Moulton was born in
Schenectady, New York, United States, He worked as a
model at the Bookings and
Ford agencies before beginning his production career. Before that, he had worked in the
music industry, firstly as a child working part-time in record shops, then holding a sales and promotion job at
King Records (from 1959 to 1961), and similar positions at
RCA and
United Artists. He eventually left due to his disgust at the industry's dishonesty. His music career restarted in the late 1960s, with a self-made tape of overlapping songs created for the
Fire Island bar and restaurant, The Sandpiper. He was responsible for the first continuous-mix album side, on
Gloria Gaynor's disco album
Never Can Say Goodbye, earning him the title of "father of the disco mix." Among some of his other successes in mixing songs are
The Three Degrees' "Dirty Ol' Man",
MFSB featuring The Three Degrees' "Love Is the Message",
B.T. Express' "
Do It ('Til You're Satisfied)",
Tamiko Jones's "Let It Flow",
Sarah Dash's "Sinner Man", Michele's (
Chantal Curtis) "Disco Dance",
The Trammps' "
Disco Inferno",
People's Choice's "
Do It Any Way You Wanna",
Andrea True's "
More, More, More", plus
First Choice's "Doctor Love" as well as "Armed and Extremely Dangerous" and
Claudja Barry's album,
The Girl Most Likely. The British label Harmless Records has released albums of Moulton's work of remixed tracks, originally issued on Philadelphia International and other Philly soul labels, mainly during the 1970s. ==References==