Tommy Mccook
50 top tracks
Tommy Mccook
50 top tracks
Albums

Tommy McCook Featuring Bobby Ellis
Tommy Mccook

Real Cool: The Jamaican King Of The Saxophone '66-'77
Tommy Mccook

Tommy McCook Anthology
Tommy Mccook

Blazing Horns/Tenor in Roots
Tommy Mccook

Trojan Instrumentals Box Set Disc 2
Tommy Mccook

Tommy McCook Classics
Tommy Mccook

Cloak & Dagger / Sharpe Razor / Dub Organiser
Tommy Mccook

Trojan Instrumentals Box Set Disc 3
Tommy Mccook

Soul Rock Steady
Tommy Mccook

The Abyssinians And Friends
Tommy Mccook

100% Dynamite
Tommy Mccook

Trojan Ska Collection
Tommy Mccook
Biography
Tommy McCook (3 March 1927 – 5 May 1998) was a Jamaican saxophonist. A founding member of The Skatalites, he also directed The Supersonics for Duke Reid, and backed many sessions for Bunny Lee or with The Revolutionaries at Channel One Studios in the 1970s....Read more on Last.fm
Read more
Tommy McCook (3 March 1927 – 5 May 1998) was a Jamaican saxophonist. A founding member of The Skatalites, he also directed The Supersonics for Duke Reid, and backed many sessions for Bunny Lee or with The Revolutionaries at Channel One Studios in the 1970s.
McCook was born in Havana, Cuba, and moved to Jamaica in 1933. He took up the tenor saxophone at the age of eleven, when he was a pupil at the Alpha School, and eventually joined Eric Dean’s Orchestra.
In 1954 he left for an engagement in Nassau, Bahamas, after which he ended up in Miami, Florida, and it was here that McCook first heard John Coltrane and fell in love with jazz. McCook returned to Jamaica in early 1962, where he was approached by a few local producers to do some recordings. Eventually he consented to record a jazz session for Clement "Coxson" Dodd, which was issued on the album as "Jazz Jamaica". His first ska recording was an adaptation of Ernest Gold’s "Exodus", recorded in November 1963 with musicians who would soon make up the Skatalites.
During the 1960s and 1970s McCook recorded with the majority of prominent reggae artists of the era, working particularly with producer Bunny Lee and his house band, The Aggrovators, as well as being featured prominently in the recordings of Yabby You and the Prophets (most notably on version sides and extended disco mixes), all while still performing and recording with the variety of line ups under the Skatalites name.
McCook died of pneumonia and heart failure, aged 71, on 5 May 1998. <a href="https://www.last.fm/music/Tommy+McCook">Read more on Last.fm</a>. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
