The Esquires


The Esquires were an American R&B group from Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States, principally active from 1957 to 1976.

History

The group first formed in 1957 around the Moorer family: Gilbert, his brother Alvis, and their sister Betty. They first performed as Betty Moorer and the Esquires. When their sister and lead singer left, the group shortened its name to The Esquires, and Gilbert became lead singer. In 1961, Sam Pace joined as a tenor. Millard Edwards, a bass, also sang during this period in place of Taylor. They went through many lineup changes over their first decade, which saw them aiming mostly for local recognition. In 1966 they moved to Chicago and auditioned for Curtis Mayfield, who was not interested in signing them. They then attempted to sign with Constellation Records, but the record label went under at the end of 1966; they signed instead with Bunky Records, Constellation's successor. Bunky was distributed by Scepter Records on the national level.
Their debut record for Bunky/Scepter was "Get on Up", becoming a major hit in the United States, peaking at #11 as a pop single but reaching #3 on the R&B charts. Following the release they played Chicago's Regal Theater and the Apollo Theatre in New York City. Further singles were also successes, and the group released one full-length LP. After five singles on Bunky the group signed a deal with Scepter themselves late in 1968. They later returned to Bunky and then, in 1970, signed with Capitol Records for one single and Lamarr Records in 1971 for "Girls in the City".
Perry Moorer played alto saxophone with the group. He died in 1996.
Gilbert Moorer died from throat cancer on August 28, 2008, at the age of 67.
Alvis Moorer died on August 21, 2011 at the age of 71.
Sam Pace died after a long illness on January 7, 2013 at the age of 68.
Edwards, who lives in Chicago, is now the only surviving member of the band from its recording days.

Members

Albums

Singles