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Lisa Moorish

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Lisa Moorish (born 16 January 1972)[1] is an English singer-songwriter. She had a solo career beginning in 1989, and was the lead singer of the indie band Kill City in the early 2000s.

Biography

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Origins

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Moorish was born in Walworth, but grew up in Brixton, South London. She is mixed race: her father Henry Watt is a black Jamaican "mixed with Irish, Scottish, Asian", whilst her mother Iris is English and from Middlesbrough. They met in a Hammersmith club.[1]

Music career

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Moorish began her musical career in 1989, aged 17, when she signed to Jive Records. She released two singles with Jive, although a huge club and dance chart hit, they were not commercial hits and she was dropped. In 1991 she released two singles with Polydor, but again commercial success eluded her. Signing to Go! Discs in the mid-1990s yielded an album (I've Gotta Have It All, 1996), as well as a collaboration with George Michael on a version of his Wham! hit "I'm Your Man".

In 1995, Moorish performed backing vocals on an acoustic version of the Oasis song "Fade Away" for the Warchild charity album.

In 1996, Moorish provided backing vocals on Northern Irish indie band Ash's hit single, "Oh Yeah", which reached number 6 in the UK Singles Chart.

In the early 2000s, Moorish was a member of indie band, Kill City. They were a four-piece consisting of Moorish, fellow songwriter "Welsh" Pete Jones on bass and guitarists Tom Bowen and Stuart Le Page.[1] In 2004, they released their debut EP White Boys, Brown Girl on Alan McGee's Poptones label. Nash Gierak (Mower) joined the new line-up on bass in 2004–2006, alongside Tom Lindley and Pete Denton (The Kooks) on guitar.[2]

In December 2003, Moorish recorded a cover of "Fairytale of New York" with Johnny Borrell on BBC Radio 6 Music.[3] She has frequently performed with Drew McConnell.[citation needed] In 2006, Moorish appeared on the "Strummerville" charity single, a cover of The Clash's "Janie Jones"[4] which peaked at number 17 in the UK Singles Chart.

Personal life

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On 26 March 1998,[citation needed] Moorish gave birth to a daughter Molly, who was fathered by Liam Gallagher and conceived two months after Gallagher married Patsy Kensit.[1] In 2003, she gave birth to a son named Astile to The Libertines front man, Pete Doherty.[5]

Discography

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Albums

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List of albums, with selected details
Title Details
I've Gotta Have It All
Divine Chaos

Singles

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List of singles, with selected chart positions, showing year released
Title Year Peak chart positions
GER
[7]
NLD
[8]
UK
[9]
"Rock to the Beat" 1989
"Going Back to My Roots"
"People" 1991
"Loves Heartbreak"
"Just the Way It Is" 1994 42
"I'm Your Man" 1995 49 24
"Mr. Friday Night" 1996 62 24
"Love for Life" 37
"Sylvia" 2024
"The Hunger"
"Social Pariah"
"—" denotes a recording that did not chart or was not released in that territory.

References

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  1. ^ a b c d A life on the edge (Miranda Sawyer, The Guardian, 20 August 2004
  2. ^ (2004) Album notes for White Boys, Brown Girl by Kill City, p. 1–4 [booklet]. Belgium: Anorak Supersport (ANO030CD).
  3. ^ "Rip It Up, Razorlight single". Warrington Guardian. Retrieved 16 February 2021.
  4. ^ Less Is Moorish (Suzanne Kerins, Sunday Mirror, 17 September 2006)
  5. ^ "Pete Doherty Laments His Drug-Fuelled Lifestyle". Contactmusic.com. 1 August 2013. Retrieved 15 July 2020.
  6. ^ Millar, Mark (26 June 2024). "Back in the Spotlight: Lisa Moorish on 'Divine Chaos' and Her Triumphant Return to Music". XS Noize. Retrieved 20 December 2024.
  7. ^ Peak chart positions in Germany:
  8. ^ Peak chart positions in the Netherlands:
  9. ^ "Lisa Moorish: Artist Chart History". Official Charts Company. Retrieved 27 June 2024.
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