Hello music lovers I have now installed my new PC and have got back to some sort of normality. Since my old PC got fried and is now in pooter heaven, I could not believe the amount of requests for new links. So before I start blogging I will endeavour to fulfil them ALL
Also please note if anyone sent me any files since Feb 1st then please do again as all were lost. Luckily I backed up all music files prior to that date.
So as soon as I catch up with the re-posts, I'll be back!
Tommy McCook OD (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.He was among the most
innovative and influential Jamaican musicians of his generation, a prime
catalyst behind the evolution and international popularity of ska and reggae.
Thomas Matthew McCook was born March 4, 1927. While some
sources claim he was born to Jamaican parents in Havana, Cuba, and moved to
Jamaica in 1933, others claim that he was born in Kingston, Jamaica. He was raised by his mother, who worked in the kitchen of a
beachfront music club in Kingston. There, McCook sometimes watched bands
rehearse, an experience he later cited as fostering an early interest in music.
He began learning the tenor saxophone at age eleven, after his mother enrolled
him at the Alpha Cottage School in 1938. McCook joined Eric Deans' Orchestra in
1943 after Deans selected him from the graduating class at the Alpha School. He
spent several years playing in various groups, including Don Hitchman’s sextet
and Roy Coburn’s Blu-Flames.
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, a major influence on his playing. McCook would later call jazz
his "first love" and additionally cite Coleman Hawkins, Sonny
Rollins, Lester Young, and Ornette Coleman as influences.
The Skatalites
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 "Coxsone" Dodd, which
was issued on the album 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. Though they only existed for 14 months,
the Skatalites were the quintessential ska band of their time, backing every
major vocalist and producing an astounding amount of prime instrumental
material.
The Supersonics
In the wake of the group's demise, McCook founded the
Supersonics, who were soon installed as the house band at Duke Reid's Treasure
Isle studio; the most sought-after studio of the rocksteady era, they appeared
on classic hits from artists including Alton Ellis, Justin Hinds, and the
Techniques. The Supersonics featured bassist Jackie Jackson and drummer Paul
Douglas, who would later become the rhythm section for Toots and the Maytals.
During the 1960s and 1970s, McCook recorded with the
majority of prominent reggae artists of the era, working particularly with
producers Clement "Coxsone" Dodd as well as 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.
In 1975, McCook was honored with Jamaica's Order of
Distinction for his contributions to music. In 1997, The Slackers paid tribute
to McCook with "Cooking for Tommy," an instrumental track on their
album Redlight. In 1978, Tommy McCook made a brief cameo in the film Rockers
directed by Theodoros Bafaloukos. He was also part of the Rockers All Stars,
the group responsible for the film's instrumental music.
In 1983 he re-formed the Skatalites nearly two decades after
their initial breakup, relocating them to the U.S. in 1985 just months after
the release of their comeback album, Return of the Big Guns. A series of new
releases from the Skatalites followed in the years to come, and they even
notched a pair of Grammy nominations. In 1994 they mounted their first world
tour, which included appearances as part of the Skavoovee U.S.A. tour, a
package that included their descendants the Specials, the Selecter, and the
Toasters.
After a heart attack in 1995, McCook temporarily withdrew
from touring with the reformed Skatalites, a change which became permanent in
1996. He recorded on the band's albums through the mid-1990s until a
triple-bypass surgery kept him from the Ball of Fire (1997) sessions.
McCook died of pneumonia and heart failure at his home in
Atlanta, Georgia, on May 5, 1998, at the age of 71.
(Edited from Wikipedia & AllMusic) (* some sources give 4th March others give just the year)
Norman Wade (March, 2, 1946 – December, 2021) was an
American Country singer and songwriter.
Norman Wade has been a country music cult hero to thousands
of fans throughout the world, yet little is known of Wade’s early years, except
that he was born Norman Robert Stevenson in Columbus, Georgia, USA., and developed
an interest in country music as a child. He was particularly attracted to the
music of Hank Williams.
As a teenager he learnt to play the guitar and lived
and worked in Louisiana. Whilst employed at the local Winn Dixie Store he
helped to open other stores in Lafayette, Morgan City, New Iberia and New
Orleans. At night he would pick and sing country songs in the few night spots
that hadn’t given way to rock & roll music at that time.
In 1959, he relocated to Nashville where he first
encountered Marty Robbins playing a steel guitar in an Opry dressing room, but
at the time didn’t know who he was. Wade answered Marty’s inquiries by saying
that he had come to Nashville to write songs and was staying at the YMCA. Marty,
who became Wade’s biggest influence, offered him a job that led to his working
for the star for the next 15 years, including appearances with him on the Grand
Ole Opry (Robbins later even played dobro on some tracks on Wade’s Pure
Country).
