrète and melodic elements, often in collaboration with filmmakers. After departing from collaborative projects like Slapp Happy and Henry Cow, Moore pursued independent releases that highlighted his songwriting versatility, often blending whimsical lyrics with innovative production techniques. His early solo work garnered critical attention for its quirky accessibility, while later output delved into sound design and personal archives, aligning with his academic interests in music technology. The debut solo album, Pieces from the Cloudland Ballroom (1971, Polydor), showcased Moore's minimalist and experimental style. This was followed by Secrets of the Blue Bag (1972, Polydor), featuring tape manipulations and atmospheric soundscapes. Flying Doesn't Help (1979, Quango Records) marked a shift toward concise pop structures infused with avant-garde elements, featuring tracks like "Judy Get Down" that showcase his melodic sensibility and ironic wit.[54] Recorded with minimal instrumentation, it received praise for bridging experimental roots with commercial appeal, though commercial success was limited. This was followed by World Service (1981, Do It Records), a more polished effort exploring global themes through radio-inspired motifs and layered synths, often cited as his most song-oriented release. Critics noted its radio-friendly hooks, such as the title track, as a high point in his 1980s output. The Only Choice (1984, Parlophone), his final major-label solo album of that era, adopted a darker, synth-pop tone influenced by emerging electronic trends, with production by Moore himself emphasizing atmospheric tension. After a hiatus focused on production and academia, Moore returned with Arithmetic in the Dark (2019, Touch), an experimental electronic album derived from field recordings and algorithmic processes, reflecting his research into perception and sound synthesis.[55] Described as hallucinogenic and abstract, it features tracks like "Switched" that manipulate acoustic emissions for immersive textures.[56] In recent years, archival releases have expanded Moore's solo catalog, drawing from unreleased tapes and early experiments. Out (recorded 1976, released 2020, Drag City), a previously shelved Virgin Records project, captures proto-new wave energy with pop-leaning songs like "Catch a Falling Star," bridging his band era to solo maturity.[6] Similarly, Home of the Demo (2024, Drag City) compiles mid-1980s home recordings, revealing unfinished art-pop gems such as "Me and Neil Diamond" that echo the whimsy of his earlier work while highlighting DIY ethos.[57] Mare's Tail (2024 reissue of 1969 soundtrack, Paradigm Discs) presents Moore's earliest foray into collage-based sound design using found sources and field recordings, underscoring his foundational experimental impulses.[58] In 2025, CSound & Violin (live recording from 2023, released April 18, 2025, Touch) explores electroacoustic performance with violin integration. As of November 2025, the forthcoming album On Beacon Hill (with AKA & Friends, Drag City, scheduled November 21, 2025) includes 2025 singles "No Parlez" and "It's Fear," continuing his scorched-earth cabaret style. These releases, often limited-edition vinyl, have revitalized interest in Moore's oeuvre, emphasizing his enduring influence on avant-garde music.| Album Title | Release Year | Label | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pieces from the Cloudland Ballroom | 1971 | Polydor | Debut studio album; minimalist/experimental. |
| Secrets of the Blue Bag | 1972 | Polydor | Experimental; musique concrète elements. |
| Flying Doesn't Help | 1979 | Quango | Art-pop with experimental edges. |
| World Service | 1981 | Do It Records | Synth-driven songs with thematic breadth. |
| The Only Choice | 1984 | Parlophone | Darker electronic pop; last 1980s release. |
| Out | 2020 (rec. 1976) | Drag City | Archival unreleased album; proto-new wave. |
| Arithmetic in the Dark | 2019 | Touch | Electronic/experimental; perception-focused. |
| Home of the Demo | 2024 | Drag City | Archival demos; mid-1980s art-pop sketches. |
| Mare's Tail | 2024 (rec. 1969) | Paradigm Discs | Film soundtrack reissue; sound collage. |
