Bill Moody (author)


Bill Moody was an American writer of detective fiction and a professional jazz drummer.

Biography

Moody grew up in Santa Monica, California and attended Boston's Berklee School of Music.
Moody moved to Las Vegas in the mid-70s and stayed 20 years as a professional jazz drummer. He also taught at the University of Nevada.
Moody lived in northern California and taught creative writing at Sonoma State University.

Writing career

In 1994, Moody's first published novel Solo Hand introduces his Evan Horne character, and addresses music royalties and blackmail.
Moody wrote Death of a Tenor Man while teaching at the University of Nevada in Las Vegas. The subject of this novel is the mysterious death of saxophonist Wardell Gray.
His third Evan Horne mystery The Sound of the Trumpet involves lost recordings of trumpeter Clifford Brown.
Bird Lives! centers around the murders of "smooth jazz" artists.
In Looking for Chet Baker Horne investigates the disappearance of a friend who has been writing a paper on Chet Baker.
Shades of Blue is not a murder mystery, but instead Horne investigates what might be original compositions of two famous Miles Davis recordings.
In Fade to Blue Horne teaches an actor how to fake piano playing for a movie, but is drawn in to a murder investigation.
Mood Swings is a collection of nine stories, each providing a view of the world of jazz through the eyes of nine musicians.
Moody has written two espionage novels: Czechmate: the Spy Who Played Jazz was written in 1986 but not published until 2012, and The Man in Red Square was published in 2013.
Moody wrote his 1993 non-fiction book The Jazz Exiles based on his experiences living and working in Europe for three years.

Music career

Moody has played with many jazz musicians, including Jon Hendricks, Lou Rawls, Maynard Ferguson, Russ Freeman, and Carson Smith.

Evan Horne Series

Fictional mysteries featuring jazz pianist Evan Horne.
Mood Swings

Nonfiction

The Jazz Exiles