Wade first recorded in 1959, and cut a number of singles
over the years before "going solo" in the '70s, when he started to
record albums of his own.It was in 1978 that he achieved minor success with
‘Close Every Honky Tonk’. Although he continued to record and achieved some
local chart successes, his only Billboard entry was a 1979 recording of Hank
Williams’ ‘I’m A Long Gone Daddy’.
The initial response to his career started off in the Deep South.
Like an established superstar, folks hearing him for the first time started
calling the radio stations to hear more of his records, and they would pack the
night clubs to see and hear him perform.Wade had written many songs and excelled at recording honky-tonk
numbers. He played in all parts of the United States and also at the Opry in
his own right. In 1984, he was honoured with lifetime membership of the Jimmie
Rodgers Memorial Festival in Meridian, Mississippi.
He remained active but, like Vernon Oxford, his ability to
sing in the style of Hank Williams and his love for the down-home country sound
of fiddle and steel guitar meant that he was probably born 10 years too late to
gain the proper acclaim his ability merits.
According to Praguefrank’ s Country Music Discographies Norman
Wade diedduring December 2021.
(Edited from scant information from All Muisc and LP liner
notes)
Ila Vann (born 1938) is a Soul, blues and R&B singer.
Born Ila Harriet Fields in Long Branch, New Jersy, USA. Her
brothers are Hampton Carlton (keyboard player for the The Mighty Clouds Of Joy)
and Paul Vann.
She started out singing in church and was spotted at age 8
by Mahalia Jackson and went on the road as an opening act for her for the next
4 years. She sang with The Blind Boys Of Alabama, The Staple Singers, Clara
Ward and Sam Cooke. At age 23, she recorded with Louis Armstrong. Her work with
Sam Cooke led to her first recording contract with Arnold Records.
“I was working as a waitress on Broadway, and Sam Cooke came
in. I told him I was interested in recording rhythm and blues. Two weeks later,
I was in the studio.” A week later she recorded What’s the Matter Baby that
went to number 1 in England. This led to countless recording sessions with
Frank Sinatra, Kenny Rogers, Ray Charles and Louis Armstrong.
“Louis Armstrong was such a
nice man and so wise. He told me, ‘You will never make a million in the
business because you are so focused on your family, but you will be popular.’ I
turned down a lot of tours because of my children. I would never leave my
family for long. I am thankful because my children now tell me how grateful
they are I didn’t leave them with a sitter for long periods.” Throughout her
30’s, she exclusively performed in NYC. After 14 years of a loving marriage
with four kids, she was suddenly widowed.
Ila hit Broadway in 1972 in the musical Inner City and her
move to Roulette resulted in a more commercial sound, and she is especially
known for her version of "Can’t Help Loving That Man" from the
musical "Showboat". This song later became a huge hit on the Northern
Soul circuit in England. Vann broke her Roulette contract due to a lack of
promotion/marketing for her work. She
continued to be a sought after solo performer as well as providing distinct
harmonies with pop greats Barry Manilow.
Following her Roulette recordings, she worked on Broadway
musicals, toured with the USO, and the group Business Before Pleasure. She
lived in Ontario, Canada for many years and performed in cities and towns
around Eastern Ontario. She toured the province for three years, meeting her second
husband near Bagotville where he was stationed in the military. She got married
and acquired permanent residence. The couple came to Trenton in 1987 when he
was posted.. Vann performed for the next
four years with the R and B Boys out of Belleville. She also made occasional
appearances in the UK for always appreciative Northern Soul devotees. Her
husband died in 2002.
Ila continued to perform weekly for the next four years with
the R and B Boys out of Belleville. Then, for the next three, she settled into
a regular spot at Brandees in Kingston where the owner hired a tight band to
back her. There, she met Ian Kojima, the sax player from the Fade Kings, and
consequently she did many shows with them before retiring in 2017. She lives in
Richmond, Virginia with one of her daughters. Ila Vann was the kind of
performer you never forgot, bubbling with energy and full of life, yet was a vastly underrated performer – recognition
of her contributions to the Soul Music genre is long overdue.
(Edited from Discogs, The Intelligencer, Loyal Blues & County
and Quinte Living.)
Michael Wofford (February 28, 1938 – September 19, 2025) was
an American jazz pianist and composer. He was an accompanist to singers Sarah
Vaughan (in 1979) and Ella Fitzgerald (1989–1994). He was known in the jazz
community going back to the 1960s for the albums Strawberry Wine and Summer
Night. He performed with Shorty Rogers, Bud Shank, Joe Pass, Shelly Manne, Kenny
Burrell, and Zoot Sims.
