3 March 1927 – 5 May 1998
Founding member of The Skatalites and The Supersonics. Very important jamaican saxophone player.
He was born in Havana, Cuba. When his father worked at Panama Canal, the familly moved to Jamaica in 1933. He went to Alpha School, which gave him a good musical eduction. His career started in 1943 when he performed in Eric Dean Orchestra, one of the best at that time on the whole island. Then he switched to Don Hitchman's sextet. This band was one of the first jamaican Bands ever got recorded (1952/1953). This happened at the first radio station in Jamaica, Z or Zed QI. In the early fifties, Tommy was a soloist in the greatest band to coalesce in Jamaica before The Skatalites, Roy Coburn's Blu-Flames featuring Don Drummond, Cluett Johnson and Ken Williams. In 1954 he moved to Nassau, Bahamas to play gigs in Clubs next to Ernest Ranglin. 1956 he moved to Miami, Florida where he first got into contact with Jazz music. He was heavily influenced by hearing John Coltrane, whose tunes he first played when he moved back to Jamaica in 1962. He played with a lot of musicians, which can be found on a lot of early ska recordings, but until 1964 he always denied offer by Clement "Coxsone" Dodd and Arthur "Duke" Reid. He was a known musician for adding Jazz to ska music. On sundays, he always went to play a regular session with other musicians like Jackie Mittoo, Lloyd Knibbs and Johnny Moore, which got later released as Jazz Jamaica. Out of this session emerged one of Jamaica's most important bands [a=Skatalites](June 1964). The Skatalites made several hundred instrumental recordings, mostly for Dodd's Studio One and backed the gamut of Jamaica's vocalists on hundreds more. After Don Drummond murdered his girlfriend in 1965, they crashed and split up. McCook was now producing records for Reid's Studio One. At that point he started his new band Supersonics. Tommy led them until they disintegrated on a trip to Montreal Canada in 1969. In 1973 he went to the U.K. to work with Jimmy Cliff's band for a BBC special on Cliff meeting Jazz artist Herbie Mann. After 1975 he played at Studio One's studio band [a=Revolutionaries]. In 1983, Tommy started to reanimate the Skatalites, which worked out well and they as they saw that they could make out a living of touring, they restarted. He stopped playing around 1995, when his health condition got worse. He died on May 5, 1998 leaving his second wife, eight children and fourteen grand children.
2025
Duke Reid
7", RE
2023
Harlem Shuffle Records
7", Ltd
2023
Pressure Sounds
7", Num, Let
2023
2022
Treasure Isle
7", RE
2022
2021
Treasure Isle
7", Single
2021
Duke Records (2)
7"
2021
2020
2020
2019
2018
2017
2016
Doctor Bird
7"
2016
Soul Jazz Records, Studio One
7", Ltd
2016
2016
2016
2013
Islam
7", Ltd
2013
C And N Records
7", Single
2012
Baron's
7", Single
2011
2011
2010
Trojan Records, Trojan Records
7", Ltd
2010
2010
2007
2006
2005
2004
2004
2003
2002
Treasure Isle
7", Single
2001
Cactus, Creole Records
CD, Comp
2001
2001
2000
Vivian Jackson (Yabby You), Prophet Record
12", M/Print
2000
1999
Moodisc Records, Moodisc Records
7", Single
1999
1998
1998
1996
Peacemaker Records
CD, Comp
1995
Rhino Records
CD, Album
1995
1995
1989
1988
1982
WLN Music, WLN Music
LP, Album
1979
Kingley Sounds
12"
1979
Matador Records
7", Single
1979
JB Music
12"
1979
1978
Grove Music
12"
1978
Roots Man
LP
1978
Phil Pratt
12"
1978
1978
1977
Studio One
12"
1977
Justice (2)
LP, Album
1977
Virgonian
12"
1977
Grove Music
7", Single
1977
1977
1977
1977
1977
1976
Moodisc Record, Moodisc Record
7"
1976
Carl's Records
LP, Album
1976
Angen
7", Single
1976
Hot Stuff (2)
7"
1976
Moodisc Records
7", TP
1976
Triangle Of Love
7", Single
1976
1976
1976
1976
1975
Vulcan
7"
1975
Third World
7", Single
1975
1975
1975
1975
1975
1975
1975
1974
Attack (7)
LP, Album
1974
Attack (7)
7"
1974
African Treasure
7", Single
1974
1974
1974
1974
1974
1974
1973
Lion
7"
1973
DUB (7)
7"
1973
Soul Proff
7"
1973
Tommy McCook
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Tommy McCook
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