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The Skatalites
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More than a band,
the Skatalites
were and are an institution, an aggregation of top-notch musicians who didn't merely define the sound of Jamaica, they were the sound of Jamaica across the '50s and '60s. Although the group existed in its original incarnation for less than 18 months, members brought their signature styles to hundreds upon hundreds of the island's releases.
The Skatalites
officially lined up as guitarist
Jerome "Jah Jerry" Hinds
, bassist
Lloyd Brevett
, teenaged pianist
Donat Roy "Jackie" Mittoo
,
drummer
Lloyd Knibbs
, trumpeter
Johnnie "Dizzie" Moore
, Cuban-born tenor saxophonist
Tommy McCook
, alto saxophonists
Lester Sterling
and Cuban born
Roland Alphonso
, and trombonist
Don Drummond
.
Moore
,
McCook
,
Sterling
, and
Drummond
were all alumni of the Alpha Cottage School for Boys, an educational institution for troubled and troublesome boys in Kingston, run by the Catholic diocese. Besides the regular lashings of studies, the school was renowned for its music program, and over the years turned hundreds of wayward boys into performers of note. All four ended up playing the hotel circuit, churning out R&B and jazz covers for the tourists.
Previous to the late '50s, this was Jamaica's only real music industry outside the mento scene, and as there were no local record labels, resorts were the only way for musicians to seriously ply their trade. The hotel bands were an ever-shifting conglomerate of players, but over time, they would crisscross each other's paths so often, that all became familiar with everyone else's style.
Knibbs
and
Drummond
, for example, had both once played with
Eric Dean's Band
. When
Knibbs
departed for
the Sheiks
, he joined a lineup that included
Mittoo
and
Moore
. However, new career opportunities presented themselves when local businessmen
Duke Reid
and
Clement "Coxsonne" Dodd
both launched record labels and the era of the sessionmen arrived in Jamaica.
Although both
McCook
and
Alphonso
had previously cut acetates, this was the first time any of the future
Skatalites
would appear on vinyl. Between 1959, when
Reid
released his first vinyl single, and 1962, most of the band's future members worked regularly at
Reid
's Treasure Isle studio, playing on a swathe of R&B, boogie, and ballad releases. The Heartbeat label's
Ska After Ska After Ska
bundles up an album's worth of this early material, as does the Dutch label Jamaica Gold, on
Shuffle'n'Ska Time
. In 1962,
Dodd
opened his own Studio One recording studio, and the future
Skatalites
now quickly gravitated in his direction as well. Joining them was
McCook
, who'd missed all the previous action, having left Jamaica in 1954 to join the house band at the Zanzibar Club in Nassau. The studio was inaugurated with the release of the album
Jazz Jamaica From the Workshop
, which featured
McCook
,
Alphonso
,
Drummond
, and guitarist
Ernest Ranglin
, amongst others.
The Skatalites
came to fruition in June 1964, according to the members' own reckoning, although they have given conflicting stories about just how it happened.
Ranglin
credits
Moore
,
Knibbs
credits himself, but there's no doubt who came up with the name -- that honor goes to
McCook
. Drafting in vocalists
Jackie Opel
,
Tony DaCosta
,
Doreen Schaeffer
, and calypso star
Joseph "Lord Tanamo" Gordon
, the group debuted live on June 27, 1964, at the Hi- Hat club in Rae Town. It didn't take long for
the Skatalites
to grab a residency at the Bournemouth Beach Club in Eastern Kingston, where they performed three nights a week, as well as a Sunday residency at the Orange Bowl on Orange Street.
With the growth of
Dodd
's Studio One label, the group soon found themselves with almost more gigs than they could handle, touring the island as the backing band for most of the label's artists, whilst also performing on-stage themselves. It must have been grueling, the constant driving to and from venues and playing a minimum of two sets a night, but in truth,
the Skatalites
were having a whale of a time. And in between the gigs, the band seems to have spent virtually all their waking hours recording. Besides working for
Dodd
and
Reid
, the group also played on a multitude of records for
Prince Buster
and
Duke
and
Justin Yap
. The actual number of recordings they performed on is anyone's guess, an approximation made more difficult by the fact that the musicians normally went uncredited on the singles themselves. To add to the confusion,
the Skatalites
in the studio could be any of a number of musicians, not just the aforementioned lineup. Guitarist
Ranglin
, pianist
Gladstone Anderson
, trombonist
Rico Rodriguez
, and trumpeter
Baba Brooks
are just a few of the many men who took part in
the Skatalites
recording sessions.
And what actually defines a
Skatalites
record? Many of their recordings were understandably released under the vocalist's name, not theirs. But what of
Prince Buster
's U.K. smash
"Al Capone"
?
Buster
may have intoned the title across the track, but wasn't it
the Skatalites
who truly made the song? Even amongst the group's own repertoire, the records were credited to the composer, not the band. Thus, the seminal
"Guns of Navarone"
was originally released under
Roland Alphonso
's name, not
the Skatalites
'. Modern archivists have attempted to address these injustices with compilations featuring the band, regardless of original accreditation. The West Side label's
Skaravan -- Top Sounds From Top Deck
, for example, is currently into the eighth CD of their
Skatalites
' compilations, all taken from their sessions for the
Yap
brothers, while Heartbeat's
Foundation Ska
bundles up a batch of Studio One cuts. Thankfully, the members' styles are so unique, as to be instantly recognizable within a few notes. In truth, most ska compilations are awash in the members' music, credited or not. That bouncy swing tempo, the jazzy brass, and the steady, skanking beat, all shout
the Skatalites
louder than any written credit, as easily heard on the vocal releases as on their own instrumentals.
