
Jack Moore & Quentin Kovalsky. Quentin Kovalsky & Jack Moore. Two friends. Two artists, composers, producers, arrangers. They are different. And it is precisely these differences that unite them.

Jack Moore
Irish by birth, worldly by choice. As he himself says, being Gary Moore’s son is both his “blessing and his curse.”
His father, of course, encouraged, inspired, and taught Jack to play guitar, but he didn’t really take to the instrument until somewhat later.
Through simple—and (all too) obvious—associations, Jack has since played many tribute concerts in his father’s honor. He’s been invited onstage to perform alongside Thin Lizzy, Deep Purple, and Joe Bonamassa.
In June 2025, Jack and his band appeared at the 15th Rock Legends Festival in Szarlota. Together with friends, he performed not only classic blues evergreens but also his own compositions—and it’s those songs he cares about most right now.
The album Electric Ladyland is a collection of compositions by Jack and Quentin. It’s rock bearing the highest mark of quality, “Q.” These are songs of love, longing, inner conflict, disorientation, and the chaos of the times we live in.

Quentin Kovalsky
He usually doesn’t write out his CV because it would be far too extensive. He left Poland (specifically the Retkinia district of Łódź) to settle in London.
He’s traveled the world—and all of Poland—thanks to being an artist who fears no challenge. That’s also why he graduated from the British School of Applied Vocal Studies, London Vocaltec Actontown.
Besides singing, he plays bass, various guitars, piano, and drums. What binds him to Jack Moore is more than mere collaboration: they’ve known each other for years and have played hundreds of concerts together.
“When I finally retire, I’ll write a book. I already have the title—‘Driving Mr. Moore’—and the story keeps writing itself, because we’re always inventing new projects and living new adventures.” For the Electric… album, Quentin composed some of the tracks and produced, arranged, and mixed most of them.
According to Kovalsky, these are songs above all about journeys. Where will those journeys take the listener? That depends entirely on their musical sensibility.