Wofford attended Point Loma High School, where he embraced
his love for jazz as a sophomore. He played in area bands with men such as John
Guerin, Don Sleet, and Gary Lefebvre. At age 19, the San Diego Symphony
performed two compositions of his which he had written at age 14 and 18
respectively. He attended San Diego State College but dropped out after a
semester due to lack of devotion.
In 1964, record producer Albert Marx discovered Wofford and
signed him and his trio (John Guerin on drums and John Doling on bass) to Epic
Records. In 1966, Wofford released his first solo album, Strawberry Wine, which
received critical acclaim.
In the 1970s Wofford toured Europe with Manne and Lee
Konitz, in the 1980s Japan with Manne, Sweets Edison, and Eddie
"Lockjaw" Davis, and Japan and Brazil with Benny Carter. He performed
with Kenny Burrell, Benny Golson, Art Farmer, Charlie Haden, Slide Hampton,
Clifford Jordan, Ray Brown, and Charles McPherson. Wofford worked on John
Lennon's album Rock 'n' Roll (1975) and in 1973 briefly toured with Roger
McGuinn of the Byrds. He continued touring with various prominent artists and
recording before moving back to San Diego in the late 1970s.
In 2000, Wofford married flutist Hofmann in 2000 and they
toured together and recorded a 2006 duo album together at the Athenaeum Music
& Arts Library in the San Diego neighborhood of La Jolla. Their chemistry
together was equally palpable on stage and off. Wofford made significant
contributions to jazz education through his involvement in workshops, clinics,
and camps, particularly in San Diego, where he served as core faculty for the
UC San Diego Jazz Camp starting from its inaugural session in 2003.
On August 13, 2012, he was given the Lifetime Achievement
Award at the 22nd Annual San Diego Music Awards. In 2023, Wofford was inducted
into the San Diego Music Hall of Fame for his lifetime of representing San
Diego with exceptional musical talent.
Wofford died at the
age of 87 years, on September 19, 2025, in the Balboa Park-area home he shared
with his wife and longtime musical partner, flutist Holly Hofmann. He had been
receiving hospice care there for the past two weeks. The cause of death,
Hofmann said, was complications from hyponatremia, a condition that occurs when
the level of sodium in the blood is too low.
(Edited from Wikipedia & The San Diego Union-Tribune)
Obrey Wilson (February 27, 1942 – February 6, 2016) was an American
country, gospel and soul singer / songwriter.
Obrey Dean Wilson was born in Clarksville, the son of Obey
Lee Wilson and Clara Person Wilson. For an artist who had a dozen or so 45s
released precious little is known about Obrey – which is a shame as he was a
fine vocalist and strong songwriter who made some high quality country soul in
the 60s and 70s. He seems to have started his career with Snuff Garrett at
Liberty, and although his four sides for the company are more pop than soul,
“Hey There Mountain” from 1962 has some notoriety as being one of only a
handful of sides that Phil Spector produced for Garrett.
The cuts from his first stay at Epic were produced by Jerry
Kennedy or Billy Sherrill in Nashville, and they range in styles from
pop/country to soul. The best is undoubtedly She Used To Be Mine (1965) which
is really soulful thanks to Wilson’s obvious gospel vocal touches, including a
well judged rap, and the tasteful piano. His sole Columbia outing was recorded
in New York, with Charlie Calello providing the big big backdrop for his
version of the uplifting “My Ancestors”, (1966) also covered by Charles Gray. The flip has had
some Northern scene action. Obrey’s Philips 45 was again produced by Jerry
Kennedy but neither side was among his best.
But both sides of his Bell 45 were far better. It was
another Nashville recording, but more like John Richbourg’s style of music from
there than Billy Sherrill’s. “Soul Satisfaction #1” (1969) was a gently funky
little opus, very nicely arranged, and Break Away Baby (1968) was far and away
Wilson’s best effort to date. In a classic southern soul setting of
guitar/organ underpinning a strong horn section, Obrey cut loose, his high
tenor sounding just perfect, full of righteous fire and hoarse commitment.
He continued this gospel feeling with his next 45, an easy
paced tuneful hymn, with some really good guitar and conga playing over which
Wilson again gets high with the spirit. Both tracks on his second Mercury
single came from the pen of the wonderful Swamp Dogg and while “You Were Meant
For Me” (1972) was good, his version of Laid Back And Easy was excellent.
Always one of Swamp’s finer evocative numbers, I think Wilson’s rendition just
about shades Freddie North’s for sheer soul thanks to his oh-so-flexible vocal.
