A powerful but enigmatic figure in soul, funk, and R&B (little is known about his life, especially from the mid-'70s onward),
Lee Moses was a vocalist and guitarist who gained his largest audience more than a decade after his death. While most of his material was cut in New York City,
Moses' vocal style was very much in the manner of Southern soul of the '60s, raw and passionate and unafraid to push the emotional boundaries of a song, while his guitar work was elemental and scratchy but full of fire, twisting blues, rock, and funk into a sound all his own.
Moses' early singles (collected on How Much Longer Must I Wait? Singles & Rarities 1965-1972) were rough-hewn exercises in Stax-style soul, while his sole album, 1971's
Time and Place, added a dash of funk and some hard rock accents to his musical personality.
Lee Moses was born on March 13, 1941, in Atlanta, and he attended Booker T. Washington High School, where he sang in talent shows and learned to play guitar.
Moses formed his first band, the Showstoppers, in the 1950s, and the group became a major draw in the Atlanta area. In the mid-'60s,
Moses relocated to New York City and began working as a session guitarist, primarily working with producer and behind-the-scenes man
Johnny Brantley, who had roots in Georgia.
Moses' tough but expressive guitar style and gritty, impassioned vocals became one of the hallmarks of
Brantley's productions. (Another musician who often worked on
Brantley's mid-'60s sessions was
Jimi Hendrix, and after
Hendrix's death, some of the sessions
Moses cut with
Hendrix would be reissued on an album titled Moods.)
In 1967,
Brantley helped
Moses land a record deal with
Musicor Records, and that year he released three singles for the label: "Reach Out, I'll Be There" b/w "Day Tripper," "Bad Girl (Part I)" b/w "Bad Girl (Part II)," and "I'm Sad About It" b/w "How Much Longer (Must I Wait)." Despite the strength of the material,
Moses'
Musicor sides did little business, and other 45s he issued that year for Dynamo ("Never in My Life" b/w "If Loving You Is a Crime [I'll Always Be Guilty]") and Lee John Records ("Diana [From N.Y.C.]" b/w "My Adorable One") fared no better. In 1971,
Moses struck a deal with Maple Records, an offshoot of All Platinum Records, and they released his first full-length album,
Time and Place, with
Moses backed by his stage band the Disciples as well as members of
the Ohio Players. The album, produced by
Brantley, was a strong exercise in deep soul and taut funk, but it was sadly ignored upon release. After cutting a 1973 single for Gates Records -- a powerful version of "The Dark End of the Street" b/w "She's a Bad Girl" --
Moses decided he'd had enough of
Brantley and the music business. He returned to the Atlanta area, where he played occasional club dates, but he never recorded again.
Moses died in 1997 at the age of 56.
While
Lee Moses enjoyed little recognition during his lifetime, after his death the
Time and Place album was discovered by crate diggers and soul music obsessives, and original copies started to fetch high prices among collectors. In 2007, the British label Castle Music gave
Time and Place a reissue on both vinyl and CD, with many of
Moses' single sides added as a bonus. In 2016, the American archival label Future Days Records brought out a new edition of
Time and Place that restored the album's original sequence, and three years later the same label issued How Much Longer Must I Wait? Singles & Rarities 1965-1972, which collected all of
Moses' non-LP singles, adding three unreleased tracks to the mix. ~ Mark Deming