| CSound & Violin | 2025 | Touch | Live electroacoustic; violin integration. |
| On Beacon Hill (forthcoming) | 2025 | Drag City | With AKA & Friends; art-pop/cabaret (scheduled Nov 21, 2025). |
Singles and Compilations
Anthony Moore's solo singles output spans the late 1970s and 1980s, often reflecting his experimental art rock sensibilities with quirky, narrative-driven tracks released on independent and major labels alike. His debut single as a featured artist came via Slapp Happy, with "Johnny's Dead" b/w "Mr. Rainbow" issued in 1975 on Virgin Records, marking an early post-band venture that blended pop whimsy with avant-garde edges.[59] Following this, Moore released "Catch a Falling Star" b/w "Back to the Top" in 1976, also on Virgin (VS144), showcasing his shift toward more personal, melodic compositions amid his production work for other artists.[59] In the late 1970s, Moore's singles gained traction in European markets, including the 1979 release of "Lucia" b/w "Useless Moments" on Metronome (0030.257), which highlighted his growing interest in rhythmic, synthesizer-driven pieces. This period saw further output with "Judy" b/w "Time Less Strange" in 1980 on Quango, followed by a variant "Judy" b/w "Lucia" on the same label (HMGS 10), both emphasizing his lyrical focus on fleeting human connections. By 1981, "World Service" b/w "No Brakes (Reprise)" appeared on Do It Records, tying into themes from his concurrent album work.[59] The early 1980s brought singles like "The Mouth" in 1982 on Sheet Records (BULL4), and two Parlophone releases in 1984: "The Only Choice" b/w "No Brakes (Reprise)" and "Industrial Drums" b/w "The Only Choice (Instrumental)," the latter exploring percussion-heavy experimentation. A notable 1988 charity single, "Where Is the Madcap Called Syd?" credited to Syd Barrett/Anthony Moore/Oliver Peter Sellars & The Hollywood Party, was released on Stampa Alternativa, paying homage to the Pink Floyd founder with proceeds benefiting mental health causes.[59] Moore's contributions to compilations underscore his influence in avant-garde and progressive circles, often appearing on multi-artist releases that curated experimental sounds. He featured on the 1980 compilation Miniatures: A Sequence of Fifty-One Tiny Masterpieces Edited by Morgan Fisher (Cherry Red), contributing the one-minute track "New Year's Eve," part of a collaborative effort with artists like Robert Wyatt and XTC to showcase brevity in composition.[60] Another key appearance was on the 1983 various artists album In the Beginning There Was Rhythm (Factory), where Moore collaborated with David Cunningham on a track blending electronic rhythms and spoken elements. His work also graced the RēR Quarterly Volume I, No. 4 (Recommended Records, 1983), with the 11-minute piece "Plains of Hungary," an ambient exploration of minimalism amid contributions from John Oswald and others. More recently, retrospective compilations have repackaged his material, such as the 2012 double-CD Flying Doesn't Help & World Service on Floating World Records (FLOATM6163), remastering tracks from his 1979 and 1981 albums to highlight his mid-career evolution. Additionally, the 2019 Slapp Happy - Ultra Rare Trax (Cuneiform Records) includes previously unreleased solo tracks like "Judy" and "Lucia," contextualizing his early 1980s singles within the band's archival legacy.[61]| Year | Single Title | Label | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1975 | Johnny's Dead b/w Mr. Rainbow | Virgin | As Slapp Happy Featuring Anthony Moore |
| 1976 | Catch a Falling Star b/w Back to the Top | Virgin (VS144) | Solo debut single |
| 1979 | Lucia b/w Useless Moments | Metronome (0030.257) | European release |
| 1980 | Judy b/w Time Less Strange | Quango | - |
| 1980 | Judy b/w Lucia | Quango (HMGS 10) | Variant pressing |
| 1981 | World Service b/w No Brakes (Reprise) | Do It Records | - |
| 1982 | The Mouth | Sheet Records (BULL4) | - |
| 1984 | The Only Choice b/w No Brakes (Reprise) | Parlophone | - |
| 1984 | Industrial Drums b/w The Only Choice (Instrumental) | Parlophone | Experimental focus |
| 1988 | Where Is the Madcap Called Syd? | Stampa Alternativa | Charity single with collaborators |