Thanks to its inclusion on the “Lost Soul” series of LPs
Obrey’s outstanding Sho Nuff You Can (1973) is probably his most accessible track.
But this superb slice of country soul can’t really have enough plaudits aimed
at it, so sweet is the melody, so subtle the playing , so good are Bergen
Whit’s horn charts and so emotional the vocal that it’s almost an advertisement
for country soul.
Wilson’s final single in 1982 was for John E Denny’s
Nashville operation and Mel Tillis’ Take Time was another winner, just the
right side of the country/soul divide with Wilson’s hoarse tone lovely to hear,
and his “delay” sense of time really on the button. His companion on the track
Bernice Cook sings well too.
Obrey was a member of Mt.Zion Baptist Church, Port Royal. He
worked as a nurse for Complete Home Health Care for 43 years. He passed away in
Clarkesville, Tennessee on February6, 2016, aged 73 years old.
(Edited from Sir Shambling & obit @ Clarkesville Now)
Guy Klucevsek (February 26, 1947 – May 22, 2025) was an
American accordionist and composer known for his fusion of polka, minimalism
and experimental music. He stunned audiences around the world with his mastery
of the unwieldy instrument in jazz- and world-influenced avant-garde concerts.
Guy Allen Klucevsek, was born in New York City to Godfred
Klucevsek and Alyse Hamilton, parents of Slovenian immigrant heritage. He spent
part of his early childhood in Saddle Brook, New Jersey, before moving to western
Pennsylvania near Pittsburgh at the age of nine following his parents' divorce
in 1956, where he was raised by his aunt and uncle in a close-knit
Slovenian-American community. This environment deeply immersed him in the
traditions of Slovenian folk music, including lively polkas and melancholic
minor-key waltzes, which were staples at family gatherings and local events.
At the age of five, Klucevsek became captivated by the
accordion after watching a television performance by virtuoso Dick Contino on The
Horace Heidt Show, prompting him to coax his father into purchasing a 12-bass
accordion. His initial lessons began soon after with a door-to-door teacher
named Joe Macko, who instructed him in polka-style pieces and basic techniques
suited to the instrument's popularity in mid-20th-century America. This early
exposure laid the groundwork for his technical foundation, blending popular
ethnic repertoires with the accordion's expressive capabilities.
Here’s The C&M Waltz” from above CD
He studied accordion with Walter Grabowski who eventually
introduced him to the more difficult free-bass accordion. This allowed
Klucevsek to play straight from piano music without transcription. In high
school he formed a Slovenian polka band and played tuba in the school band. After
graduating from high school, he matriculated to Indiana University of
Pennsylvania where he earned a BA in 1969. He pursued further studies at the
University of Pittsburgh and graduated with an MA in 1971. He then attended the
California Institute of the Arts where he was a pupil of Robert Bernat, Harold
Budd, Gerald Shapiro, Morton Subotnick, and James Tenney.
In 1972, Klucevsek joined the faculty of Glassboro State
College now (Rowan University) where he taught until 1976. He was a member of
Relâche, a chamber ensemble based in Philadelphia, from 1980 through 1990. He
moved to Manhattan in the 1980s where he was involved in the Downtown
experimental music scene and first met his long time collaborator John Zorn.
His first album, Blue Window, was released in 1986.
Over his career Klucevsek composed more than 100 pieces,
released more than 20 albums and collaborated with Dave Douglas, Bill Frisell,
Laurie Anderson, Maureen Fleming, Tom Waits and others. He was also a founding
member of the international group Accordion Tribe. Klucevsek also participated
in cross-cultural collaborations including with Basque accordionist Kepa
Junkera, oud player Rahim AlHaj and Japanese composer Teiji Ito.
While Klucevsek's music sometimes fits within traditional
polka styles it moves far beyond this into experimentalism and minimalism.
Klucevsek was influenced by Flaco Jimenez and Nathan Abshire which led him to
look to integrate his Slovenian-American heritage into his avant-garde music.
His polkas would often be in minor keys and played at great speed rather than
the genial pace and major key of traditional polkas. Klucevsek was reluctant to
label himself and his style but thought of himself as a composer rather than an
accordionist. His music was unique in employing the accordion in jazz and
improvisational music.
In 2018, Guy Klucevsek ceased touring and largely stepped
back from public performances due to declining health, including faltering
eyesight from cataracts. His book, Vignettes (Short Pieces for Accordion), was
published in 2020 and he last publicly performed in 2022, but continued making
music, issuing Hope Dies Last in 2023. Little Big Top, with Volker Goetze, was
released in 2024. Klucevsek died at his home in Staten Island on May 22, 2025,
at the age of 78, after battling neuroendocrine cancer for nearly ten years.