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Moore continued to work in Liverpool and died of a brain haemorrhage on 29 September 1981, seventeen days after fifty years old. [2] The death record for Thomas Henry Moore in the September quarter of 1981 in Liverpool states that he was born in 1931 [1] rather than 1924 as sometimes stated; this made him 28 when he played with the Beatles, rather than 36.
To augment their act in recent years, "Yo-Yo Man" became part of their shows. Tom Smothers had created the mostly non-speaking character in the late 1960s, a comedic performer of tricks using a yo-yo. The term "Yo-Yo Man" is registered in his name. [30] In their 2008 tour, Yo-Yo Man was listed as the group's opening act.
Make Way for the Motherlode is the debut studio album by the American West Coast hip-hop musician Yo-Yo. [1] [2] Make Way for the Motherlode was released on March 19, 1991, through East West Records and Atlantic Records.
Thomas Edward Moore (December 23, 1962 – May 24, 1998) was an American professional golfer. Moore was born in New Orleans, Louisiana . He had a decorated junior golf career, ranking #1 in the Junior Golf World Rankings in 1980 (Golf Digest).
However, Beatles drummer Tommy Moore arrived late and Johnny Hutch was asked to sit in with the band. The Beatles were turned down for both spots, although Parnes contacted Beatles manager Allan Williams to arrange for them to back Gentle on a Scottish tour beginning on 20 May; the Beatles were the only group Williams could book at such short ...
Tommy works for Hamm's character, Monty Miller, an oil industry titan otherwise known as a wildcatter. "Oil and gas industry makes 3 billion dollars a day in pure profit, and it's only getting bigger.
The Hondo guitar company was originally formed in 1969 when Jerry Freed and Tommy Moore of the International Music Corporation (IMC) of Fort Worth, Texas, formed a joint-venture with Korean manufacturer Samick Company. IMC's intent was to introduce modern manufacturing techniques and American/Japanese quality standards to the Korean guitar ...
The Osmonds soon had hits with other light, R&B-style pop numbers like "Double Lovin'" (No. 14, which was essentially a "One Bad Apple" sound-alike record) and "Yo-Yo" (No. 3). In each of these hits, the formula was the same; Merrill sang lead, and Donny was "co-lead" in essence, singing the "hook" or "chorus" of the song.