But the instrumentals were the group's glory. Songs like
"Guns of Navarone,"
"Phoenix City,"
"Addis Ababa,"
"Silver Dollar,"
"Corner Stone,"
and
"Blackberry Brandy,"
to name just a small handful of their most seminal cuts, not only defined the island's sound, but created a whole new genre of music -- ska. The group have ofttimes been quoted as saying their invention of ska was never intentional, but merely the byproduct of their flawed attempts at American R&B. But this self-deprecating explanation neglects the jazz and big band swing sound that was also crucial to ska in its original form. And anyone good enough to play in those styles would have little problem mastering R&B. What
the Skatalites
actually did was drag these older styles into the contemporary scene, merge it with modern R&B, and propel it into the mainstream via a faster syncopated island beat. And with it, the group's musical legacy spread around the world and across generations.
But that must have seemed ridiculous at the very end of 1964.
The Skatalites
were playing at the La Parisienne club in Harbour View for New Year's Eve, a show that went on without
Drummond
. The trombonist had a history of mental illness and late that night, in a fit of rage, he stabbed his common-law wife and band vocalist,
Marguerita
, to death.
Drummond
was arrested and sent to Bellevue Sanitarium; he died there in 1969.
The Skatalites
continued on for six more months after this tragedy, but the spark was dying with it, and finally in July 1965, the members called it quits. Several from the group did continue playing together.
Alphonso
,
Moore
,
Mittoo
, and
Brevett
eventually formed
the Soul Brothers
, which later become
the Soul Vendors
.
McCook
formed
the Supersonics
, which was virtually
Reid
's house band at Treasure Isle Studio, and
Sterling
went off to work with producer
"Sir" Clancy Collins
. As their session work continued apace, inevitably many of the former members found themselves back working together. Then in 1975, most of
the Skatalites
reunited to record
Brevett
's solo album,
African Roots
.
McCook
,
Alphonso
,
Sterling
,
Ranglin
,
Mittoo
, and
Knibbs
all took part in the proceedings. Two years later, the
Hot Lava
album appeared, credited to
Tommy McCook & the Skatalites
, but in contrast to
Brevett
's "solo" album, this really was one. 1978's
Jackie Mittoo
may sound like a solo outing by the pianist, but actually features a clutch of former
Skatalites
. That same year, Island head
Chris Blackwell
convinced the members to reconvene again and recorded the
Big Guns
album. However, due to discord between the label man and
McCook
, the record sat on the shelf until 1984, when it was finally released as
Return of the Big Guns
. The previous year, the group had again reunited under the aegis of producer
Bunny Lee
for the
Skatalites With Sly & Robbie & the Taxi Gang
.
It took a few more years for the members to finally agree they were a band again; in 1986 they made it official and began gigging regularly. In 1989, they toured the world as
Bunny Wailer
's backing band, and the next year performed the same service for
Prince Buster
. In 1993, an album of new material,
Skavoovee
, finally appeared. Now boasting a core lineup of
McCook
,
Brevett
,
Sterling
, and
Knibbs
, the album was highly acclaimed. Their timing was perfect as the U.S. was in the grips of ska fever, and the band's constant touring abroad had cemented a worldwide following. Over the intervening years,
the Skatalites
had returned to their jazz roots with a vengeance, but ska fans didn't mind one bit.
Alphonso
now permanently rejoined
the Skatalites
for 1994's
Hi-Bop Ska: The 30th Anniversary Recording
, which also featured such illustrious guests as former vocalist
Doreen Schaeffer
,
Prince Buster
, and
Toots Hibbert
, and an all-star gathering of jazz musicians. The album deservedly earned the band their first Grammy nomination. Even
McCook
's heart attack in 1995 barely slowed the group down. The band continued their hectic touring schedule without him until the tenor saxophonist rejoined them early the next year.
However, even though he was forced off the road for good due to health problems a few weeks later, he was still able to record, and 1996's excellent
Greetings From Skamania
remains a tribute to his determination, and earned the group a second Grammy nomination. On May 5, 1998, the legendary saxophonist passed away; he was 71. Later that year,
the Skatalites
released
Balls of Fire
, on which the band re-created many of their old ska hits in their newer jazz style. That autumn,
Alphonso
collapsed on-stage at Hollywood's Key Club. He slipped into a coma soon after, and on November 20, he, too, died. But no matter how great the contributions of individual members,
the Skatalites
were always greater than the sum of their parts, and thus the band carried on. In 2000, they released
Bashaka
and their touring schedule continues unabated. While touring Europe in late2001, they reocrded yet again, resulting in the 2003 release of
From Paris With Love
. Each year brings another slew of compilations of their recordings from labels around the world. Decades on, their music remains timeless. ~ Jo-Ann Greene, All Music Guide
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12/04
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Albums (21)
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Guns Of Navarone
(25 songs)
On the Right Track
(5 songs)
Anthology
(16 songs)
Rolling Steady
(1 Track)
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